In the past, the closure file has been generated so that all individual
locale files were imported individually. This resulted in a huge
slow-down in g3 due to the large amount of imports.
With 90bd984ff7 this changed so that we
inline the locale data for the g3 closure locale file. Also the file
only contained data for locales being supported by Closure. For this a
list of locales has been extracted from Closure Compiler, as well as a
list of locale aliases.
This logic is prone to CLDR version updates, and also broke as part of
the Gulp -> Bazel migration where this logic has been slightly modified
but caused issues in G3. e.g. a locale `zh-Hant` was requested in g3,
but the locale data had the name of the alias locale that provided the
data at index zero (which represents the locale name). Note that the
locale names at index zero always could differentiate from the requested
`goog.LOCALE` due to the aliasing logic. This just didn't come up before.
We simplify this logic by generating a `goog.LOCALE` case for all
locales CLDR provides data for. We don't need to bother about aliasing
because with the refactorings to the CLDR generation tool, all locales
are built (which also captures the aliases), and we can generate the locale
file on the fly (which has not been done before).
PR Close#42230
The CLDR extraction tool has been reworked to run as part of Bazel.
This adds a initial readme explaining what the tool generates. It's
far from a detailed description but it can serve as foundation for more
detailed explanations.
PR Close#42230
Introduces a few Starlark macros for running the new Bazel
CLDR generation tool. Wires up the new tool so that locales
are generated properly. Also updates the existing
`closure-locale` file to match the new output generated by the Bazel tool.
This commit also re-adds a few locale files that aren't
generated by CLDR 37, but have been accidentally left in
the repository as the Gulp script never removed old locales
from previous CLDR versions. This problem is solved with the
Bazel generation of locale files, but for now we re-add these
old CLDR 33 locale files to not break developers relying on these
(even though the locale data indicies are incorrect; but there might
be users accessing the data directly)
PR Close#42230
Converts the CLDR locale extraction script to a Bazel tool.
This allows us to generate locale files within Bazel, so that
locales don't need to live as sources within the repo. Also
it allows us to get rid of the legacy Gulp tooling.
The migration of the Gulp script to a Bazel tool involved the
following things:
1. Basic conversion of the `extract.js` script to TypeScript.
This mostly was about adding explicit types. e.g. adding `locale:
string` or `localeData: CldrStatic`.
2. Split-up into separate files. Instead of keeping the large
`extract.js` file, the tool has been split into separate files.
The logic remains the same, just that code is more readable and
maintainable.
3. Introduction of a new `index.ts` file that is the entry-point
for the Bazel tool. Previously the Gulp tool just generated
all locale files, the default locale and base currency files
at once. The new entry-point accepts a mode to be passed as
first process argument. based on that argument, either locales
are generated into a specified directory, or the default locale,
base currencies or closure file is generated.
This allows us to generate files with a Bazel genrule where
we simply run the tool and specify the outputs. Note: It's
necessary to have multiple modes because files live in separate
locations. e.g. the default locale in `@angular/core`, but the
rest in `@angular/common`.
4. Removal of the `cldr-data-downloader` and custom CLDR resolution
logic. Within Bazel we cannot run a downloader using network.
We switch this to something more Bazel idiomatic with better
caching. For this a new repository rule is introduced that
downloads the CLDR JSON repository and extracts it. Within
that rule we determine the supported locales so that they
can be used to pre-declare outputs (for the locales) within
Bazel analysis phase. This allows us to add the generated locale
files to a `ts_library` (which we want to have for better testing,
and consistent JS transpilation).
Note that the removal of `cldr-data-downloader` also requires us to
add logic for detecting locales without data. The CLDR data
downloader overwrote the `availableLocales.json` file with a file
that only lists locales that CLDR provides data for. We use the
official `availableLocales` file CLDR provides, but filter out
locales for which no data is available. This is needed until we
update to CLDR 39 where data is available for all such locales
listed in `availableLocales.json`.
PR Close#42230
This is a pre-refactor commit allowing us to move
the CLDR locale generation to Bazel where files would
no longer be checked-in, except for the `closure-locale`
file that is synced into Google3.
PR Close#42230
Before this commit, attribute completion display parts were retrieved
but not assigned. In addition, the switch case was non-exhaustive
because it did not include `StructuralDirectiveAttribute`.
PR Close#42472
In the past, when we enabled `--strict` in the repository, we added
another tsconfig for code not being migrated to be `--strict`
compatible. This was done for the deprecated http and webworker
packages. Since these are now removed, we can rmeove the logic.
PR Close#42506
The `NO_ERRORS_SCHEMA` schema can be used to ignore errors related to unknown elements or properties, but since it suppresses these errors it may also hide real problems in a template. This commit updates the `NO_ERRORS_SCHEMA` docs to mention that.
Closes#39454.
