I18n code breaks up internationalization into opCodes which are then stored
in arrays. To make it easier to debug the codebase this PR adds `debug`
property to the arrays which presents the data in human readable format.
PR Close#38154
The order of asset- and data-groups in `ngsw-config.json` affects how a
request is handled by the ServiceWorker. Previously, this was not
clearly documented.
This commit describes how the order of asset-/data-groups affects
request handling.
Closes#21189
PR Close#38364
Previously, the [processCliCommands][1] dgeni processor, which is used
to generate the docs pages for the CLI commands, expected the CLI
commands overview page (with a URL of `cli`) to exist as a child of a
top-level navigation section (`CLI Commands`). If one tried to move the
`CLI Commands` section inside another section, `processCliCommnads`
would fail to find it and thus fail to generate the CLI commands docs.
This problem came up in #38353.
This commit updates the `processCliCommands` processor to be able to
find it regardless of the position of the `CLI Commands` section inside
the navigation doc.
[1]:
dca4443a8e/aio/tools/transforms/cli-docs-package/processors/processCliCommands.js (L7-L9)
PR Close#38365
Roll forward of #38147.
This allows Closure compiler to tree shake unused constructor calls to `NgModuleFactory`, which is otherwise considered
side-effectful. The Angular compiler generates factory objects which are exported but typically not used, as they are
only needed for compatibility with View Engine. This results in top-level constructor calls, such as:
```typescript
export const FooNgFactory = new NgModuleFactory(Foo);
```
`NgModuleFactory` has a side-effecting constructor, so this statement cannot be tree shaken, even if `FooNgFactory` is
never imported. The `NgModuleFactory` continues to reference its associated `NgModule` and prevents the module and all
its unused dependencies from being tree shaken, making Closure builds significantly larger than necessary.
The fix here is to wrap `NgModuleFactory` constructor with `noSideEffects(() => /* ... */)`, which tricks the Closure
compiler into assuming that the invoked function has no side effects. This allows it to tree-shake unused
`NgModuleFactory()` constructors when they aren't imported. Since the factory can be removed, the module can also be
removed (if nothing else references it), thus tree shaking unused dependencies as expected.
The one notable edge case is for lazy loaded modules. Internally, lazy loading is done as a side effect when the lazy
script is evaluated. For Angular, this side effect is registering the `NgModule`. In Ivy this is done by the
`NgModuleFactory` constructor, so lazy loaded modules **cannot** have their top-level `NgModuleFactory` constructor
call tree shaken. We handle this case by looking for the `id` field on `@NgModule` annotations. All lazy loaded modules
include an `id`. When this `id` is found, the `NgModuleFactory` is generated **without** with `noSideEffects()` call,
so Closure will not tree shake it and the module will lazy-load correctly.
PR Close#38320
This introduces a new `ModuleInfo` interface to represent some of the statically analyzed data from an `NgModule`. This
gets passed into transforms to give them more context around a given `NgModule` in the compilation.
PR Close#38320
PR #36601 introduces icons on all links if the link contains
https:// or http:// but there were some internal links left
which contained https://angular.io. Removed https://angular.io
from all these links.
PR Close#38360
This commit refactors the argument of the `parseEventName` function
to use an object with named properties instead of using an object indexer.
PR Close#38089
Some specialised browsers that do not support scroll restoration
(e.g. some web crawlers) do not allow `scrollRestoration` to be
writable.
We already sniff the browser to see if it has the `window.scrollTo`
method, so now we also check whether `window.history.scrollRestoration`
is writable too.
Fixes#30629
PR Close#30630
Previously, the `ngOnDestroy` method called `unsubscribe` regardless of if `subscription` had
been initialized. This can lead to an error attempting to call `unsubscribe` of undefined.
This change prevents this error, and instead only attempts `unsubscribe` when the subscription
has been defined.
PR Close#38344
The `TscPlugin` interface using a type of `ts.CompilerHost&Partial<UnifiedModulesHost>` for the `host` parameter
of the `wrapHost` method. However, prior to this change, the interface implementing `NgTscPlugin` class used a
type of `ts.CompilerHost&UnifiedModulesHost` for the parameter. This change corrects the inconsistency and
allows `UnifiedModulesHost` members to be optional when using the `NgtscPlugin`.
