we can't provide this functionality because the directives are lazy
loaded when the module loads, which is too late for the shiv to do
anything useful.
- change custom onload directive to special arguments recongnized by both
ng-view and ng-include
- rename $contentLoaded event to $viewContentLoaded and $includeContentLoaded
- add event docs
It's more likely you are using angular.fromJson() inside Angular world, which means you get proper
exception handling by $exceptionHandler.
There is no point to explicitly push it to console and it causes memory leaks on most browsers
(tried Chrome stable/canary, Safari, FF).
Problems:
- controller was instantiated immediately on $afterRouteChange (even if no content), that's
different compare to ng:controller, which instantiates controllers after compiling
- route listened on current scope ($afterRouteChange), so if you were listening on $rootScope
($afterRouteChange), you get called first and current.scope === undefined, which is flaky
- route handles scope destroying, but scope is created by ng:view
- route fires after/before route change even if there is no route (when no otherwise specified)
Solution:
- route has no idea about scope, whole scope business moved to ng:view (creating/destroying)
- scope is created (and controller instantiated) AFTER compiling the content
- that means on $afterRouteChange - there is no scope yet (current.scope === undefined)
- added $contentLoaded event fired by ng:view, after linking the content
- remove $formFactory completely
- remove parallel scope hierarchy (forms, widgets)
- use new compiler features (widgets, forms are controllers)
- any directive can add formatter/parser (validators, convertors)
Breaks no custom input types
Breaks removed integer input type
Breaks remove list input type (ng-list directive instead)
Breaks inputs bind only blur event by default (added ng:bind-change directive)
Reason to fix this was the fact that with undefined url, it ended up with weird exception
(Cannot call method 'replace' of undefined), which was more confusing than helpful.
jQuery.ajax() does request to current url, if url is not specified, so I decided for this solution.