In the ServiceWorker tests, we use mock implementations of the various
events emitted during the ServiceWorker lifecycle. Previously, these
mock implementations were defined in the `testing/scope.ts` file. This
added several extra classes to a file that already contains a few,
making it harder to maintain.
Therefore, this commit moves these mock event classes to a separate
`testing/events.ts` file.
PR Close#42736
This commit makes the `SwTestHarness.envIsSupported()` static method a
standalone function. This function is used to determine whether the
current environment provides the necessary APIs to run the SW tests and
is independent of `SwTestHarness`, so is no need for it to be a static
method of `SwTestHarness`.
This is in preparation of switching from our custom typings to the
official TypeScript typings (`lib.webworker.d.ts`).
PR Close#42736
This commit removes the duplicate `Context` interface and uses the
`ExtendableEvent` interface instead.
This is in preparation of switching from our custom typings to the
official TypeScript typings (`lib.webworker.d.ts`).
PR Close#42736
The ServiceWorker needs to keep track of some metadata for unhashed
asset resources to know if/when they might need to be revalidated. This
applies to resources that do not exist on the filesystem at build-time
(and thus cannot be hashed), such as fonts or images loaded from
external sources. For hashed resources, this metadata is irrelevant,
because the hash is enough to verify that the content hasn't changed and
no revalidation is necessary.
Previously, the ServiceWorker would store such metadata for hashed
resources as well, even though it would never be used (thus taking up
space unnecessarily).
This commit fixes it by not storing metadata for hashed resources, i.e.
those that are included in an asset-group's `hashes` array.
PR Close#42606
Source files that contain directives or components that need an inline
type constructor or inline template type-check block would always be
considered as affected in incremental rebuilds. The inline operations
cause the source file to be updated in the TypeScript program that is
created for template type-checking, which becomes the reuse program
in a subsequent incremental rebuild.
In an incremental rebuild, the source files from the new user program
are compared to those from the reuse program. The updated source files
are not the same as the original source file from the user program, so
the incremental engine would mark the file which needed inline
operations as affected. This prevents incremental reuse for these files,
causing sub-optimal rebuild performance.
This commit attaches the original source file for source files that have
been updated with inline operations, such that the incremental engine
is able to compare source files using the original source file.
Fixes#42543
PR Close#42759
DTS bundling, will cause originally namespaced imports become namespace declarations within the same file. Example:
Before bundling
```ts
import * as i1 from './router';
export declare class RouterModule {
constructor(guard: any, router: Router);
static ɵmod: i0.ɵɵNgModuleDeclaration<RouterModule, [typeof i1.RouterOutlet...]>;
}
```
After bundling
```
declare namespace i1 {
export {
RouterOutletContract,
RouterOutlet
}
}
export declare class RouterModule {
constructor(guard: any, router: Router);
static ɵmod: i0.ɵɵNgModuleDeclaration<RouterModule, [typeof i1.RouterOutlet...]>;
}
```
And therefore this commit adds support for reflecting types that are defined in such namespace declarations.
Closes#42064
PR Close#42728
Updates the api-extractor dependencies of the repository, and within
the `@angular/bazel` package so that TypeScript 4.3 is supported when
a flattened typings file is generated. Without this update, the api
extractor could fail if a referenced tsconfig use a TS 4.3-only option such as
`noImplicitOverride`.
Note: This could also be considered a `feat:` for `@angular/bazel`,
but this package is not part of the public API anyway and we'd want
that change to land in the patch branches too (to keep the goldens
in sync between release branches as much as possible)
PR Close#42737
Historically, our Language Service was built with the potential to be a
drop-in replacement for the TypeScript Language Service with the added
benefit of being able to provide Angular-specific information as well.
While our VSCode extension does not use the Language Service in this
way, it appears that other community-contributed plugins do. We don't
really officially support this use-case but there's not real reason for
us to override the TypeScript Language Service's
implementation in the VE Angular Language Service so that it returns
`undefined`. As with other non-implemented methods, we can just allow
this to be deferred to TSLS.
fixes#42715
PR Close#42727
When the template type checker try to get a symbol of a template node, it will
not return the directives intended for an element on a microsyntax template,
for example, `<div *ngFor="let user of users;" dir>`, the `dir` will be skipped,
but it's needed in language service.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1420
PR Close#42640
When `TestBed.compileComponents` is called under ViewEngine, we kick off a compilation and return a promise that resolves once the compilation is done. In most cases the consumer doesn't _have_ to await the returned promise, unless their components have external resources.
