Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Olivier Combe 0f5c70d563 build: update npm dependencies (#19328)
PR Close #19328
2017-09-22 13:20:52 -07:00
Victor Berchet cf269d9ff4 refactor: add license header to JS files & format files (#12081) 2016-10-04 20:39:20 -07:00
Chuck Jazdzewski 43d3a84df3 Revert "refactor: add license header to JS files & format files (#12035)"
This reverts commit 8310c91823.
2016-10-04 14:06:41 -07:00
Victor Berchet 8310c91823 refactor: add license header to JS files & format files (#12035) 2016-10-04 13:15:49 -07:00
Peter Bacon Darwin 7f22bd62ab test(angular_1_router): apply annotations to controller constructors
Until Angular 1.5.1 is released, the `$routeConfig` and `$routerCanActivate`
annotations for components must live on the controller constructor.

In Angular 1.5.1, it will automatically copy these annotations across from
the component definition file.

Closes #7319
2016-03-09 21:50:24 +00:00
Peter Bacon Darwin a1c3be21ec fix(angular1_router): rename `$route` service to `$rootRouter`
The singleton service that represents the top level router was called
`$router` but this is confusing since there are actually lots of routers,
which depend upon where you are in the DOM. This is similar to the situation
with scopes.

This commit clarifies this singleton by renaming it to `$rootRouter`.

BREAKING CHANGE:

The `$router` injectable service has been renamed to `$rootRouter`
2016-02-24 21:15:34 +00:00
Peter Bacon Darwin d4a4d81173 fix(angular1_router): support templateUrl components 2016-02-24 21:15:34 +00:00
Peter Bacon Darwin 72ab35bceb test(angular1_router): test that location handles query strings
See 6698
2016-02-08 16:18:13 -08:00
Alexander Bachmann c6036435f0 fix(router): don't prepend `/` unnecessarily to Location paths
Closes #6729
Closes #5502
2016-02-08 16:18:13 -08:00
Peter Bacon Darwin d86be245b8 fix(angular1-router): add support for using the component helper
In Angular 1.5 there is a new helper method for creating component directives.
See https://docs.angularjs.org/guide/component for more information about components.

These kind of directives only match the `E` element form and the previously component
router only created HTML that matched directives that matched the `A` attribute form.

This commit changes the `<ng-outlet>` directive so that it generates custom HTML
elements rather divs with custom attributes to trigger the relevant component to
appear in the DOM.

Going forward, Angular 1.5 users are encouraged to create their router components
using the following style:

```
myModule.componnet('component-name', {
  // component definition object
});
```

Closes angular/angular.js#13860
Closes #6076
Closes #5278

BREAKING CHANGE:

The component router now creates custom element HTML rather than custom attribute
HTML, in order to create a new component. So rather than

```html
<div custom-component></div>
```

it now creates

```html
<custom-component></custom-component>
```

If you defined you router components using the `directive()` helper and
specified the `restrict` properties such that element matching was not allowed,
e.g. `restrict: 'A'` then these components will no longer be instantiated
by the component router and the outlet will be empty.

The fix is to include `E` in the `restrict` property.

`restrict: 'EA'`

Note that this does not affect directives that did not specify the `restrict`
property as the default for this property is already `EA`.
2016-02-08 16:18:13 -08:00
Jeff Cross 604c8bbad5 refactor(lifecycle): prefix lifecycle methods with "ng"
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously, components that would implement lifecycle interfaces would include methods
like "onChanges" or "afterViewInit." Given that components were at risk of using such
names without realizing that Angular would call the methods at different points of
the component lifecycle. This change adds an "ng" prefix to all lifecycle hook methods,
far reducing the risk of an accidental name collision.

To fix, just rename these methods:
 * onInit
 * onDestroy
 * doCheck
 * onChanges
 * afterContentInit
 * afterContentChecked
 * afterViewInit
 * afterViewChecked
 * _Router Hooks_
 * onActivate
 * onReuse
 * onDeactivate
 * canReuse
 * canDeactivate

To:
 * ngOnInit,
 * ngOnDestroy,
 * ngDoCheck,
 * ngOnChanges,
 * ngAfterContentInit,
 * ngAfterContentChecked,
 * ngAfterViewInit,
 * ngAfterViewChecked
 * _Router Hooks_
 * routerOnActivate
 * routerOnReuse
 * routerOnDeactivate
 * routerCanReuse
 * routerCanDeactivate

The names of lifecycle interfaces and enums have not changed, though interfaces
have been updated to reflect the new method names.

Closes #5036
2015-11-30 16:40:50 -08:00
Brian Ford 6ddfff5cd5 refactor(router): improve recognition and generation pipeline
This is a big change. @matsko also deserves much of the credit for the implementation.