PR Close#42327
This is based on a discussion we had a few weeks ago. Currently if a component uses `ViewEncapsulation.ShadowDom` and its selector doesn't meet the requirements for a custom element tag name, a vague error will be thrown at runtime saying something like "Element does not support attachShadowRoot".
These changes add a new diagnostic to the compiler that validates the component selector and gives a better error message during compilation.
PR Close#42245
For quite a while it is an unspoken convention to add a trailing
new-line files within the Angular repository. This was never enforced
automatically, but has been frequently raised in pull requests through
manual review. This commit sets up a lint rule so that this is
"officially" enforced and doesn't require manual review.
PR Close#42478
Updates the compiler-cli compliance goldens. The golden updates are
required due to a regression in TypeScript 4.3 that causes the emitter
to not incorrectly preserve lines when emitting a node list.
This can be reverted once https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/44070
is available.
PR Close#42022
Switches the repository to TypeScript 4.3 and the latest
version of tslib. This involves updating the peer dependency
ranges on `typescript` for the compiler CLI and for the Bazel
package. Tests for new TypeScript features have been added to
ensure compatibility with Angular's ngtsc compiler.
PR Close#42022
Currently we support safe property (`a?.b`) and method (`a?.b()`) accesses, but we don't handle safe keyed reads (`a?.[0]`) which is inconsistent. These changes expand the compiler in order to support safe key read expressions as well.
PR Close#41911
As previously discussed in pull/31070 and issues/30486, this would be useful because it is often desirable to apply styles to fields that are both `ng-invalid` and `ng-pristine` after the first attempt at form submission, but Angular does not provide any simple way to do this (although evidently Angularjs did). This will now be possible with a descendant selector such as `.ng-submitted .ng-invalid`.
In this implementation, the directive that sets control status classes on forms and formGroups has its set of statuses widened to include `ng-submitted`. Then, in the event that `is('submitted')` is invoked, the `submitted` property of the control container is returned iff it exists. This is preferred over checking whether the container is a `Form` or `FormGroup` directly to avoid reflecting on those classes.
Closes#30486.
PR Close#42132
With the removal of the `ModuleWithProviders` transform in the parent commit,
the underlying dts transform can also be removed as it is not used elsewhere.
PR Close#41996
The `ModuleWithProviders` type has required a generic type since Angular 10,
so it is no longer necessary for the compiler to transform usages of the
`ModuleWithProviders` type without the generic type, as that should have
been reported as a compile error. This commit removes the detection logic
from ngtsc.
PR Close#41996
Prior to this change the `min` and `max` validator directives would not
set the `min` and `max` attributes on the host element. The problem was
caused by the truthy check in host binding expression that was
calculated as `false` when `0` is used as a value. This commit updates
the logic to leverage nullish coalescing operator in these host binding
expressions, so `0` is treated as a valid value, thus the `min` and
`max` attributes are set correctly.
Partially closes#42267
PR Close#42412
When a `trackBy` function is used that accepts a supertype of the iterated
array's type, the loop variable would undesirably be inferred as the supertype
instead of the array's item type. This commit adds an inferred type parameter
to `TrackByFunction` to allow an extra degree of freedom, enabling the
loop value to be inferred as the most narrow type.
Fixes#40125
PR Close#41995
The ngtsc test targets have fake declarations files for `@angular/core`
and `@angular/common` and the template type checking tests can leverage
the fake common declarations instead of declaring its own types.
PR Close#41995
Type-only imports are known to be elided by TypeScript, so the compiler
can be certain that such imports do not contribute to potential import
cycles. As such, type-only imports are no longer considered during cycle
analysis.
Regular import statements that would eventually be fully elided by
TypeScript during emit if none of the imported symbols are used in a
value position continue to be included in the cycle analysis, as the
cycle analyzer is unaware of these elision opportunities. Only explicit
`import type` statements are excluded.
PR Close#42453
This change moves the `dev-infra/browsers` folder into `dev-infra/bazel`.
The browser folder is providing custom configuration for Bazel, so it
should live within the `bazel` folder for a more well-structured
`dev-infra` folder.
PR Close#42268
Prior to this PR, attempting to get rename info for pipe name expressions would defer to the
typescript language service, which would return no rename info. This was not caught because
the test was written incorrectly.
This PR corrects the test behavior and adjusts the logic in getting rename info to account
for indirect renames (like pipe names).
PR Close#41974
The compiler flag `compileNonExportedClasses` allows the Angular compiler to
process classes which are not exported at the top level of a source file.
This is often used to allow for AOT compilation of test classes inside
`it()` test blocks, for example.
Previously, the compiler would identify exported classes by looking for an
`export` modifier on the class declaration itself. This works for the
trivial case, but fails for indirectly exported classes:
```typescript
// Component is declared unexported.