PR Close#38004
Previously, each Angular repository had its own strategy/configuration
for merging pull requests and cherry-picking. We worked out a new
strategy for labeling/branching/versioning that should be the canonical
strategy for all actively maintained projects in the Angular organization.
This PR provides a `ng-dev` merge configuration that implements the
labeling/branching/merging as per the approved proposal.
See the following document for the proposal this commit is based on
for the merge script labeling/branching: https://docs.google.com/document/d/197kVillDwx-RZtSVOBtPb4BBIAw0E9RT3q3v6DZkykU
The merge tool label configuration can be conveniently accesed
within each `.ng-dev` configuration, and can also be extended
if there are special labels on individual projects. This is one
of the reasons why the labels are not directly built into the
merge script. The script should remain unopinionated and flexible.
The configuration is conceptually powerful enough to achieve the
procedures as outlined in the versioning/branching/labeling proposal.
PR Close#38223
The merge tool provides a way for configurations to determine the branches
for a label lazily. This is supported because it allows labels to respect
the currently selected base branch through the Github UI. e.g. if `target: label`
is applied on a PR and the PR is based on the patch branch, then the change
could only go into the selected target branch, while if it would be based on
`master`, the change would be cherry-picked to `master` too. This allows for
convenient back-porting of changes if they did not apply cleanly to the primary
development branch (`master`).
We want to expand this function so that it is possible to report failures if an
invalid target label is appplied (e.g. `target: major` not allowed in
some situations), or if the Github base branch is not valid for the given target
label (e.g. if `target: lts` is used, but it's not based on a LTS branch).
PR Close#38223
The merge script currently accepts a configuration function that will
be invoked _only_ when the `ng-dev merge` command is executed. This
has been done that way because the merge tooling usually relies on
external requests to Git or NPM for constructing the branch configurations.
We do not want to perform these slow external queries on any `ng-dev` command
though, so this became a lazily invoked function.
This commit adds support for these configuration functions to run
asynchronously (by returning a Promise that will be awaited), so that
requests could also be made to the Github API. This is benefical as it
could avoid dependence on the local Git state and the HTTP requests
are more powerful/faster.
Additionally, in order to be able to perform Github API requests
with an authenticated instance, the merge tool will pass through
a `GithubClient` instance that uses the specified `--github-token`
(or from the environment). This ensures that all API requests use
the same `GithubClient` instance and can be authenticated (mitigating
potential rate limits).
PR Close#38223
@angular/core/testing provide `async` test utility, but the name `async` is
confusing with the javascript keyword `async`. And in some test case, if you
want to use both the `async` from `@angular/core/testing` and `async/await`,
you may have to write the code like this.
```typescript
it('test async operations', async(async() => {
const result = await asyncMethod();
expect(result).toEqual('expected');
}));
```
So in this PR, the `async` is renamed to `waitForAsync` and also deprecate `async`.
PR Close#37583
This reverts commit b4449e35bf.
The example given from the previous change was for a component selector and not a provider selector.
This change fixes it.
Fixes#38323.
PR Close#38325
Within an angular template, when a character entity is unable to be parsed, previously a generic
unexpected character error was thrown. This does not properly express the issue that was discovered
as the issue is actually caused by the discovered character making the whole of the entity unparsable.
The compiler will now instead inform via the error message what string was attempted to be parsed
and what it was attempted to be parsed as.
Example, for this template:
```
<p>
ģp
</p>
```
Before this change:
`Unexpected character "p"`
After this change:
`Unable to parse entity "ģp" - hexadecimal character reference entities must end with ";"`
Fixes#26067
PR Close#38319
This commit updates the `tslint.json` configuration file, that is used
to lint the docs examples, to match the one generated for new Angular
CLI apps. There are some minimal differences (marked with `TODO`
comments) for things, such as component selector prefix, that would
require extensive and/or difficult to validate changes in guides.
This commit also includes the final adjustments to make the docs
examples code compatible with the new tslint rules. (The bulk of the
work has been done in previous commits.)