Previously, `ComponentInstruction`s held all the state for async components.
Now, we introduce several subclasses for `Instruction` to describe each type of navigation.

BREAKING CHANGE:

Redirects now use the Link DSL syntax. Before:

```
@RouteConfig([
	{ path: '/foo', redirectTo: '/bar' },
	{ path: '/bar', component: BarCmp }
])
```

After:

```
@RouteConfig([
	{ path: '/foo', redirectTo: ['Bar'] },
	{ path: '/bar', component: BarCmp, name: 'Bar' }
])
```

BREAKING CHANGE:

This also introduces `useAsDefault` in the RouteConfig, which makes cases like lazy-loading
and encapsulating large routes with sub-routes easier.

Previously, you could use `redirectTo` like this to expand a URL like `/tab` to `/tab/posts`:

@RouteConfig([
	{ path: '/tab', redirectTo: '/tab/users' }
	{ path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }

Now the recommended way to handle this is case is to use `useAsDefault` like so:

```
@RouteConfig([
	{ path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }

@RouteConfig([
	{ path: '/posts', component: PostsCmp, useAsDefault: true, name: 'Posts' },
	{ path: '/users', component: UsersCmp, name: 'Users' }
])
TabsCmp { ... }
```

In the above example, you can write just `['/Tab']` and the route `Users` is automatically selected as a child route.

Closes #4728
Closes #4228
Closes #4170
Closes #4490
Closes #4694
Closes #5200

Closes #5475
2015-11-30 17:06:03 +00:00
Alex Rickabaugh c5294c77d9 Revert "refactor(router): improve recognition and generation pipeline"
This reverts commit cf7292fcb1.

This commit triggered an existing race condition in Google code. More work is needed on the Router to fix this condition before this refactor can land.
2015-11-23 16:26:47 -08:00
Brian Ford cf7292fcb1 refactor(router): improve recognition and generation pipeline
This is a big change. @matsko also deserves much of the credit for the implementation.

Previously, `ComponentInstruction`s held all the state for async components.
Now, we introduce several subclasses for `Instruction` to describe each type of navigation.

BREAKING CHANGE:

Redirects now use the Link DSL syntax. Before:

```
@RouteConfig([
  { path: '/foo', redirectTo: '/bar' },
  { path: '/bar', component: BarCmp }
])
```

After:

```
@RouteConfig([
  { path: '/foo', redirectTo: ['Bar'] },
  { path: '/bar', component: BarCmp, name: 'Bar' }
])
```

BREAKING CHANGE:

This also introduces `useAsDefault` in the RouteConfig, which makes cases like lazy-loading
and encapsulating large routes with sub-routes easier.

Previously, you could use `redirectTo` like this to expand a URL like `/tab` to `/tab/posts`:

@RouteConfig([
  { path: '/tab', redirectTo: '/tab/users' }
  { path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }

Now the recommended way to handle this is case is to use `useAsDefault` like so:

```
@RouteConfig([
  { path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }

@RouteConfig([
  { path: '/posts', component: PostsCmp, useAsDefault: true, name: 'Posts' },
  { path: '/users', component: UsersCmp, name: 'Users' }
])
TabsCmp { ... }
```

In the above example, you can write just `['/Tab']` and the route `Users` is automatically selected as a child route.

Closes #4170
Closes #4490
Closes #4694
Closes #5200

Closes #5352
2015-11-20 23:18:43 +00:00
Brian Ford 5205a9e65f refactor(angular_1_router): use directives for route targets
BREAKING CHANGE:

Previously, route configuration took a controller constructor function as the value of
`component` in a route definition:

```
$route.config([
  { route: '/', component: MyController }
])
```

Based on the name of the controller, we used to use a componentMapper service to
determine what template to pair with each controller, how to bind the instance to
the $scope.

To make the 1.x router more semantically alligned with Angular 2, we now route to a directive.
Thus a route configuration takes a normalized directive name:

```
$route.config([
  { route: '/', component: 'myDirective' }
])
```

BREAKING CHANGE:

In order to avoid name collisions, lifecycle hooks are now prefixed with `$`. Before:

```
MyController.prototype.onActivate = ...
```

After:

```
MyController.prototype.$onActivate = ...
```

Same for `$canActivate` (which now lives on the directive factory function),
`$canDeactivate`, `$canReuse`, and `$onDeactivate` hooks.
2015-09-21 12:13:07 -07:00
Brian Ford acc2722cb8 refactor(router): rename navigate and navigateInstruction methods 2015-09-11 17:17:45 -07:00
Brian Ford ad1bd5fc11 refector(router): rename outlet integration spec to navigation spec
The new name better reflects the behavior under test.
2015-08-31 23:24:09 +00:00