The problem is that the test could be over by the time the promise has resolved, in which case we still cache the factory of the test module. This becomes a problem if another compilation is triggered right afterwards, because it'll see that we still have a `_moduleFactory` and it won't recreate the factory.
These changes resolve the issue by saving a reference to the module type that is being compiled and checking against it when the promise resolves.
Note that while this problem was discovered while trying to roll out the new test module teardown behavior in the Components repo (https://github.com/angular/components/pull/23070), it has been there for a long time. The new test behavior made it more apparent.
PR Close#42669
As of ES2021, JavaScript allows using underscores as separators inside numbers, in order to make them more readable (e.g. `1_000_000` vs `1000000`). TypeScript has had support for separators for a while so these changes expand the template parser to handle them as well.
PR Close#42672
Previously, if there were two tags with the same "name" or "property" attribute selector,
then only the first was checked for duplicates when deciding whether to add a new meta
tag.
Fixes#42700Fixes#19606
PR Close#42703
Previously, the SW was only able to clean up caches for app-versions
found in the `Driver`'s `versions` map. If (for some reason) the
`Driver` failed to load a valid stored state (including app-versions)
and ended up with an [empty `versions` map][1], any obsolete versions
would remain in the cache storage. This case was rare but possible.
This commit makes the cache clean-up logic more robust by ensuring that
all app-version caches are removed unless they are currently used by the
SW to serve active clients (with the exception of the latest
app-version, which is always retained).
Fixes#41728
[1]: 9de65dbdce/packages/service-worker/worker/src/driver.ts (L515-L529)
PR Close#42622
Previously, obsolete caches were only cleaned up when successfully
loading the stored state. When the state failed to be loaded, cleaning
up the caches would be skipped until the next SW initialization.
This commit changes this, ensuring that the caches are cleaned up
regardless if the stored state was loaded successfully or not.
PR Close#42622
This commit simplifies/systemizes accessing the `CacheStorage` through a
wrapper, with the following benefits:
- Ensuring a consistent cache name prefix is used for all caches
(without having to repeat the prefix in different places).
- Allowing referring to caches using their name without the common
cache name prefix.
- Exposing the cache name on cache instances, which for example makes it
easier to delete caches without having to keep track of the name used
to create them.
PR Close#42622
This commit improves the cache names generated by the ServiceWorker by
making them shorter and non-repetitive. In particular, the following
changes are made:
- Data-group cache names no longer include the `dynamic` infix, since it
does not add any value.
Before: `ngsw:<...>:data:dynamic:<...>`
After: `ngsw:<...>:data:<...>`
- `CacheDatabase` table names no longer include the `ngsw:<path>` prefix
twice.
Before: `ngsw:<path>:db:ngsw:<path>:<...>`
After: `ngsw:<path>:db:<...>`
NOTE 1:
This change will result in different cache names being generated for the
same app-versions with the new SericeWorker script. This means that some
of the previously cached data will need to be re-downloaded (because the
ServiceWorker will not be able to re-use the old caches), but that
should be transparent for the end user.
While possible, adding logic to allow the ServiceWorker to retrieve data
from the old caches is not worth the extra complecity and maintenance
cost.
NOTE 2:
Generating different cache names for some of the caches means that the
ServiceWorker will not be able to clean-up some of the old caches. This
will be taken care of in a subsequent commit that will rework the
clean-up logic to be more robust (covering changes such as this one and
other edgecases).
PR Close#42622
`CacheDatabase` uses the un-prefixed table names to interact with
database tables. However, the `list()` method returns the raw, prefixed
table names (which are not useful, since they cannot be used to
open/delete a table).
This commit fixes this by removing the prefix from the cache names
returned by the `list()` method.
NOTE:
This method is currently not used anywhere, so this change does not
affect the ServiceWorker behavior.
PR Close#42622
This commit includes the ServiceWorker version in the debug info shown
at `/ngsw/state` to make it easier to know what version of the
ServiceWorker script is controlling the page.
PR Close#42622
This commit makes some minor refactorings to improve the code
readability and maintainability, including:
- Avoiding code duplication.
- Using more descriptive variable names.
