In order to allow both signals and non-signals in two-way bindings, we have to pass the expression through `ɵunwrapWritableSignal`. The problem is that the language service uses a bundled compiler that is fairly new, but it may be compiling an older version of Angular that doesn't expose `ɵunwrapWritableSignal` (see https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/2001).
These changes add a `_angularCoreVersion` flag to the compiler which the language service can use to pass the parsed Angular version to the compiler which can then decide whether to emit the function.
PR Close#54423
When the `ts.Project` creates the language service plugin (in this case,
the Angular Language Service), it sets the project's language service to
the new language service returned by the plugin create:
https://sourcegraph.com/github.com/microsoft/TypeScript@b12af0fa2bbd4b015e59adcfb49988cea7f919a1/-/blob/src/server/project.ts?L2035-2044
The project may be reloaded in response to various events, such as a
change to the tsconfig file, which then recreates the plugin. When this
happens, the language service that gets passed to the plugin `create`
function will not be the typescript language service, but rather the
previous instance of the new language service returned by the last call
to `create`.
This commit ensures that subsequent calls to `create` for the
`NgLanguageService` plugin for a project after the first call are able
to retrieve and hold on to the _TypeScript_ language service.
fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1923
PR Close#51912
This commit removes the option to enable the VE language service and removes the VE bundle entirely.
It also updates the name of the ivy bundle to "language-service.js" now that there is only one.
PR Close#43723
As outlined in the previous commit which enabled the `esModuleInterop`
TypeScript compiler option, we need to update all namespace imports
for `typescript` to default imports. This is needed to allow for
TypeScript to be imported at runtime from an ES module.
Similar changes are needed for modules like `semver` where the types incorrectly
suggest named exports that will not exist at runtime when imported from ESM.
This commit refactors all imports to match with the lint rule we have
configured in the previous commit. See the previous commit for more
details on why certain imports have been changed.
A special case are the imports to `@babel/core` and `@babel/types`. For
these a special interop is needed as both default imports, or named
imports break the other module format. e.g default imports would work
well for ESM, but it breaks for CJS. For CJS, the named imports would
only work, but in ESM, only the default export exist. We work around
this for now until the devmode is using ESM as well (which would be
consistent with prodmode and gives us more valuable test results). More
details on the interop can be found in the `babel_core.ts` files (two
interops are needed for both localize/or the compiler-cli).
PR Close#43431
This method is the @angular/language-service side of the implementation
for https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1485
Given a location in a file, if the location is inside a component,
`getTemplateLocationForComponent` will return the `DocumentSpan` of the
inline `template` or the `DocumentSpan` for the file that the
`templateUrl` points to.
PR Close#43208
This commit adds a new configuration option, `forceStrictTemplates` to the
language service plugin to allow users to force enable `strictTemplates`.
This is needed so that the Angular extension can be used inside Google without
changing the underlying compiler options in the `ng_module` build rule.
PR Close#41062
Currently there are two entry points for the `@angular/language-service`
package:
- `@angular/language-service`
This default entry point is for View Engine LS. Through the redirection
of `main` field in `package.json`, it resolves to
`./bundles/language-service.js`.
- `@angular/language-service/bundles/ivy.js`
This secondary entry point is for Ivy LS.
TypeScript recently changed the behavior of tsserver to allow only package
names as plugin names [1] for security reasons. This means the secondary
entry point for Ivy LS can no longer be used.
We implemented a quick hack in the module resolver (in the extension repo)
to fix this, but the long term fix should be in `@angular/language-service`.
Here, the `main` field in `package.json` is changed to `index.js`, and in the
index file we conditionally load View Engine or Ivy based on the input config.
This eliminates the need for multiple entry points.
As part of this PR, I also removed all source code for View Engine and Ivy
included in the NPM package. Consumers of this package should run the bundled
output and nothing else. This would help us prevent an accidental import that
results in execution of unbundled code.
[1]: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/42713
PR Close#40967
Two motivations behind this change:
1. We would like to expose the types of the Language Service to external
users (like the VSCode extension) via the npm package, on the top
level of the package
2. We would like the View Engine and Ivy LS to share a common interface
(notably after the inclusion of `getTcb`, the Ivy LS upholds a
strict superset of `ts.LanguageService`; previously both VE and Ivy
LS were aligned on `ts.LanguageService`.)
To this end, this commit refactors the exports on the toplevel of the
`language-service/` package to just be types common to both the VE and
Ivy language services. The VE and Ivy build targets then import and use
these types accordingly, and the expectation is that an external user
will just import the relevant typings from the toplevel package without
diving into either the VE or Ivy sources.
Follow up on #40607
PR Close#40621