With this commit, the language service will first try to locate a
pre-compiled style file with the same name when a `css` is provided in
the `styleUrls`. This prevents a missing resource diagnostic for when the
compiled file is not available in the language service environment and also
allows "go to definition" to go to that pre-compiled file.
Fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1263
PR Close#41538
In environments such as the Language Service where inline type-checking code
is not supported, the compiler would previously produce a diagnostic when a
template would require inlining to check. This happened whenever its
component class had generic parameters with bounds that could not be safely
reproduced in an external TCB. However, this created a bad user experience
for the Language Service, as its features would then not function with such
templates.
Instead, this commit changes the compiler to use the same strategy for
inline TCBs as it does for inline type constructors - falling back to `any`
for generic types when inlining isn't available. This allows the LS to
support such templates with slightly weaker type-checking semantics, which
a test verifies. There is still a case where components that aren't
exported require an inline TCB, and the compiler will still generate a
diagnostic if so.
Fixes#41395
PR Close#41513
Adds perf tracing for the public methods in LanguageService. If the log level is verbose or higher,
trace performance results to the tsServer logger. This logger is implemented on the extension side
in angular/vscode-ng-language-service.
PR Close#41319
The Ivy Language Service uses the compiler's template type-checking engine,
which honors the configuration in the user's tsconfig.json. We recommend
that users upgrade to `strictTemplates` mode in their projects to take
advantage of the best possible type inference, and thus to have the best
experience in Language Service.
If a project is not using `strictTemplates`, then the compiler will not
leverage certain type inference options it has. One case where this is very
noticeable is the inference of let- variables for structural directives that
provide a template context guard (such as NgFor). Without `strictTemplates`,
these guards will not be applied and such variables will be inferred as
'any', degrading the user experience within Language Service.
This is working as designed, since the Language Service _should_ reflect
types exactly as the compiler sees them. However, the View Engine Language
Service used its own type system that _would_ infer these types even when
the compiler did not. As a result, it's confusing to some users why the
Ivy Language Service has "worse" type inference.
To address this confusion, this commit implements a suggestion diagnostic
which is shown in the Language Service for variables which could have been
narrowed via a context guard, but the type checking configuration didn't
allow it. This should make the reason why variables receive the 'any' type
as well as the action needed to improve the typings much more obvious,
improving the Language Service experience.
Fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1155
Closes#41042
PR Close#41072
The compiler considers template diagnostics to "belong" to the source file
of the component using the template. This means that when diagnostics for
a source file are reported, it returns diagnostics of TS structures in the
actual source file, diagnostics for any inline templates, and diagnostics of
any external templates.
The Language Service uses a different model, and wants to show template
diagnostics in the actual .html file. Thus, it's not necessary (and in fact
incorrect) to include such diagnostics for the actual .ts file as well.
Doing this currently causes a bug where external diagnostics appear in the
TS file with "random" source spans.
This commit changes the Language Service to filter the set of diagnostics
returned by the compiler and only include those diagnostics with spans
actually within the .ts file itself.
Fixes#41032
PR Close#41070
The current logic in the compiler is to bail when there are errors when
parsing a template into an HTML AST or when there are errors in the i18n
metadata. As a result, a template with these types of parse errors
_will not have any information for the language service_. This is because we
never attempt to conver the HTML AST to a template AST in these
scenarios, so there are no template AST nodes for the language service
to look at for information. In addition, this also means that the errors
are never displayed in the template to the user because there are no
nodes to map the error to.
This commit adds an option to the template parser to temporarily ignore
the html parse and i18n meta errors and always perform the template AST
conversion. At the end, the i18n and HTML parse errors are appended to
the returned errors list. While this seems risky, it at least provides
us with more information than we had before (which was 0) and it's only
done in the context of the language service, when the compiler is
configured to use poisoned data (HTML parse and i18n meta errors can be
interpreted as a "poisoned" template).
fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1140
PR Close#41068
Report non-template diagnotics when calling `getDiagnotics` function of
the language service we only returned template diagnotics. This change
causes it to return all diagnotics, not just diagnostics from the
template type checker.
PR Close#40331
Durring analysis we find template parse errors. This commit changes
where the type checking context stores the parse errors. Previously, we
stored them on the AnalysisOutput this commit changes the errors to be
stored on the TemplateData (which is a property on the shim). That way,
the template parse errors can be grouped by template.
Previously, if a template had a parse error, we poisoned the module and
would not procede to find typecheck errors. This change does not poison
modules whose template have typecheck errors, so that ngtsc can emit
typecheck errors for templates with parse errors.
Additionally, all template diagnostics are produced in the same place.
This allows requesting just the template template diagnostics or just
other types of errors.
PR Close#40026
In preparation for in-memory testing infrastructure, the existing Ivy
language service tests are moved to a `legacy` directory. These existing
tests rely on a single integration project in `test/project/app`, which
presents a number of challenges:
* adding extra fields/properties to the integration project for one test
can cause others to fail/flake.
* it's especially difficult to test any cases that require introducing
intentional errors, as those tend to break other tests.
* tests load files from disk, which is slower.
* tests rely on the real built versions of @angular/core and
@angular/common, which makes them both slow to build and require rebuilds
on every compiler change.
* tests share a single tsconfig.json, making it extremely difficult to test
how the language service handles different configuration scenarios (e.g.
different type-checking flags).
PR Close#39594
Test harness `setup()` is expensive, in the order of ~2.5 seconds.
We could speed up `fit()` tests considerably if `setup()` is wrapped
in `beforeAll()` to avoid running it unnecessarily.
PR Close#39305
This PR enables `getSemanticDiagnostics()` to be called on external templates.
Several changes are needed to land this feature:
1. The adapter needs to implement two additional methods:
a. `readResource()`
Load the template from snapshot instead of reading from disk
b. `getModifiedResourceFiles()`
Inform the compiler that external templates have changed so that the
loader could invalidate its internal cache.
2. Create `ScriptInfo` for external templates in MockHost.
Prior to this, MockHost only track changes in TypeScript files. Now it
needs to create `ScriptInfo` for external templates as well.
For (1), in order to make sure we don't reload the template if it hasn't
changed, we need to keep track of its version. Since the complexity has
increased, the adapter is refactored into its own class.
PR Close#39065
In many testing scenarios, there is a common pattern:
1. Overwrite template (inline or external)
2. Find cursor position
3. Call one of language service APIs
4. Inspect spans in result
In order to faciliate this pattern, this commit refactors
`MockHost.overwrite()` and `MockHost.overwriteInlineTemplate()` to
allow a faux cursor symbol `¦` to be injected into the template, and
the methods will automatically remove it before updating the script snapshot.
Both methods will return the cursor position and the new text without
the cursor symbol.
This makes testing very convenient. Here's a typical example:
```ts
const {position, text} = mockHost.overwrite('template.html', `{{ ti¦tle }}`);
const quickInfo = ngLS.getQuickInfoAtPosition('template.html', position);
const {start, length} = quickInfo!.textSpan;
expect(text.substring(start, start + length)).toBe('title');
```
PR Close#38552
This commit adds a Compiler interface that wraps the actual ngtsc
compiler. The language-service specific compiler manages multiple
typecheck files using the Project interface, creating and adding
ScriptInfos as necessary.
This commit also adds `overrideInlineTemplate()` method to the mock
service so that we could test the Compiler diagnostics feature.
PR Close#36930