- Using `async/await` instead of `Promise#then()`.
- Accessing variables directly instead of via `this` when possible.
PR Close#42622
The previous default algorithm was `md5`, which is not compliant with FIPS.
The default is now set to `sha256`, which is compliant.
Fixes#42577
PR Close#42582
The hash algorithm for the entry-point manifest was hardcoded to `md5`.
This can now be configured by the `hashAlgorithm` property on the
ngcc.config.js project configuration.
PR Close#42582
The ngcc configuration gets hashed to be used when caching
but it was hardcoded to use the `md5` algorithm, which is
not FIPS compliant.
Now the hash algorithm can be configured in the ngcc.config.js
file at the project level.
PR Close#42582
Add `openWindow`, `focusLastFocusedOrOpen` and `navigateLastFocusedOrOpen` abilty to the notificationclick handler such that when either a notification or notification action is clicked the service-worker can act accordinly without the need for the app to be open
PR Close#26907
PR Close#42520
Previously the lexer would break out of consuming a text token if it contains
a `<` character. Then if the next characters did not indicate an HTML syntax
item, such as a tag or comment, then it would start a new text token. These
consecutive text tokens are then merged into each other in a post tokenization
step.
In the commit before this, interpolation no longer leaks across text tokens.
The approach given above to handling `<` characters that appear in text is
no longer adequate. This change ensures that the lexer only breaks out of
a text token if the next characters indicate a valid HTML tag, comment,
CDATA etc.
PR Close#42605
When consuming a text token, the lexer tracks whether it is reading characters
from inside an interpolation so that it can identify invalid ICU expressions.
Inside an interpolation there will be no ICU expression so it is safe to
have unmatched `{` characters, but outside an interpolation this is an error.
Previously, if an interpolation was started, by an opening marker (e.g. `{{`)
in a text token but the text came to an end before the closing marker (e.g. `}}`)
then the lexer was not clearing its internal state that tracked that it was
inside an interpolation. When the next text token was being consumed,
the lexer, incorrectly thought it was already within an interpolation.
This resulted in invalid ICU expression errors not being reported.
For example, in the following snippet, the first text block has a prematurely
ended interpolation, and the second text block contains an invalid `{` character.
```
<div>{{</div>
<div>{</div>
```
Previously, the lexer would not have identified this as an error. Now there
will be an EOF error that looks like:
```
TS-995002: Unexpected character "EOF"
(Do you have an unescaped "{" in your template? Use "{{ '{' }}") to escape it.)
```
PR Close#42605
The ServiceWorker assigns an app-version to a each client to ensure that
all subsequent requests for a client are served using the same
app-version. The assignment is done based on the client ID.
Previously, the ServiceWorker would only try to read the client's ID off
of the `FetchEvent`'s `clientId` property. However, for navigation
requests the new client's ID will be set on [resultingClientId][1],
while `clientId` will either be empty or hold the ID of the client where
the request initiated from. See also related discussions in
w3c/ServiceWorker#870 and w3c/ServiceWorker#1266.
In theory, this could lead to the navigation request (i.e. `index.html`)
being served from a different app-version than the subsequent
sub-resource requests (i.e. assets). In practice, the likelihood of this
happening is probably very low though, since it would require the latest
app-version to be updated between the initial navigation request and the
first sub-resource request, which should happen very shortly after the
navigation request.
This commit ensures that the correct client ID is determined even for
navigation requests by also taking the `resultingClientId` property into
account.
[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FetchEvent/resultingClientId
PR Close#42607
Adds support for shorthand property declarations inside Angular templates. E.g. doing `{foo, bar}` instead of `{foo: foo, bar: bar}`.
Fixes#10277.
PR Close#42421
Previously, the template type checker would only opt-in to inline type
constructors if it could import all type references from absolute module
specifiers. This limitation was put into place in an abundance of
caution as there was a safe, but less performant, fallback available.
The language service is not capable of using this fallback, which now
means that the limitation of absolute module specifiers limits the
language service's ability to use accurate types for component/directive
classes that have generic type parameters.
This commit loosens the restriction such that type references are now
eligible for emit as long as they are exported.
PR Close#42492
When a component/directive has a generic type parameter, the template
type checker attempts to translate the type parameter such that the
type parameters can be replicated in the type constructor that is
emitted into the typecheck file.