@Component({...})
class FooCmp {...}
// Indirect export of FooCmp
export {FooCmp};
```
This is not an immediate problem for most application builds, since the
default value for `compileNonExportedClasses` is `true` and therefore such
classes get compiled regardless.
However, in the Angular Language Service now, `compileNonExportedClasses` is
forcibly overridden to `false`. That's because the tsconfig used by the IDE
and Language Service is often far broader than the application build's
configuration, and pulls in test files that can contain unexported classes
not designed with AOT compilation in mind.
Therefore, the Language Service has trouble working with such structures.
In this commit, the `ReflectionHost` gains a new API for detecting whether a
class is exported. The implementation of this method now not only considers
the `export` modifier, but also scans the `ts.SourceFile` for indirect
exports like the example above. This ensures the above case will be
processed directly in the Language Service.
This new operation is cached using an expando symbol on the `ts.SourceFile`,
ensuring good performance even when scanning large source files with lots of
exports (e.g. a FESM file under `ngcc`).
Fixes#42184.
PR Close#42207
We were linting against usages of `fdescribe` and `fit` by referencing the `no-jasmine-focus` rule which isn't installed, causing tslint to log the following:
```
Could not find implementations for the following rules specified in the configuration:
no-jasmine-focus
Try upgrading TSLint and/or ensuring that you have all necessary custom rules installed.
If TSLint was recently upgraded, you may have old rules configured which need to be cleaned
```
These changes switch to using the built-in `ban` rule.
PR Close#42415
Previously the docs were very minimalistic. The most important thing missing from the docs
was that people should primarily use higher level APIs instead of using ROUTES directly.
It would be nice to holistically overhaul more of the router API docs, but that's out of
scope of this change.
Fixes#39350
PR Close#42398
An internal change in Ivy has surfaced issues in previosly broken code. This change adds a note to the
Ivy compatibility guide as well as the TrackByFunction api docs.
Fixes#35896
PR Close#42338
The list for the possible options of providedIn was not totally clear. This commit ensures each possible value is included explicitly in the docs.
fixes#29330
PR Close#42355
We have some internal proxies for all of the Jasmine functions, as well as some other helpers. This code hasn't been touched in more than 5 years, it can lead to confusion and it isn't really necessary since the same can be achieved using Jasmine.
These changes remove most of the code and clean up our existing unit tests.
PR Close#42177
Most of these were fixed in other PRs but there were are couple of stragglers.
Note that `my-app` components in non-documentation facing code, such as
compliance tests have not been changed.
Fixes#20235
PR Close#42256
This commit fixes the state of variable _started on call of reset method.
Earlier behaviour was on call of `reset()` method we are not setting back
`_started` flag's value to false and it created various issue for end user
which were expecting this behaviour as per name of method.
We provided end user `reset()` method, but it was empty method and on call
of it wasn't doing anything. As end user/developer were not able to
reuse animation not animation after call of reset method.
In this PR on call of `reset()` method we are setting flag `_started` value to false
which can be accessed by `hasStarted()`.
Resolves#18140
PR Close#41608
`Location.go` does not trigger the browser's `popstate` event because
the Angular Router uses `pushState` and `replaceState`. This can be
confusing when calling `Location.go` and using `Location.subscribe`.
This commit clarifies the behavior of `Location.subscribe` and points
developers to the `onUrlChanges` subscription instead.
Fixes#12691
PR Close#42272
Add small clarity to sentence in documentation for navigation cancel event
to indicate that router guards returning false or urlTree is only one of
several reasons a NavigationCancel event happens.
fixes#26613
PR Close#42282
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
Update the supported range of node versions for to be less restrictive, no longer causing
yarn or npm to fail engine's checks for future versions of node.
While this change will no longer cause yarn or npm to fail these engine's check, this does
not reflect a change in the officially supported versions of node for Angular. Angular
continues to maintain support for Active LTS and Maintenance LTS versions of node.
PR Close#42205
This commit clarifies the description of the default `pathMatch`
strategy (prefix) to indicate that the path segments must each match to
a config.
fixes#39737
PR Close#42287
With this change we add a migration to replace the deprecated shadow-piercing selector from `/deep/` with deprecated but recommended `::ng-deep`.
The main motivation for this change is that the CSS optimizer CSSNano which is used by the Angular CLI no longer supports this non standard selector and causes build time errors due to the selector being minified incorrectly. However, CSSNano does support the recommended deprecated `::ng-deep` selector.
Closes: #42196
PR Close#42214
Remove publishConfig property from the package.json entry for each of the entries in
the publish configuration. Using the wombat proxy is now ensured/managed by the
ng-dev release tooling.
PR Close#42104
TypeScript supports ECMAScript private identifiers. It can happen that
developers intend to access such members from within an expression.
This currently results in an unclear error from the lexer. e.g.
