The change to prevent <span> elements being wrapped around empty text nodes caused these empty text nodes to have scopes and controllers attached, through jqLite.data() calls, which led to memory leaks and errors in IE8.
Now we exclude all but document nodes and elements from having jqLite.data() set both in the compiler and in ng-view.
Fixes: #1968 and #1876
Apparently there is a really weird bug in IE6-8 that causes anchor textContent
to be reset with href content when both contain @ symbol.
Inserting a bogus comment node into all anchor elements in IE works around this
browser bug.
I'm fixing the issue via directive because that way we'll fix it for jQuery as
well.
I fixed an e2e test too because it was incorrect.
Closes#1949
The leak can occur when ngSwich is used inside ngRepeat or any other
directive which is destroyed while its transcluded content (which
includes ngSwitch) is not attached to the DOM.
Refactor ngSwitch to use controller instead of storing data on compile
node. This means that we don't need to clean up the jq data cache.
Controller reference is released when the linking fn is released.
Closes#1621
If the $last property is calculated from the original collectionLength
on an object and properties starting with $ were filtered out, then $last
is never applied and $middle is applied erroniously.
Closes#1789
This reverts commit c81d8176cc.
This commit causes several issues (#1651, #1674, #1662) and doesn't even
contain a test that proves that anything on Opera got actually fixed.
If the original Opera resurfaces, we'll fix it properly.
I'm reverting changes that were originally done to ngRepeat to fix#933,
because these are now not necessary after the previous changes to keep
ngModel always synced with the DOM.
In cases when we reuse elements in a repeater but associate
them with a new scope (see #933 - repeating over array of
primitives) it's possible for the internal ngModel state and
the scope state to get out of sync. This change ensure that
the two are always sync-ed up even in cases where we
reassociate an element with a different (but similar) scope.
In the case of repeating over array of primitives it's still
possible to run into issue if we iterate over primitives and
use form controls or similar widgets without ngModel - oh well,
we'd likely need a special repeater for primitives to deal
with this properly, even then there might be cornercases.
Closes#933
I'm keeping this in for future reference. The issue with this solution
is that if we shift() the first item in the array, the whole repeater
DOM will be rebuilt from scratch, we need to do better than that.
Bug caused by the use of the `||` operator to replace all non-truthy
values with an empty string. Changed to replace only `undefined` values.
Closes#1401
Current implementation of ngSrc may lead to empty src attribute when page is loading.
For example:
<img ng-src="{{image.url}}">
can be temporarily rendered as
<img src="">
before the image resource is loaded.
Some browser emits a request to the current page when seeing <img src=""> (Firefox13 and IE8 will, Chromium20 won't), which leads to performance problems.
previously we expected to find option elements only within select element and if
that was not the case we throw an error. This made it impossible to include datalist
element with nested option elements in the template.
Closes#1165
this fix ensures that we prevent the default action on form submission
(full page reload) even in cases when the form is being destroyed as
a result of the submit event handler (e.g. when route change is
triggered).
The fix is more complicated than I'd like it to be mainly because
we need to ensure that we don't create circular references between
js closures and dom elements via DOM event handlers that would then
result in a memory leak.
Also the differences between IE8, IE9 and normal browsers make testing
this ugly.
Closes#1238
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
Changed the isolate scope binding options to:
- @attr - attribute binding (including interpolation)
- =model - by-directional model binding
- &expr - expression execution binding
This change simplifies the terminology as well as
number of choices available to the developer. It
also supports local name aliasing from the parent.
BREAKING CHANGE: isolate scope bindings definition has changed and
the inject option for the directive controller injection was removed.
To migrate the code follow the example below:
Before:
scope: {
myAttr: 'attribute',
myBind: 'bind',
myExpression: 'expression',
myEval: 'evaluate',
myAccessor: 'accessor'
}
After:
scope: {
myAttr: '@',
myBind: '@',
myExpression: '&',
// myEval - usually not useful, but in cases where the expression is assignable, you can use '='
myAccessor: '=' // in directive's template change myAccessor() to myAccessor
}
The removed `inject` wasn't generaly useful for directives so there should be no code using it.
attr.$observe used to call function only if there was interpolation
on that attribute. We now call the observation function all the time
but we only save the reference to it if interpolation is present.
$position marker doesn't work well in cases when we have just one item
in the list because then the item is both the first and last. To solve
this properly we need to expose individual $first and $middle and $last
flags.
BREAKING CHANGE: $position is not exposed in repeater scopes any more
To update, search for $position and replace it with one of $first,
$middle or $last.
Closes#912
IE9 ignores setAttribute('src', val) calls on img if "ng:src" attribute
is present. It only fetches the image if element property is updated as well.
Closes#935
On IE9 the input event is not fired when backspace or delete key are pressed or when
cut is performed. This makes listening on the input event unreliable and therefore
it's better for us to just use keydown/change events instead.
Closes#879