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
following Angular-specific tslint rules:
- `component-selector`
- `directive-selector`
- `no-conflicting-lifecycle`
- `no-host-metadata-property`
- `no-input-rename`
- `no-output-native`
- `no-output-rename`
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`prefer-const` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`variable-name` tslint rule without requiring the
`allow-leading-underscore` and `allow-trailing-underscore` options.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-shadowed-variable` and `variable-name` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`member-ordering` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-angle-bracket-type-assertion` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-string-literal`, `object-literal-key-quotes` and
`object-literal-shorthand` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`only-arrow-functions` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`jsdoc-format` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`semicolon` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the `align`,
`space-before-function-paren` and `typedef-whitespace` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`import-spacing` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
The `03-*` code style rule have been removed from the style guide in
be0bc799f3.
This commit removes the corresponding files and related unused code from
the`styleguide` example project.
PR Close#38143
This commit removes compiler instantiation at startup.
This is because the constructor is invoked during the plugin loading phase,
in which the project has not been completely loaded.
Retrieving `ts.Program` at startup will trigger an `updateGraph` operation,
which could only be called after the Project has loaded completely.
Without this change, the Ivy LS cannot be loaded as a tsserver plugin.
Note that the whole `Compiler` class is temporary, so changes made there are
only for development. Once we have proper integration with ngtsc the
`Compiler` class would be removed.
PR Close#38120
Currently the `getInheritedFactory` function is implemented to allow
closure to remove the call if the base factory is unused. However, this
method does not work with terser. By adding the PURE annotation,
terser will also be able to remove the call when unused.
PR Close#38291
This commit fixes a bug in View Engine whereby the compiler errorneously
thinks that a method of a component has decorator metadata when that
method is one of those in `Object.prototype`, for example `toString`.
This bug is discovered in v10.0.4 of `@angular/language-service` after
the default bundle format was switched from ES5 to ES2015.
ES5 output:
```js
if (propMetadata[propName]) {
decorators.push.apply(decorators, __spread(propMetadata[propName]));
}
```
ES2015 output:
```js
if (propMetadata[propName]) {
decorators.push(...propMetadata[propName]);
}
```
The bug was not discovered in ES5 because the polyfill for the spread
operator happily accepts parameters that do not have the `iterable`
symbol:
```js
function __spread() {
for (var ar = [], i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++)
ar = ar.concat(__read(arguments[i]));
return ar;
}
```
whereas in es2015 it’ll fail since the iterable symbol is not present in
`propMetadata['toString']` which evaluates to a function.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/859
PR Close#38292
This reverts commit 7f8c2225f2.
This commit caused test failures internally, which were traced back to the
optimizer removing NgModuleFactory constructor calls when those calls caused
side-effectful registration of NgModules by their ids.
PR Close#38303
This commit disables one TypeChecker test (added as a part of
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/38105) which make assertions about the filename while
running on Windows.
Such assertions are currently suffering from a case sensitivity issue.
PR Close#38294
The documentation is not clear on how the base href and APP_BASE_HREF are used. This commit
should help clarify more complicated use-cases beyond the most common one of just a '/'
PR Close#38123
This allows Closure compiler to tree shake unused constructor calls to `NgModuleFactory`, which is otherwise considered
side-effectful. The Angular compiler generates factory objects which are exported but typically not used, as they are
only needed for compatibility with View Engine. This results in top-level constructor calls, such as:
```typescript
export const FooNgFactory = new NgModuleFactory(Foo);
```
`NgModuleFactory` has a side-effecting constructor, so this statement cannot be tree shaken, even if `FooNgFactory` is
never imported. The `NgModuleFactory` continues to reference its associated `NgModule` and prevents the module and all
its unused dependencies from being tree shaken. This effectively prevents all components from being tree shaken, making
Closure builds significantly larger than they should be.
The fix here is to wrap `NgModuleFactory` constructor with `noSideEffects(() => /* ... */)`, which tricks the Closure
compiler into assuming that the invoked function has no side effects. This allows it to tree-shake unused
`NgModuleFactory()` constructors when they aren't imported. Since the factory can be removed, the module can also be
removed (if nothing else references it), thus tree shaking unused components as expected.
PR Close#38147