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.
we now have two types of namespaces:
- true namespace: angular.* - used for all global apis
- virtual namespace: ng.*, ngMock.*, ... - used for all DI modules
the virual namespaces have services under the second namespace level (e.g. ng.)
and filters and directives prefixed with filter: and directive: respectively
(e.g. ng.filter:orderBy, ng.directive:ngRepeat)
this simplifies urls and makes them a lot shorter while still avoiding name collisions
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']);`
Instead of using our custom serializer we now use the native one and
use the replacer function to customize the serialization to preserve
most of the previous behavior (ignore $ and $$ properties as well
as window, document and scope instances).
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