Ensure that keyframes rules, defined within components with emulated
view encapsulation, are scoped to avoid collisions with keyframes in
other components.
This is achieved by renaming these keyframes to add a prefix that makes
them unique across the application.
In order to enable the handling of keyframes names defined as strings
the previous strategy of replacing quoted css content with `%QUOTED%`
(introduced in commit 7f689a2) has been removed and in its place now
only specific characters inside quotes are being replaced with
placeholder text (those are `;`, `:` and `,`, more can be added in
the future if the need arises).
Closes#33885
BREAKING CHANGE:
Keyframes names are now prefixed with the component's "scope name".
For example, the following keyframes rule in a component definition,
whose "scope name" is host-my-cmp:
@keyframes foo { ... }
will become:
@keyframes host-my-cmp_foo { ... }
Any TypeScript/JavaScript code which relied on the names of keyframes rules
will no longer match.
The recommended solutions in this case are to either:
- change the component's view encapsulation to the `None` or `ShadowDom`
- define keyframes rules in global stylesheets (e.g styles.css)
- define keyframes rules programmatically in code.
PR Close#42608
.substr() is deprecated so we replace it with functions which work similarily but aren't deprecated
Signed-off-by: Tobias Speicher <rootcommander@gmail.com>
PR Close#45397
When we have an event listener inside an embedded view, we generate a `restoreView` call which saves the view inside of the LFrame. The problem is that we don't clear it until it gets overwritten which can lead to memory leaks.
These changes rework the generated code in order to generate a `resetView` call which will clear the view from the LFrame.
Fixes#42848.
PR Close#43075
Angular contains an NgModule registry, which allows a user to declare
NgModules with string ids and retrieve them via those ids, using the
`getNgModuleById` API.
Previously, we attempted to structure this registration in a clever fashion
to allow for tree-shaking of registered NgModules (that is, those with ids).
This sort of worked due to the accidental alignment of behaviors from the
different tree-shakers involved. However, this trick relies on the
generation of `.ngfactory` files and how they're specifically processed in
various bundling scenarios. We intend to remove `.ngfactory` files, hence
we can no longer rely on them in this way.
The correct solution here is to recognize that `@NgModule({id})` is
inherently declaring a global side-effect, and such classes should not
really be eligible for tree-shaking in the first place. This commit removes
all the old registration machinery, and standardizes on generating a side-
effectful call to `registerNgModuleType` for NgModules that have ids.
There is some risk here that NgModules with unnecessary `id`s may not
tree-shake as a result of this change, whereas they would have in previous
circumstances. The fix here should be to remove the `id` if it's not needed.
Specifying an `id` is a request that the NgModule be retained regardless of
any other references, in case it is later looked up by string id.
PR Close#45024
The `compileNgModule` operation previously supported a flag `emitInline`,
which controlled whether template scoping information for the NgModule was
emitted directly into the compiled NgModule definition, or whether an
associated statement was generated which patched the information onto the
NgModule definition. Both options are useful in different contexts.
This commit changes this flag to an enum (and renames it), which allows for
a third option - do not emit any template scoping information. This option
is added to better represent the actual behavior of the Angular Linker,
which sometimes configures `compileNgModule` to use the side-effectful
statement generation but which does not actually emit such associated
statements. In other words, the linker effectively does not generate
scoping information for NgModules at all (in some configurations) and this
option more directly expresses that behavior.
This is a refactoring as no generated code is changed as a result of
introducing this flag, due to the linker's behavior of not emitting
associated statements.
PR Close#45024
Node.js v12 will become EOL on 2022-04-30. As a result, Angular CLI v14 will no longer support Node.js v12.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Support for Node.js v12 has been removed as it will become EOL on 2022-04-30. Please use Node.js v14.15 or later.
PR Close#45286
When parsing interpolations, the input string is _decoded_ from what was
in the orginal template. This means that we cannot soley rely on the input
string to compute source spans because it does not necessarily reflect
the exact content of the original template. Specifically, when there is
an HTML entity (i.e. ` `), this will show up in its decoded form
when processing the interpolation (' '). We need to compute offsets
using the original _encoded_ string.
Note that this problem only surfaces in the splitting of interpolations.
The spans to this point have already been tracked accurately. For
example, given the template ` <div></div>`, the source span for the
`div` is already correctly determined to be 6. Only when we encounter
interpolations with many parts do we run into situations where we need
to compute new spans for the individual parts of the interpolation.