Type parameters with a default clause would incorrectly be emitted into
the typecheck file using the original `ts.TypeNode` for the default
clause, such that `ts.TypeReferenceNode`s within the default clause
would likely be invalid (i.e. referencing a type for which no import is
present in the typecheck file). This did not result in user-facing
type-check errors as errors reported in type constructors are not
translated into template positions Regardless, this commit ensures that
`ts.TypeReferenceNode`s within defaults are properly translated into the
typecheck file.
PR Close#42492
The template type checker is capable of recreating generic type bounds
in a different context, rewriting type references along the way (if
possible). This was previously done using a visitor that only supported
a limited set of types, resulting in the inability to emit all sorts of
types (even if they don't contain type references at all).
The inability to emit generic type bounds was not critical when the type
parameter emitting logic was introduced, as the compiler also has a
fallback strategy of creating inline type constructors. However, this
fallback is not available to the language service, resulting in
inaccurate types when components/directives use a complex generic type.
To mitigate this problem, the specialized visitor has been replaced with
a generalized TypeScript transform, where only type references get
special treatment. This allows for more complex types to be emitted,
such as union and intersection types, object literal types and tuple
types.
PR Close#42492
If an implcit receiver is accessed in a listener inside of an `ng-template`, we generate some extra code in order to ensure that we're assigning to the correct object. The problem is that the logic wasn't covering keyed writes which caused it to write to the wrong object and throw an assertion error at runtime.
These changes expand the logic to cover keyed writes.
Fixes#41267.
PR Close#42603
xi18n is the operation of extracting i18n messages from templates in the
compilation. Previously, only View Engine was able to perform xi18n. This
commit implements xi18n in the Ivy compiler, and a copy of the View Engine
test for Ivy verifies that the results are identical.
PR Close#42485
This commit moves some xi18n-related functions in the View Engine
ng.Program into a new file. This is necessary in order to depend on them
from the Ivy ng.Program while avoiding a cycle.
PR Close#42485
Updates to TypeScript 4.3.4 which contains a fix for a printer
regression that caused unexpected JavaScript output with our
compiler transforms.
See: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/44070.
Updates to TypeScript 4.3.4 which contains a fix for a printer
PR Close#42600
The addition of overloads to some of the number pipes caused
the documentation to lose the parameter descriptions.
This change fixes that by moving the JSDOC block in from of the
primary method signature, rather than the first overload.
Fixes#42590
PR Close#42593
This is something I ran into while working on a fix for the `TestBed` module teardown behavior for #18831. In the `RouterInitializer.appInitializer` we have a callback to the `LOCATION_INITIALIZED` which has to do some DI lookups. The problem is that if the module is destroyed before the location promise resolves, the `Injector.get` calls will fail. This is unlikely to happen in a real app, but it'll show up in unit tests once the test module teardown behavior is fixed.
PR Close#42560
We currently have two long-standing issues related to how `TestBed` tests are torn down:
1. The dynamically-created test module isn't going to be destroyed, preventing the `ngOnDestroy` hooks on providers from running and keeping the component `style` nodes in the DOM.
2. The test root elements aren't going to be removed from the DOM. Instead, they will be removed whenever another test component is created.
By themselves, these issues are easy to resolve, but given how long they've been around, there are a lot of unit tests out there that depend on the broken behavior.
These changes address the issues by introducing APIs that allow users to opt into the correct test teardown behavior either at the application level via `TestBed.initTestEnvironment` or the test suite level via `TestBed.configureTestingModule`.
At the moment, the new teardown behavior is opt-in, but the idea is that we'll eventually make it opt-out before removing the configuration altogether.
Fixes#18831.
PR Close#42566
Previously, the "go to definition" action did no account for the
possibility that something may actually be defined in a template. This
change updates the logic in the definition builder to convert any
results that are locations in template typecheck files to their
corresponding locations in the template.
PR Close#42559
Unclosed element tags are not assigned an `endSourceSpan` by the parser.
As a result, the visitor which determines the target node at a position
for the language service was unable to determine that a given position
was inside an unclosed parent. This happens because we update the
`endSourceSpan` of template/element nodes to be the end tag (and there
is not one for unclosed tags). Consequently, the visitor then cannot
match a position to any child node location.
This change updates the visitor logic to check if there are any
`children` of a template/element node and updates the end span to be the
end span of the last child. This allows our `isWithin` logic to identify
that a child position is within the unclosed parent.