```
'Parser Error: Unexpected token # at column 1 in [{{#myField}}] in C:/test.ts@5:2
```
We could improve such errors by tokenizing private identifiers similar to
how the TypeScript scanner processes them. Later we can report better
errors in the expression parser or in the typecheck block. This commit
causes all private identifier tokens to be disallowed, so it never
reaches the type checker. This is done intentionally as private
identifiers should not be considered valid Angular syntax, especially
because private fields are not guaranteed to be accessible from within
a component/directive definition (e.g. there cases where a template
function is generated outside of the class; which results in private
members not being accessible; and this results in mixed/confusing
behavior).
Fixes#36003.
PR Close#42027
We skip event listeners on non-element host nodes (e.g. `ng-container` or `ng-element`), because they don't map to a DOM node so there's nothing to bind the event to. The problem is that this also prevents listeners bound to global targets from being bound.
These changes add an extra condition to allow for the event to be bound if it has a custom event target resolver.
Fixes#14191.
PR Close#42014
* recently, performance events started showing up with a -bpstart and -bpend
suffix to indicate their being the start and end events for our performance
testing. to fix this, we added an additional check for those suffixes in
addition to the old checks.
PR Close#42085
The Validator and AsyncValidator interfaces provide a callback, `registerOnValidatorChange(fn)`. `registerOnValidatorChange` is supposed to be fired at least once to register `fn` with the validator. `fn` is then called by the validator whenever its inputs change. This was previously not happening for FormGroup validators, and is now fixed.
PR Close#41971
Prior to this change, any inserted `<style>` nodes into shadow dom trees would be retained
in memory, even after the shadow dom tree has been removed. This commit fixes the memory
leak by tracking the inserted `<style>` nodes per host element, such that removal of the
host element also releases the style nodes.
Fixes#36655
PR Close#42005
The JIT compiler has a mapping from component to the owning NgModule
and tracks whether a certain NgModule class has been verified; these
maps causes any JIT compiled component and NgModule to be retained even
if they are no longer referenced from anywhere else. This commit
switches the maps to `WeakMap` to allow garbage collecting any
components and NgModules that are no longer referenced elsewhere.
Fixes#19997
PR Close#42003
Now that there is no need to work around the source-map bug in TypeScript
(https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/29300) we can just use
`resolvedTemplateUrl` for the source-map URL, rather than having a separate
property.
PR Close#42000
Indirect templates are templates produced by a non-literal expression value
of the `template` field in `@Component`. The compiler can statically
determine the template string, but there is not guaranteed to be a physical
file which contains the bytes of the template string. For example, the
template string may be computed by a concatenation expression: 'a' + 'b'.
Previously, the compiler would use the TS file path as the source map path
for indirect templates. This is incorrect, however, and breaks source
mapping for such templates, since the offsets within the template string do
not correspond to bytes of the TS file.
This commit returns the compiler to its old behavior for indirect templates,
which is to use `''` as the source map URL for such templates.
Fixes#40854
PR Close#41973
URLSearch params are by default supported in the browser but are not supported by angular/http package added support for URLSearchParams
Fixes#36317
PR Close#37852
Rather than de-duplicating results as we build them, a final de-duplication can be done at the end.
This way, there's no forgetting to de-duplicate results at some level.
Prior to this commit, results from template locations that mapped to
multiple different typescript locations would not be de-duplicated (e.g.
an input binding that is bound to two separate directives).
PR Close#40523
When `checkTypeOfPipes` is set to `false`, our TCB currently generates
the a statement like the following when pipes appear in the template:
`(_pipe1 as any).transform(args)`
This did enable us to get _some_ information from the Language Service
about pipes in this case because we still had access to the pipe
instance. However, because it is immediately cast to `any`, we cannot
get type information about the transform access. That means actions like "go to
definition", "find references", "quick info", etc. will return
incomplete information or fail altogether.
Instead, this commit changes the TCB to generate `(_pipe1.transform as any)(args)`.
This gives us the ability to get complete information for the LS
operations listed above.
PR Close#40523
This commit updates the logic in the LS renaming to handle renaming of
pipes, both from the name expression in the pipe metadata as well as
from the template.
The approach here is to introduce a new concept for renaming: an
"indirect" rename. In this type of rename, we find rename locations
in with the native TS Language Service using a different node than the
one we are renaming. Using pipes as an example, if we want to rename the
pipe name from the string literal expression, we use the transform
method to find rename locations rather than the string literal itself
(which will not return any results because it's just a string).
So the general approach is:
* Determine the details about the requested rename location, i.e. the
targeted template node and symbol for a template rename, or the TS
node for a rename outside a template.
* Using the details of the location, determine if the node is attempting
to rename something that is an indirect rename (pipes, selectors,
bindings). Other renames are considered "direct" and we use whatever
results the native TSLS returns for the rename locations.
