This commit moves `DOMTestComponentRenderer` to `@angular/platform-browser/testing`, allowing the Angular CLI to eliminate its dependency on `@angular/platform-browser-dynamic`, which would no longer be required for new projects.
PR Close#60453
Currently when an incorrect value is in the `imports` array, we highlight the entire array which can be very noisy for large arrays. This comes up semi-regularly (at least for me) when an import is missing.
These changes add some logic that reports a more accurate diagnostic location for the most common case where the `imports` array is static. Non-static arrays will fall back to the current behavior.
PR Close#60455
This uses a fake timer scheduler implementation to ensure timer tests do not cause flakiness, similar to the incremental hydration tests.
PR Close#60461
With the recent changes to the APF bundling rules, we turned on
tree-shaking in rollup to support proper code splitting for FESM bundles.
This resulted in Rollup re-ordering imports in the FESM bundles of
`@angular/platform-browser-dynamic`— highlighting that over the past
years, this package "accidentally" resulted in the side-effects of the
compiler registering itself globally.
This continues to be the case, and our changes generally didn't cause
any issues in CLI applications because the CLI explicitly wires up the
compiler (as expected) before `-dynamic` is even loaded. For custom
setup, like Analog, this order change surfaced a breakage because e.g.
`@angular/common` with its JIT decorators of e.g. directives/services
are triggered before the compiler is actually loaded/made available.
This commit fixes this. The explicit imports in practice are a noop
because our FESM bundling doesn't recognize compiler as side-effects
true; but marking the whole -dynamic package as having side-effects;
prevents rollup from swapping the import order. Long-term, we should
look into improving this by teaching `ng_package` that e.g. the compiler
has side-effects; so that the `import @angular/compiler` statement is
not dropped when constructing FESM bundles.
PR Close#60458
`TestBed.get` isn't type safe and has been deprecated for several years now. These changes remove it from the public API and a follow-up change will add an automated migration to `TestBed.inject`.
BREAKING CHANGE:
* `TestBed.get` has been removed. Use `TestBed.inject` instead.
PR Close#60414
When the browser parses a valid html5 response like this:
```html
<!-- ... -->
<title>My page</title>
</head>
<!--nghm-->
<app-root></app-root>
<!-- ... -->
```
The resulting DOM will only start adding nodes to the body when it
runs into the first non-header tag. E.g.:
```yml
- head
- title "My page"
- comment "nghm"
- body
- app-root
```
This isn't a sign that comments are modified, so it seems worth to
handle it gracefully.
PR Close#60429
The semantics for nullish coalescing (`??`) in Javascript/Typescript
differ slightly from the semantics in Angular templates. Mixing nullish
coalescing with logical and/or without parentheses is an error in
Javascript. This PR adds an extended diagnostic that can be enabled to
treat it as an error in Angular templates as well.
PR Close#60279
This test often (but inconsitantly) timeouts with
```
Error: Timeout - Async function did not complete within 5000ms (set by jasmine.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL)
```
We suspect a racing condition within the RouterTestingHarness.
Until this has been investigated, we'll disable this test.
PR Close#60448
Reworks the language service to enable features like quick info and definitions inside host bindings.
**Note:** for the full range of language service features to work, the changes from https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/pull/2155 have to be released.
PR Close#60433
Note that this is not a public-facing change because the compiler is not
supposed to be used directly. See `public-api-surface.md`
We are changing this because in the current state, for advanced setups
like our Bazel infrastructure in Material, this peer dependency can
result in a cycle. That is because we may decide to link the
`@angular/core` package using the compiler-cli/compiler; while
transitively the compiler has a dependency on core. That's a cycle
(surfacing in Bazel w/ `rules_js`).
Dropping this optional peer dependency is acceptable because `core`,
since recently, also has an optional peer dependency on the compiler.
This one makes more sense and is also more user-facing (people generally
never install the compiler directly).
Notably the compiler does not have any runtime dependency on `core` and
this was purely added for some safety checking. See:
8c171da29f
PR Close#60437
In TSDoc, we currently handle the `@usageNotes` annotation, but this is not a standard TSDoc tag. Instead, the `@example` annotation is the correct standard, which is used in the Angular CLI repo and on the SSR package.
This change ensures that `@example` is treated the same as `@usageNotes` during the transform process and also handle multiple instances of `@example` on the same tag.
PR Close#60443
Adds a hook in the same style as `postSignalSetFn` for running side effects when a producer has been created. This hook will be passed the reactive node being created.
PR Close#60333
This commit removes the previously added `rejectErrors` option from
`toSignal` which was meant to create similar behavior to what happens
with unhandled errors in `AsyncPipe`.
This option promotes unhandled exceptions and attaches behaviors that we
do not believe are desirable as an option offered by the framework:
* Unhandled errors that are thrown lose the context of where the error
ocurred. Throwing the error where the signal is read allows error
handling to be performed at the signal's usage location
* With this feature, the value of the signal remains set to the initial
value or the previous successful value coming out of the `Observable`.
