- use only one IIFE and a ternary op in it, instead of invoking separate IIFEs in if-else
(this also completely fixed the same issue closed by PR #3597)
- also add a spec to verify usage of '$' property in expression object (e.g. `{$: 'a'}`)
Closes#5637
Code was evaluating !expression[key] while attempting to
see if the key was present, but this was evaluating to true for
false values as well as missing keys.
Closes#2797.
Previously, the number filter would format small and large numbers
as scientific notation. It now uses toFixed() to ensure that all
requested digits are shown.
This date {{2003-09-10T13:02:03.123456Z | date: yyyy-mm-dd ss} is now
treated as having 123.45ms. Previously it had 123456ms so 123 seconds
were added to the formatted date.
Use local date in unit tests so they work in any time zone
Add optional comparator function argument to $filter('filter')(array,
expression, comparator) such that the comparator function is used to
compare the values and predicates. When true, defaults to equality.
When missing defaults to substring matching.
When checking to add decimal and trialing 0s number filter used to check
trueness of fractionSize. "0" evaluating to true causes "123" to return "123."
This commit fixes#1261 and #1532. This covers
two separate issues:
- Positive timezones were being formatted without
a leading `+` resulting in a formatting string
like: "HH:MM:ssZ" giving "12:13:141000" instead
of "12:13:14+1000". Fixed by checking if timezone
is > 0 and adding a leading "+".
- Timezone output signs were inverted.
mock.TzDate expects the timezone _offset_ as it's
first argument, _not_ the timezone. This means
that a mock.TzDate with a positive offset should
result in a date string with a negative timezone,
and vice-versa.
Closes#1261, #1532
previously we were always parsing the string input as UTC which cased issues like:
{{ '2012-04-01' | date:'d MMM yyyy' }} renders as 31 Mar 2012
BREAKING CHANGE: string input without timezone info is now parsed as local time/date
Closes#847
IEEE 754 floating point sometimes results in values that are very small,
rather than zero. One example is 1.0 + 1.07 - 2.07, which returns
4.440892098500626e-16 instead of 0.
This change tweaks the number formatting logic so that an exponential
value with a negative exponent that is larger than the precision+1
returns 0 instead. For example: with precision 2, anything with an
exponent of -4, -5 or more would become 0. 9e-3 = 0.009 = 0.01, but 9e-4
= 0.0009 = 0.001 = 0.00. This detail is unlikely to matter since this
quirk is usually only triggered with values very close to zero.
Closes#1469
Makes the time zone optional in the date filter
Problem with the current R_ISO8601_STR regex was that the time was optional, but the zone was not.
This results in the filter not formatting local date times, which it could easily do.
For example:
2012-08-30 -> formatted
2012-08-30T06:06:06.123Z -> formatted
2012-08-30T06:06:06.123 -> NOT formatted
A simple change in the regex fixes this. Arguably this is closer to the ISO8601 spec which specifies
local dates being in the "current time zone" and not requiring a Z. In any case it behaves more like
a user would expect.
Create build for other modules as well (ngResource, ngCookies):
- wrap into a function
- add license
- add version
Breaks `$sanitize` service, `ngBindHtml` directive and `linky` filter were moved to the `ngSanitize` module. Apps that depend on any of these will need to load `angular-sanitize.js` and include `ngSanitize` in their dependency list: `var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['ngSanitize']);`
Breaks angular.fromJson which doesn't deserialize date strings into date objects.
This was done to make fromJson compatible with JSON.parse.
If you do require the old behavior - if at all neeeded then because of
json deserialization of XHR responses - then please create a custom
$http transform:
$httpProvider.defaults.transformResponse.push(function(data) {
// recursively parse dates from data object here
// see code removed in this diff for hints
});
Closes#202