* In the case of indirect renames, we throw out results that do not
appear in the templates (in this case, the shim files). These results will be
for the "indirect" rename that we don't want to touch, but are only
using to find template results.
* Create an additional rename result for the string literal expression
that is used for the input/output alias, the pipe name, or the
selector.
Note that renaming is moving towards being much more accurate in its
results than "find references". When the approach for renaming
stabilizes, we may want to then port the changes back to being shared
with the approach for retrieving references.
PR Close#40523
This commit renames the files for the references and rename functionality to indicate
that they deal with _both_ references and rename, not just references.
PR Close#40523
Currently the compiler treats `@page` rules in the same way as `@media`, however that is incorrect and it results in invalid CSS, because `@page` allows style declarations at the root (e.g. `@page (margin: 50%) {}`) and it only allows a limited set of at-rules to be nested into it. Given these restrictions, we can't really encapsulate the styles since they apply at the document level when the user tries to print.
These changes make it so that `@page` rules are preserved so that we don't break the user's CSS.
More information: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-page-3Fixes#26269.
PR Close#41915
adding optional body for HTTP delete request options. This new param added as an optional so won't break the existing code also provide the capability the send the body when and where it required.
PR Close#41723
This commit adds support for `$` in when selecting attributes.
Resolves#41244.
test(language-service): Add test to expose bug caused by source file change (#41500)
This commit adds a test to expose the bug caused by source file change in
between typecheck programs.
PR Close#41500
PR Close#41567
Some localization workflows want to use the extracted source translation
files directy back in the project as a target translation file.
The extraction process generates files that only contain "source" messages
and not "target" messages. This is actually valid for most translation formats
but currently the Angular localization process expects target translation files
to always contain target messages and will stop with an error in this case.
Now, instead of an error, the translation file loader will log a warning,
and then try to falback to a source message, only erroring if this is also
missing.
Fixes#21690
PR Close#41944
This allows the linker to be used as a true Babel plugin. In a Babel
configuration file, include the linker as follows:
```js
{
plugins: [
'@angular/compiler-cli/linker/babel',
]
}
```
or, if you need to specify configuration options:
```js
{
plugins: [
['@angular/compiler-cli/linker/babel', {linkerJitMode: true}],
]
}
```
PR Close#41918
When there are multiple attributes that are marked for i18n translation,
which contain expression bindings, we were generating i18n update op-codes
that did not accurately map to the correct value to be bound in the lView.
Each attribute's bindings were relative to the start of the lView first
attributes values rather than to their own.
This fix passes the current binding index to `generateBindingUpdateOpCodes()`
when processing i18n attributes to account for this.
Fixes#41869
PR Close#41882
When including a component in a template, the component's host element
is immediately appended as child of the parent node upon creation.
Hence, `hostElement.parentNode` will be a valid reference. However, if
the parent component is being inserted as an embedded view—through
`ngIf` for example—then the parent's node itself will not have been
inserted yet. This means that we cannot properly determine the position
of the transition namespace, as any `containsElement` check will return
false given that the partial DOM tree has not been inserted yet, even
though it will be contained within an existing transition namespace once
the partial tree is attached.
This commit fixes the issue by not just looking at the existence of a
parent node, but rather a more extensive check using the driver's
`containsElement` method.
PR Close#19854
This commit changes the reference emitters in the Ivy compiler to prefer
non-aliased exports if they exist. This avoids selecting "private
exports" that may not be stable, e.g. the reexports that have been added
by the View Engine compiler. Such reexports are not stable and are
therefore not suitable to be emitted into partial compilations, as the
output of partial compilations should only reference stable symbols
from upstream libraries.
An alternative solution has been considered where ViewEngine-generated
exports would gain a certain prefix, such that the Ivy compiler could
just exclude those exports (see #41443). However, that solution would
be insufficient in case a library is built using partial compilation and
while depending itself on a VE-compiled library from earlier versions of
Angular, where the magic prefix would be missing. For such libraries,
ngcc would have generated reexports using the declared name if not already
present so this change does result in choosing the correct export.
Because ngcc always generates reexports using the declared name even if
an aliased export is present, this change causes those ngcc-generated
exports to be chosen in downstream libraries using partial compilation.
This is unfortunate as it means that the declared names become
effectively public even if the library author was intentionally
exporting it using an alias. This commit does not address this problem;
it is expected that this should not result in widespread issues across
the library ecosystem.
Fixes#41277
PR Close#41866
The legacy-unit-tests-saucelabs job does not need to compile the
compiler compliance tests as they are not used in those tests. Since
the compliance tests can be configured to use specific compiler options,
the generic tsconfig that is used in legacy-unit-tests-saucelabs may not
succeed to compile the compliance tests so this commit excludes those
source files.