We do not feel this is appropriate implicit behavior but should be an
explicit choice by the application. Signals are built to represent
state. When an observable stream is converted to a stateful
representation, there should be a choice made about what state should
be presented when an error occurs
* If an error occurs but the signal value is never read in its error
state, this is not an application state error that should result in an
unhandled exception.
* While Angular does not have error boundaries today, there is likely to
be investigation in the near future to address increased risk of
errors thrown from signals such as this in templates. Without
pre-designing any specifics, it is possible that this type of feature
would require the error to be thrown from the signal. We are subsequently
not prepared to commit to stabilizing the `toSignal` API with the
`rejectErrors` option and its current behavior.
Developers that desire similar behavior to `rejectErrors` have several
options, the simplest of which would be something similar to
`toSignal(myStream.pipe(catchError(() => EMPTY)))`.
PR Close#60397
The `renderApplication` and `renderModule` methods currently encapsulate the entire rendering process, making it difficult to intercept key phases from a non-Angular context. This change exports the internal `render` method, allowing us to perform operations such as:
- Flushing headers before hydration preparation
- Handling non static redirects (e.g., 302 responses)
- Intercepting router events for additional processing
This refactor serves as an experimental step toward improving the API for better customization and integration in the future.
PR Close#60416
Angular DevTools now supports mutating objects underneath signals in the property explorer view.
This is done by performing an "immutable update" by recursively copying objects underneath a signal and overwriting the one property specified. For example, if the user attempted to set `foo.bar.baz[2].hello = 'world'` and `bar` was a signal, this would effectively become:
```typescript
foo.bar.set({
...foo.bar(),
baz: [
...foo.bar().baz.slice(0, 2),
{
...foo.bar().baz[2],
hello: 'world',
},
...foo.bar().baz.slice(3),
],
})
```
The motivation for immutable updates is because signals and Angular change detection don't really like interior mutability of signal values. If we didn't do this, any kind of comparison or dirty check would prevent the UI from updating. If an application attempts to change a deeply nested property inside a signal, it doesn't work today. DevTools should generally be limited to operations an application could do itself, and the recommended approach to make such a change like this is an immutable update. Creating entirely new objects intentionally breaks referential equality such that the application can properly react to the change.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to make immutable updates in a truly generic sense. You can't just copy a class for instance `({...new MyFoo()}).doSomething()`. We could do something fancier like manually copying over the prototype or something like that, but there is no way to do this without breaking class semantics (ex. the class might reasonably rely on the constructor being called). Therefore we instead reject any mutations to non-primitive objects. In the future, we might expand the set of "primitives" to include other built-ins and well-known objects like `URL` or `Element`, but those are out of scope for now.
I opted to ban mutating the result of a readonly/computed signal. While the mutation is likely to succeed, a subsequent rerun of the `computed` will immediately drop the change. However, I opted to allow mutating the result of a getter property. This has a similar problem because it might be returning a synthetic object which will be invalidated on the next execution, but it is possible and reasonable for a getter to return the same object multiple times such that a mutation may reasonably survive other updates. DevTools can't easily know whether a getter actually will return the same object on each execution or not, so we optimistically assume the reference is stable. If it isn't, the mutation will be lost whenever the getter is re-executed.
PR Close#60381
Sometimes `forest` can be empty if the provided roots are empty, and was leading to a "Cannot read `resolutionPath` of `undefined`" error. Now we check the forest has a tree in it before looking up `resolutionPath`.
There might be a separate issue with the fact that the backend script likely shouldn't be emitting an empty forest in the first place. However we already check that a resolution path exists at all, so I think it's fair to also check that a tree was provided. We can separately look into making sure the backend is emitting valid data.
PR Close#60403
Improves the partial compliance golden generation to not rely on large
files being transmitted via `stdout`. Instead the files are written
directly as it's done in idiomatic Bazel generation actions.
In addition, we add extra stdout logging for the Bazel action, to see if
the process is actually invoked in RBE workers. Right now those are
occassionally stuck, but neither us, nor the RBE team can see anything
running, and they're occasionally stuck for 1hr.
PR Close#60427
This commit updates the server rendering documentation and merges the prerendering, hybrid, and SSR sections for better clarity and organization.
Closes#52884 and closes#60079
PR Close#60383
Builds on the changes from #60137 to add support for two-way bindings on dynamically-created components. Example usage:
```typescript
import {createComponent, signal, twoWayBinding} from '@angular/core';
const value = signal('');
createComponent(MyCheckbox, {
bindings: [
twoWayBinding('value', value),
],
});
```
In the example above the value of `MyCheckbox` and the `value` signal will be kept in sync.
PR Close#60342
Historically Angular's type checking only extended to templates, however host bindings can contain expressions as well which can have type checking issues of their own. These changes expand the type checking infrastructure to cover the `host` object literal, `@HostBinding` decorators and `@HostListener` with full language service support coming in future commits.
Note that initially the new functionality is disabled by default and has to be enabled using the `typeCheckHostBindings` compiler flag.
PR Close#60267
Sets up the logic that produces the information necessary to type check host bindings of a component. Also introduces a compiler flag for toggling checking of host bindings.
PR Close#60267