PR Close#44811
The compiler generates code for the Angular runtime in `@angular/core` which
has to be the exact same version, as otherwise there may be version skew
between what the compiler generates and what the runtime supports. This would
result in hard to diagnose problems at runtime. By adding a peer dependency
for `@angular/compiler` on `@angular/core` we can let the package manager
report an error (NPM 7+) or warning (NPM 6, Yarn) during installation to
signal that the set of packages is incompatible.
PR Close#45267
In templates with several levels of nested nodes, it's common for several `elementStart`/`elementEnd` instructions to show up in a row which can be optimized away.
These changes add chaining support for `elementStart`, `elementEnd`, `elementContainerStart` and `elementContainerEnd` to shave off some bytes when possible.
PR Close#44994
Previously the logic for generating chained instructions was somewhat rigid, because we had to collect all of the calls ahead of time and then call one of the chained instruction helpers. This doesn't work for something like `elementStart`, because we have to descend into other elements that could add to the chain.
These changes refactor the code so that we collect the list of instructions in a flat array and we do the chaining only once at the end when we have the entire instruction set for the code block.
The new approach has the advantage of being (almost) entirely configuration-based via the `CHAINABLE_INSTRUCTIONS` array and being more flexible in allowing us to chain instructions that span across elements.
PR Close#44994
For two-way-bindings that use the banana-in-a-box syntax, the compiler
synthesizes an event assignment expression from the primary expression.
It is valid for the primary expression to be terminated by the non-null
operator, however naive string substitution is used for the synthesized
expression, such that the `!` would immediately precede the `=` token,
resulting in the valid `!=` operator token. The expression would still
parse correctly but it doesn't implement the proper semantics, resulting
in incorrect runtime behavior.
Changing the expression substitution to force a space between the
primary expression and the assignment avoids this mistake, but it
uncovers a new issue. The grammar does not allow for the LHS of an
assignment to be the non-null operator, so the synthesized expression
would fail to parse. To alleviate this, the synthesized expression is
parsed with a special parser flag to allow for this syntax.
Fixes#36551
PR Close#37809
This commit implements the first phase of standalone components in the Angular
compiler. This mainly includes the scoping rules for standalone components
(`@Component({imports})`).
Significant functionality from the design is _not_ implemented by this PR,
including:
* imports of standalone components into NgModules.
* the provider aspect of standalone components
Future commits will address these issues, as we proceed with the design of
this feature.
PR Close#44812
Refs http://b/214103351.
This happens if a user writes `<span i18n>Message</span>`. This is accepted as an internationalized message, but without a description. JSCompiler will throw an error in this situation because descriptions are generally required. Now, the Angular compiler will generate a suppression annotation so JSCompiler allows the syntax. This will ease an internal migration to JSCompiler-based i18n.
PR Close#44787
This commit removes the leftover `Identifiers` class that was used in the
ViewEngine compiler. The remaining usages of the `inlineInterpolate` and
`interpolate` instructions were refactored to make use of an
`InterpolationExpression` output expression to capture the argument list of an
interpolation expression. An attempt was made to refactor this further by
converting to the desired interpolation instruction immediately, but some
downstream consumers are designed in a way where the argument list itself is
needed, e.g. as other arguments need to be prepended/appended.
PR Close#44676
So-called "Quote expressions" were added in b6ec2387b3
to support foreign syntax to be used in Angular templates, requiring a custom
template transform to convert them somehow during compilation. Support for template
transforms was originally implemented in a43ed79ee7 but
has since been dropped. Since the compiler is not public API the quote expressions
should not have any usages anymore. Removing support for them can improve error
reporting for expressions that contain a `:`, e.g. binding to a URL without quotes:
```html
<a [href]="http://google.com">Click me</a>
```
Here, `http` would be parsed as foreign "http" quote expression with `//google.com` as
value, later reporting the error "Quotes are not supported for evaluation!" because
there was no template transform to convert that code.
Closes#40398
PR Close#44915
An `ng-template` with an inline template (i.e. has a structural
directive) would previously not get an `undefined` `tagName` because the
logic assumed the element would be `t.Element` or `t.Content` and read
the tag name from the `name` property. For a `t.Template`, this exists
instead on the `t.tagName`. The final result would be an `tagName` of `undefined`
for the parent `t.Template`, causing failures in the indexer downstream.
This `undefined` value is actually expected in the renderer code, even
though the type does not specify this possibility. This change updates
the type of `tagName` to be `string|null` and explicitly handles the
case where there is a structural directive on an `ng-template`. You can
see how the two are differentiated in the compliance code that was
modified in this commit.