PR Close#41866
Makes the following improvements to the listener instructions to make them slightly smaller and more memory-efficient.
1. Removes the default value from the `useCapture` parameter since it generates more code than just castint to `false`.
2. Removes the `useCapture` and `eventTargetResolver` parameters from `ɵɵsyntheticHostListener` since they won't be generated by the compiler, as far as I can tell.
3. Makes it so that we don't have to return a target name from a `GlobalTargetResolver`. This allows us to save on some memory, because we can return a reference to the target without having to wrap it in an object literal.
DEPRECATIONS:
`EventManagerPlugin.getGlobalEventTarget` is now deprecated and won't be called from Ivy code anymore. Global events will go through `addEventListener`.
PR Close#41807
Updates some tests where values related to the `HEADER_OFFSET` are hardcoded, causing them to break when the offset is updated. This comes up once in a while during refactorings and these changes should save us some time in the future.
PR Close#41883
`@font-face` rules cannot contain nested selectors. Nor can they be
nested under a selector. Normally this would be a syntax error by the
author of the styles. But in some rare cases, such as importing styles
from a library, and applying `:host ::ng-deep` to the imported styles,
we can end up with broken css if the imported styles happen to contain
`@font-face` rules.
This commit works around this problem by sanitizing such cases (erasing
any scoping selectors) during emulated ShadowDOM encapsulation style
processing.
Fixes#41751
PR Close#41815
These docs were linking directly to docs that have ambiguous paths.
These changes ensure that these links are not affected by the
disambiguation processing of those docs.
PR Close#41788
Currently we save a reference to an `LView` on most DOM nodes created by Angular either by saving
the `LView` directly in the `__ngContext__` or by saving the `LContext` which has a reference to
the `LView`. This can be a problem if the DOM node is retained in memory, because the `LView` has
references to all of the child nodes of the view, as well as other internal data structures.
Previously we tried to resolve the issue by clearing the `__ngContext__` when a node is removed
(see https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36011), but we decided not to proceeed, because it can
slow down destruction due to a megamorphic write.
These changes aim to address the issue while reducing the performance impact by assigning a unique
ID when an `LView` is created and adding it to `__ngContext__`. All active views are tracked in
a map where their unique ID is used as the key. We don't need to worry about leaks within that map,
because `LView`s are an internal data structure and we have complete control over when they are
created and destroyed.
Fixes#41047.
PR Close#41358
`global` property is not available in the browser, previously this was polyfilled through `core-js`. This now fails with `global is not defined`, since global cannot be accessed when not defined.
PR Close#41739
`global` property is not available in the browser, previously this was polyfilled through core-js.
(cherry picked from commit 827cf41386dcd7e496e107d6b32c54281bc935f1)
PR Close#41739
`core-js` is a CJS package which cannot be used directly in the browser. `core-js-bundle` is the bundled version of the package which can be used in directly in the browser.
PR Close#41739
Currently we have a lot of places where we repeat the type `Type<T>|AbstractType<T>|InjectionToken<T>` which makes it cumbersome to add another type or to type something else with the same signature.
These changes add a new type that can be used instead.
Fixes#39792.
PR Close#41580
This commit refactors the code to replace `loadLContext` with `getLContext` calls. The only difference between these two functions is that the `loadLContext` supports throwing an error in case `LContext` can not be found. The investigation performed in #41525 revealed that throwing while retrieving `LContext` might have undesirable performance implications, so we should avoid that to make sure there are no accidental perf regressions in other parts of code that used `loadLContext`. Moreover, in most of the places the `loadLContext` was already called in a mode that prevented an error from being thrown, so this refactoring should have no effect on the actual behavior.
PR Close#41606
Some partial libraries have been minified, which results in the declaration
calls being being converted from property accesses to indexed accesses.
This commit ensures that the linker can process these calls.
Fixes#41655
PR Close#41747
Some partial libraries have been minified, which results in boolean literals
being converted to `!0` and `!1`. This commit ensures that the linker can
process these values.
Fixes#41655
PR Close#41747
Close#41520.
This case related to the issue #41522.
```
Zone.root
.fork({
name: 'xhr',
onHasTask(delegate, currentZone, zone, taskState) {
console.log('hasMacrotask', taskState.macroTask);
return delegate.hasTask(zone, taskState);
},
})
.run(() => {
const xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', 'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/zone.js/0.11.4/zone.min.js');
xhr.addEventListener('load', () => {
throw new Error();
});
xhr.send();
});
```
zone.js invoke all `onload` event handlers before change the XHR task's state from
`scheduled` to `notscheduled`, so if any `onload` listener throw error, the XHR task
wlll be hang to `scheduled`, and leave the macroTask status in the zone wrongly.
This has been fixed in the previous commit, this commit add test to verify the case.
PR Close#41562
Close#41522
`zone.js` patches event listeners and run all event listeners together, if
one event handler throws error, the listeners afterward may not be invoked.
