Before the Develop drop down menu items were hard coded with an absolute url,
which meant that they did not work correctly on local or ci server builds.
jQuery's API for removeData allows a second 'name' argument to just
remove the property by that name from an element's data. The absence
of this argument was causing some features not to work correctly when
combining multiple directives, such as ng-click, ng-show, and ng-animate.
By appending directive-start and directive-end to a
directive it is now possible to have the directive
act on a group of elements.
It is now possible to iterate over multiple elements like so:
<table>
<tr ng-repeat-start="item in list">I get repeated</tr>
<tr ng-repeat-end>I also get repeated</tr>
</table>
This new service is used by the ngSwipeLeft/Right directives, and by the
separate ngCarousel and swipe-to-delete directives which are under
development.
- Instance or collection have `$promise` property which is the initial promise.
- Add per-action `interceptor`, which has access to entire $http response object.
BREAKING CHANGE: resource instance does not have `$then` function anymore.
Before:
Resource.query().$then(callback);
After:
Resource.query().$promise.then(callback);
BREAKING CHANGE: instance methods return the promise rather than the instance itself.
Before:
resource.$save().chaining = true;
After:
resource.$save();
resourve.chaining = true;
BREAKING CHANGE: On success, promise is resolved with the resource instance rather than http
response object.
Use interceptor to access the http response object.
Before:
Resource.query().$then(function(response) {...});
After:
var Resource = $resource('/url', {}, {
get: {
method: 'get',
interceptor: {
response: function(response) {
// expose response
return response;
}
}
}
});
When real jQuery is present, Angular monkey patch it to fire `$destroy` event.
This commit fixes two issues in the jQuery patch:
- passing a selector to the $.fn.remove method (only fire `$destroy` on the matched elements)
- using `$.fn.html` without parameters as a getter (do not fire `$destroy`)
element(selector, label).query(fn) is a very useful function, yet barely
explained. The developer guide should show how this function can be used
to conditionally execute behavior and assertions.
If the timeout argument is a promise, abort the request when it is resolved.
Implemented by adding support to $httpBackend service and $httpBackend mock
service.
This api can also be used to explicitly abort requests while keeping the
communication between the deffered and promise unidirectional.
Closes#1159