PR Close#44788
The previous fix for correcting spans with comments in
59eef29a6c
had the unfortunate side effect of _breaking_ the spans with comments
when there was leading whitespace. This happened because the previous
fix was testing one without a comment, identifying that the offset shouldn't
have anything added to it, and then removing that offset adjustment
(`offsets[i] + (expressionText.length - sourceToLex.length)`).
Upon further investigation, this offset adjustment _was actually
necessary_ for when the input had comments, but this was only because
the `stripComments` function used `trim` to remove whitespace for these
cases. This is the real problem -- not only does it create a ton of confusion
but also it means that the behavior of the lexer and resulting spans is
different between inputs with comments and inputs without comments.
After reviewing how the `inputLength` of `_ParseAST` was used, it
appears that the correct behavior would be to _not_ trim the input. The
`inputLength` is used to advance the current index beyond points which
have been processed. This _should_ include any whitespace. Additionally,
`inputLength` doesn't appear to be needed at all. When there was no
comment in the input, it was always equal to the `input.length` anyways.
When there _is_ a comment, it should include that comment anyways to
advance the index beyond the comment.
PR Close#44785
The directive matching pass that happens during template compilation is
redundant, since directive matching has already happened during the resolution
phase of ngtsc and only matching declarables are provided to the template
compiler. In JIT mode the declarables only become available after the primary
template compilation has completed, so there is no need to perform directive
matching in both JIT and AOT mode.
PR Close#44731
When parsing a binding with a comment at the end of the expression, the
parser previously had logic to offset the parsed spans by the length of the
comment. This logic seemed not to serve any useful purpose, and instead
resulted in the corruption of the spans. For example, in the expression
`{{foo // comment}}`, the parser would map the parsed `foo` `PropertyRead`
node at the location of the characters 'ent' from the comment suffix.
This commit removes that logic, correcting the parsed spans of such nodes in
the presence of comments. Removing this logic does not seem to have caused
any tests to fail.
PR Close#44678
In `language-service`, the `checker.getDirectiveMetadata` doesn't return the animations meta of the `Component`.
but it's useful for animation completion.
PR Close#44630
To make our test output i.e. devmode output more aligned
with what we produce in the NPM packages, or to be more
aligned with what Angular applications will usually consume,
the devmode output is switched from ES5 to ES2015.
Additionally various tsconfigs (outside of Bazel) have been
updated to match with the other parts of the build. The rules
are:
ES2015 for test configurations, ES2020 for actual code that will
end up being shipped (this includes the IDE-only tsconfigs).
PR Close#44505
The Ivy compiler no longer generates code for type-checking purposes
using the output AST types. Instead, it uses TypeScript AST nodes and
its printer for type-checking. This commit removes the type-related
output nodes.
PR Close#44411
This commit improves the null-safety of the ng-content selector and
updates a comment that turned out to be slightly inaccurate.
Closes#38407
PR Close#44411
As mentioned in the previous commit, integration tests will be declared
in subpackages of `//integration`. For these tests to still rely on the
NPM packages from `HEAD`, we need to update the visibility.
PR Close#44238
This commit finishes the removal of View Engine from the codebase, deleting
those pieces of @angular/compiler which were only used for VE.
Co-Authored-By: JoostK <joost.koehoorn@gmail.com>
PR Close#44368
This commit removes the View Engine runtime. Itself, this change is
relatively straightforward, but it represents the final step in a multi-year
journey. It's only possible due to the hard work of many current and former
team members and collaborators, who are too numerous to list here.
Co-authored-by: Alan Agius <alan.agius4@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Kushnir <akushnir@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Scott <atscott01@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Seguin <andrewjs@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Cédric Exbrayat <cedric@ninja-squad.com>
Co-authored-by: Charles Lyding <19598772+clydin@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Dave Shevitz <dshevitz@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Doug Parker <dgp1130@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Dylan Hunn <dylhunn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Emma Twersky <emmatwersky@google.com>
Co-authored-by: George Kalpakas <kalpakas.g@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Igor Minar <iminar@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeremy Elbourn <jelbourn@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Jessica Janiuk <jessicajaniuk@google.com>
Co-authored-by: JiaLiPassion <JiaLi.Passion@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joey Perrott <josephperrott@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joost Koehoorn <joost.koehoorn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kristiyan Kostadinov <crisbeto@abv.bg>
Co-authored-by: Madleina Scheidegger <mscheid@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Thompson <2554588+MarkTechson@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Minko Gechev <mgechev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Gschwendtner <paulgschwendtner@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pawel Kozlowski <pkozlowski.opensource@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pete Bacon Darwin <pete@bacondarwin.com>
Co-authored-by: Wagner Maciel <wagnermaciel@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Zach Arend <zachzach@google.com>
PR Close#43884