Reproduction:
```
export class AppComponent implements AfterViewInit {
@ViewChild('btn') btn: ElementRef;
title = 'event-error';
constructor(private ngZone: NgZone) {}
ngAfterViewInit() {
this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
this.btn.nativeElement.addEventListener('click', () => {
throw new Error('test1');
});
this.btn.nativeElement.addEventListener('click', () => {
console.log('add eventlistener click');
});
});
}
}
```
Until now no Angular users report this issue becuase in the `ngZone`, all
error will be caught and will not rethrow, so the event listeners afterward
will still continue to execute, but if the event handlers are outside of `ngZone`,
the error will break the execution.
This commit catch all errors, and after all event listeners finished invocation,
rethrow the errors in seperate `microTasks`, the reason I am using `microTask` here
is to handle multiple errors case.
PR Close#41562
We have a check that determines whether to generate property binding instructions for an `ng-template`. The check looks at whether the tag name is exactly `ng-template`, but the problem is that if the tag is placed in a non-HTML namespace (e.g. `svg`), the tag name will actually be `:namespace:ng-template` and the check will fail.
These changes resolve the issue by looking at the tag name without the namespace.
Fixes#41308.
PR Close#41669
documentation of decendants property of @ContentChildren was not clear when decendants was set to false it did not pick up direct children when any directive was used on the elements. With Ivy the functionality follows the following pattern only query direct children (in the sense of elements in a template) when descendants: false is specified.
Fixes#20074
PR Close#35927
Close#41520.
This case related to the issue #41522.
```
Zone.root
.fork({
name: 'xhr',
onHasTask(delegate, currentZone, zone, taskState) {
console.log('hasMacrotask', taskState.macroTask);
return delegate.hasTask(zone, taskState);
},
})
.run(() => {
const xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', 'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/zone.js/0.11.4/zone.min.js');
xhr.addEventListener('load', () => {
throw new Error();
});
xhr.send();
});
```
zone.js invoke all `onload` event handlers before change the XHR task's state from
`scheduled` to `notscheduled`, so if any `onload` listener throw error, the XHR task
wlll be hang to `scheduled`, and leave the macroTask status in the zone wrongly.
This has been fixed in the previous commit, this commit add test to verify the case.
PR Close#41562
Close#41522
`zone.js` patches event listeners and run all event listeners together, if
one event handler throws error, the listeners afterward may not be invoked.
Reproduction:
```
export class AppComponent implements AfterViewInit {
@ViewChild('btn') btn: ElementRef;
title = 'event-error';
constructor(private ngZone: NgZone) {}
ngAfterViewInit() {
this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
this.btn.nativeElement.addEventListener('click', () => {
throw new Error('test1');
});
this.btn.nativeElement.addEventListener('click', () => {
console.log('add eventlistener click');
});
});
}
}
```
Until now no Angular users report this issue becuase in the `ngZone`, all
error will be caught and will not rethrow, so the event listeners afterward
will still continue to execute, but if the event handlers are outside of `ngZone`,
the error will break the execution.
This commit catch all errors, and after all event listeners finished invocation,
rethrow the errors in seperate `microTasks`, the reason I am using `microTask` here
is to handle multiple errors case.
PR Close#41562
Currently if a component defines a template inline, but not through a
string literal, the partial compilation references the template expression
as is. This is problematic because the component declaration can no longer
be processed by the linker later as there is no static interpretation. e.g.
```js
const myTemplate = `...`;
TestCmp.ɵcmp = i0.ɵɵngDeclareComponent({
version: "0.0.0-PLACEHOLDER",
type: TestCmp,
selector: "test-cmp",
ngImport: i0,
template: myTemplate,
isInline: true
});
```
To fix this, we use the the resolved template in such cases so that
the linker can process the template/component declaration as expected.
PR Close#41583
With the introduction of the partial compilation, the Angular compiler's
existing `parseTemplate` method has been extended to pass through multiple
properties purely in favor of the partial compilation.
e.g. the `parseTemplate` function now accepts an "option" called `isInline`.
This option is just passed through and returned as part of the `ParsedTemplate`.
This is not ideal because the `parseTemplate` function doesn't care
whether the specified template was inline or not. This commit cleans
up the `parseTemplate` compiler function so that nothing needed only
for the partial compilation is added to it.
We introduce a new struct for additional template information that
is specific to the generation of the `declareComponent` function. With
that change, we can simplify the component decorator handler and keep
logic more local.
PR Close#41583
This adds string literals, number literals, `true`, `false`, `null` and
`undefined` to autocomplete results in templates.
For example, when completing an input of union type.
Component: `@Input('input') input!: 'a'|'b'|null;`
Template: `[input]="|"`
Provide `'a'`, `'b'`, and `null` as autocompletion entries.
