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