Changes would not propagate to a value in downgraded component in case you had two-way binding and listening to a value-change, e.g. [(value)]="value" (value-change)="fetch()"
Closes#22734
PR Close#22772
Previously, when a downgraded component was destroyed in a way that did
not trigger the `$destroy` event on the element (e.g. when a parent
element was removed from the DOM by Angular, not AngularJS), the
`ComponentRef` was not destroyed and unregistered.
This commit fixes it by listening for the `$destroy` event on both the
element and the scope.
Fixes#22392
PR Close#22400
`packages/upgrade/static/src` is anymlink to `packages/upgrade/src`.
Still, using the correct paths (e.g. using
`@angular/upgrade/static/src/...` for `@angula/upgrade/static` specs
ensures that the module loader (e.g. SystemJS) can map the imports to
the same instances.
PR Close#22167
This helps ensure we use the same tsconfig.json file for all compilations.
Next steps are to make it the same tsconfig.json file used by the editor
PR Close#20964
Add testability hook to downgraded component so that protractor can wait for asynchronous call to complete.
Add unregisterApplication() and unregisterAllApplications() to testability registry for cleaning up testability and unit test.
BREAKING CHANGE
It is no longer possible to declare classes in this format.
```
Component({...}).
Class({
constructor: function() {...}
})
```
This format would only work with JIT and with ES5. This mode doesn’t
allow build tools like Webpack to process and optimize the code, which
results in prohibitively large bundles. We are removing this API
because we are trying to ensure that everyone is on the fast path by
default, and it is not possible to get on the fast path using the ES5
DSL. The replacement is to use TypeScript and `@Decorator` format.
```
@Component({...})
class {
constructor() {...}
}
```
This change allows ReflectiveInjector to be tree shaken resulting
in not needed Reflect polyfil and smaller bundles.
Code savings for HelloWorld using Closure:
Reflective: bundle.js: 105,864(34,190 gzip)
Static: bundle.js: 154,889(33,555 gzip)
645( 2%)
BREAKING CHANGE:
`platformXXXX()` no longer accepts providers which depend on reflection.
Specifically the method signature when from `Provider[]` to
`StaticProvider[]`.
Example:
Before:
```
[
MyClass,
{provide: ClassA, useClass: SubClassA}
]
```
After:
```
[
{provide: MyClass, deps: [Dep1,...]},
{provide: ClassA, useClass: SubClassA, deps: [Dep1,...]}
]
```
NOTE: This only applies to platform creation and providers for the JIT
compiler. It does not apply to `@Compotent` or `@NgModule` provides
declarations.
Benchpress note: Previously Benchpress also supported reflective
provides, which now require static providers.
DEPRECATION:
- `ReflectiveInjector` is now deprecated as it will be remove. Use
`Injector.create` as a replacement.
closes#18496
(#17971)
This commit changes the dynamic version of ngUpgrade to use `UpgradeHelper`,
thus bringing its behavior (wrt upgraded components) much closer to
`upgrade/static`. Fixes/features include:
- Fix template compilation: Now takes place in the correct DOM context, instead
of in a detached node (thus has access to required ancestors etc).
- Fix support for the `$onInit()` lifecycle hook.
- Fix single-slot transclusion (including optional transclusion and fallback
content).
- Add support for multi-slot transclusion (inclusing optional slots and fallback
content).
- Add support for binding required controllers to the directive's controller
(and make the `require` behavior more consistent with AngularJS).
- Add support for pre-/post-linking functions.
(This also ports the fixes from #16627 to the dynamic version.)
Fixes#11044
(#17971)
Although, pre- and post-linking functions are correctly called during directive
linking, directives with `link.post` would throw an error. Interestingly, having
`link.pre` only or defining `link: fn` (which is an alias for `link.post: fn`)
would not throw.
This commit removes this check and allows directives with pre- and/or
post-linking functions to work.
Previously, only simple, single-slot transclusion worked on upgraded components.
This commit fixes/adds support for the following:
- Multi-slot transclusion.
- Using fallback content when no transclusion content is provided.
- Destroy unused scope (when using fallback content).
Fixes#13271
This wraps the $interval service when using upgrade to run the
$interval() call outside the Angular zone. However, the callback is
invoked within the Angular zone, so changes still propagate to
downgraded components.
Previously, non-bracketed inputs (e.g. `xyz="foo"`) on downgraded components
were initialized using `attrs.$observe()` (which uses `$evalAsync()` under the
hood), while bracketed inputs (e.g. `[xyz]="'foo'"`) were initialized using
`$watch()`. If the downgraded component was created during a `$digest` (e.g. by
an `ng-if` watcher), the non-bracketed inputs were not initialized in time for
the initial call to `ngOnChanges()` and `ngOnInit()`.
This commit fixes it by using `$watch()` to initialize all inputs. `$observe()`
is still used for subsequent updates on non-bracketed inputs, because it is more
performant.
Fixes#16212
Previously, when using a different property/attribute name for an upgraded
component's binding (e.g. `bindings: {propName: '<attrName'}`), the property and
attribute names were swapped (e.g. using `attrName` as the property name and
`propName` as the attribute name). This resulted in unexpected behavior.
This commit fixes this using the correct names for properties and attributes.
This only affects `upgrade/dynamic`. `upgrade/static` works correctly already.
Fixes#8856
PR Close#16128