The documentation says that the input should be red if you enter
invalid values or leave it blank. Because the type="integer" is not
supported this does not happen in practice. This fix changes the
input type to number and adds an ng-pattern to ensure that the number
is an integer.
Sometimes is not desirable to use interpolation on attributes because
the user agent parses them before the interpolation takes place. I.e:
<svg>
<circle cx="{{cx}}" cy="{{cy}}" r="{{r}}"></circle>
</svg>
The snippet throws three browser errors, one for each attribute.
For some attributes, AngularJS fixes that behaviour introducing special
directives like ng-href or ng-src.
This commit is a more general solution that allows prefixing any
attribute with "ng-attr-", "ng:attr:" or "ng_attr_" so it will
be set only when the binding is done. The prefix is then removed.
Example usage:
<svg>
<circle ng-attr-cx="{{cx}}" ng-attr-cy="{{cy}}" ng:attr-r="{{r}}"></circle>
</svg>
Closes#1050Closes#1925
JQLite.ready() used for automatic bootstrapping (when jQuery is not present)
now checks if document already is ready when first called. This simplifies
bootstrapping when the angular script is loaded asynchronously.
However if other scripts with angular app code are being loaded as well
it is developers responsibility to ensure that these scripts are loaded
after angular-loader.js is evaluated and before angular.js script is
evaluated.
If you bind using '=' to a non-existant parent property, the compiler
will throw a NON_ASSIGNABLE_MODEL_EXPRESSION exception, which is right
because the model doesn't exist.
This enhancement allow to specify that a binding is optional so it
won't complain if the parent property is not defined. In order to mantain
backward compability, the new behaviour must be specified using '=?' instead
of '='. The local property will be undefined is these cases.
Closes#909Closes#1435
As explained in 'Understanding the Controller Component', Controllers
written for new (post 1.0 RC) versions of Angular need to add methods to
the scope directly, not the function's prototype. Correcting this
example should remove any ambiguity, especially for beginners.