Addresses one of the issues found during investigation of https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1399
PR Close#42554
This commit updates the parser logic to continue to try to match an end
tag to an unclosed open tag on the stack. Previously, it would only
push an error to the list and stop looking at unclosed elements.
For example, the invalid HTML of `<li><div></li>`, has an unclosed
element stack of [`li`, `div`] when it encounters the close `li` tag.
We compare against the previously unclosed tag `div` and see that this is
unexpected. Instead of simply giving up here, we continue to move up the
unclosed tags until we find a match (if there is one).
PR Close#42554
Within Google, closure compiler is used for dealing with translations.
We generate a closure-compatible locale file that allows for
registration within Angular, so that Closure i18n works well together
with Angular applications. Closure compiler does not limit its
locales to BCP47-canonical locale identifiers. This commit updates
the generation logic so that we also support deprecated (but aliased)
locale identifiers, or other aliases which are likely used within
Closure. We use CLDR's alias supplemental data for this. It instructs
us to alias `iw` to `he` for example. `iw` is still supported in Closure.
Note that we do not manually extract all locales supported in Closure;
instead we only support the CLDR canonical locales (as done before) +
common aliases that CLDR provides data for. We are not aware of other
locale aliases within Closure that wouldn't be part of the CLDR aliases.
If there would be, then Angular/Closure would fail accordingly.
PR Close#42230
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
When a FormControl, FormArray, or FormGroup is first constructed, if an async validator is attached, the `statusChanges` observable should receive a message when the validator complete (i.e. pending -> valid/invalid). If the validator was provided as part of the constructor options, it was not fired at construction time, which is fixed in this PR.
Fixes#35309.
PR Close#42553
We can’t determine whether the user actually meant the `back` or
the `forward` using the popstate event (triggered by a browser
back/forward)
so we instead need to store information on the state and compute the
distance the user is traveling withing the browser history.
So by using the `History#go` method,
we can bring the user back to the page where he is supposed to be after
performing the action.
implementation for #13586
PR Close#38884
Close#41867
In the previous commit https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/41562#issuecomment-822696973,
the error thrown in the event listener will be caught and re-thrown, but there is a bug
in the commit, if there is only one listener for the specified event name, the error
will not be re-thrown, so this commit fixes the issue and make sure the error is re-thrown.
PR Close#41868
In watch builds, the compiler attempts to reuse as much information from
a prior compilation as possible. To accomplish this, it keeps a
reference to the most recently succeeded `TraitCompiler`, which contains
all analysis data for the program. However, `TraitCompiler` has an
internal reference to an `IncrementalBuild`, which is itself built on
top of its prior state. Consequently, all prior compilations continued
to be referenced, preventing garbage collection from cleaning up these
instances.
This commit changes the `AnalyzedIncrementalState` to no longer retain
a `TraitCompiler` instance, but only the analysis data it contains. This
breaks the retainer path to the prior incremental state, allowing it to
be garbage collected.
PR Close#42537
Previously the autoRegisterModuleById registration was marked with noSideEffects wrapper to ensure that we don't end up retaining all NgModules.
However the return value was not referenced by anything, so closure compiler removed it because it determined that this code has no side effects and is not referenced by anyone.
This issue affects apps that use Closure Compiler and also rely on https://angular.io/api/core/getModuleFactory to retrieve factories by ID. This combination is used heavily in google3, especially in Pantheon.
Fixes b/188453434
PR Close#42529
`onSameUrlNavigation` only affects whether the Angular Router
processes the URL and runs it through the navigation pipeline,
retriggering redirects, guards, and resolvers. The name `reload` is a
little confusing because it does _not_ reload the component. Developers
_also_ need to implement a custom `RouteReuseStrategy` to trigger a
component reload on same URL navigation.
Fixes#21115
PR Close#42275
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.
This reverts commit 00b1444d12, undoing the rollback of this change.
PR Close#42132
corrects a bug that resulted in query params such as
`[queryParams]={a: 1, b:[]}` being serialized as 'a=1&'
instead of 'a=1'
resolves#42445
PR Close#42481
These notes are copied from `ViewChild`. In addition, `ContentChildren` and `ViewChildren`
can specify multiple string selectors by separating each selector by a
comma.
fixes#21734
PR Close#42366
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