Previously we did not include literal types because we only included
results from the component context (`ctx.`) and the template scope.
This is the second attempt at this. The first attempt is in
1d12c50f63 and it was reverted in 75f881e078150b0d095f2c54a916fc67a10444f6.
PR Close#41645
The `ViewportScroller` figures out which element to scroll into view using `document.getElementById`. The problem is that it won't find elements inside the shadow DOM.
These changes add some extra logic that goes through all the shadow roots to look for the element.
Fixes#41470.
PR Close#41644
When determining whether to run an animation, the `TransitionAnimationPlayer`
checks to see if a DOM element is attached to the document. This is done by
checking to see if the element is "contained" by the document body node.
Previously, if the element was inside a shadow DOM, the engine would
determine that the element was not attached, even if the shadow DOM's
host was attached to the document. This commit updates the `containsElement()`
method on `AnimationDriver` implementations to also include shadow DOM
elements as being contained if their shadow host element is contained.
Further, when using CSS keyframes to trigger animations, the styling
was always added to the `head` element of the document, even for
animations on elements within a shadow DOM. This meant that those
elements never receive those styles and the animation would not run.
This commit updates the insertion of these styles so that they are added,
to the element's "root node", which is the nearest shadow DOM host, or the
`head` of the document if the element is not in a shadow DOM.
Closes#25672
PR Close#40134
When creating the router state, the `RouteReuseStrategy#retrieve` should
only be called when `RouteReuseStrategy#shouldAttach` returns `true`.
That is, we should only retrieve a stored route when the reuse strategy
indicates that there is one stored and that it should be reattached.
This now matches the behavior in the route activation:
1d12c50f63/packages/router/src/operators/activate_routes.ts (L170-L172)Fixes#23162
PR Close#30263
This situation can probably happen only when using
`HashLocationStrategy` and by manually changing hash that triggers a route
guard that returns a new `UrlTree`. Then hash in the browser might not
match the current route because navigation was canceled, while hash in
the URL remained set by the user.
Related to #37048
PR Close#40409
This is follow-up from #41437 and it reduces the amount of code we generate for safe property accesses (`a?.b`) and nullish coalescing (`a ?? b`) by:
1. Reusing variables in nested nullish coalescing expressions.
2. Not initializing temporary variables to `null`. The way our code is generated means that the value will always be overwritten before we compare against it so the initializer didn't really matter.
Fixes#41491.
PR Close#41563
When recognizing routes, the router merges nodes which map to the same
empty path config. This is because auxiliary outlets under empty path
parents need to match the parent config. This would result in two
outlet matches for that parent which need to be combined into a single
node: The regular 'primary' match and the match for the auxiliary outlet.
In addition, the children of the merged nodes should also be merged to
account for multiple levels of empty path parents.
Fixes#41481
PR Close#41584
The asynchronous preprocessing check was not accounting for components that did not have any inline styles. In that case, the cache did not have an entry which then allowed the asynchronous check to run and fail the compilation. The caching during the asynchronous analysis phase now handles components without inline styles.
PR Close#41602
Previously, it was not possible to block a partial-linker from trying to
process a declaration that was defined in a newer version of Angular than
that of the partial-linker. For example, if a partial-linker was published as
part of version 12.0.0, there was no way for a partially-compiled declaration
compiled via version 13.0.0 to tell the 12.0.0 linker that it would be invalid
to attempt to process it.
This commit adds a new `minVersion` property to partial-declarations, which is
interpreted as the "minimum partial-linker version" that can process this
declaration. When selecting a partial-linker for such a declaration, the known
linker version ranges are checked to find the most recent linker whose version
range has an overlap with the interpreted declaration range.
This approach allows us to set a minimum version for a declaration, which
can inform an old partial-linker that will it not be able to accurately
process the declaration.
Note that any pre-release part to versions are ignored in this selection
process.
The file-linker can be configured, via the `unknownDeclarationVersionHandling`
property of `LinkerOptions`, to handle such a situation in one of three ways:
- `error` - the version mismatch is a fatal error
- `warn` - a warning is sent to the logger but the most recent partial-linker
will attempt to process the declaration anyway.
- `ignore` - the most recent partial-linker will, silently, attempt to process
the declaration.
The default is to throw an error.
Closes#41497
PR Close#41578
In version 12, applications will only be allowed to be built in Ivy, this makes the minified UMDs redundant since they cannot be processed by NGCC.
With this change, we remove the minified UMDs from the generated APF package.
BREAKING CHANGE: Minified UMD bundles are no longer included in the distributed NPM packages.
PR Close#41425
Update the supported range of node versions for Angular. Angular now
supports node >=12.14.1 to <16.0.0, dropping support for Node v10.
BREAKING CHANGE: Angular no longer maintains support for node v10
PR Close#41544