Previously if a template contained a directive that had a template
(sync or async) and the directive template was to replace the original
element and the directive template contained another directive on the
root element of this template and this new directive was an element
transclude directive then an infinite recursion would follow because
the compiler kept on re-adding and reapplying the original directive
to the replaced node.
This change fixes that.
Closes#2155
This reverts commit 15e1a29cd0.
The original commit was fixing two issues - one of them was
preventing attributes that triggered directives that replaced
the compiled node to be merged into the new node.
This change was a breaking change (as seen in the diff of the
tests in this commit) and that's why it's being removed.
A proper fix will follow.
parseKeyValue and toKeyValue can now handle duplicate values in the query.
```
?x=1&x=2 <-> {x:[1,2]}
```
The algorithm looks like:
1)parseKeyValue looks for presence of obj[key]
2)detects and replaces obj[key] with [obj[key],val]
3)then pushes more duplicates if necessary
4)toKeyValue decodes array correctly
5)(not changed)$location.search({param: 'key'}) still replaces if necessary
6)(not changed)$location.search({param: ['key1', 'key2']}) sets the url with duplicates
BREAKING CHANGE: Before this change:
- `parseKeyValue` only took the last key overwriting all the previous keys;
- `toKeyValue` joined the keys together in a comma delimited string.
This was deemed buggy behavior. If your server relied on this behavior
then either the server should be fixed or a simple serialization of
the array should be done on the client before passing it to $location.
With the recent refactoring of $location service we changed this behavior
resulting in a regression.
Previously we thought that html5 mode always required base[href]
to be set in order for urls to resolve properly. It turns out that
base[href] is problematic because it makes anchor urls (#foo) to
always resolve to the base url, which is almost always incorrect
and results in all anchors links and other anchor urls (e.g. svg
references) to be broken.
For this reason, we should now start recommending that people just
deploy to root context (/) and not set the base[href] when using
the html5 mode (push/pop history state).
If it's impossible to deploy to the root context then either all
urls in the app must be absolute or base[href] must be set with the
caveat that anchor urls in such app won't work.
Closes#2762
BREAKING CHANGE: Concatenating expressions makes it hard to reason about
whether some combination of concatenated values are unsafe to use
and could easily lead to XSS. By requiring that a single expression
be used for *[src/ng-src] such as iframe[src], object[src], etc.
(but not img[src/ng-src] since that value is sanitized), we ensure that the value
that's used is assigned or constructed by some JS code somewhere
that is more testable or make it obvious that you bound the value to
some user controlled value. This helps reduce the load when
auditing for XSS issues.
To migrate your code, follow the example below:
Before:
JS:
scope.baseUrl = 'page';
scope.a = 1;
scope.b = 2;
HTML:
<!-- Are a and b properly escaped here? Is baseUrl
controlled by user? -->
<iframe src="{{baseUrl}}?a={{a}&b={{b}}">
After:
JS:
var baseUrl = "page";
scope.getIframeSrc = function() {
// There are obviously better ways to do this. The
// key point is that one will think about this and do
// it the right way.
var qs = ["a", "b"].map(function(value, name) {
return encodeURIComponent(name) + "=" +
encodeURIComponent(value);
}).join("&");
// baseUrl isn't on scope so it isn't bound to a user
// controlled value.
return baseUrl + "?" + qs;
}
HTML: <iframe src="{{getIframeSrc()}}">
BREAKING CHANGE: Interpolations inside DOM event handlers are
disallowed. DOM event handlers execute arbitrary Javascript code.
Using an interpolation for such handlers means that the interpolated
value is a JS string that is evaluated. Storing or generating such
strings is error prone and likely leads to an XSS if you're not
super careful. On the other hand, ng-click and such event handlers
evaluate Angular expressions that are a lot safer (e.g. No direct
access to global objects - only scope), cleaner and harder to
exploit.
To migrate the code follow the example below:
Before:
JS: scope.foo = 'alert(1)';
HTML: <div onclick="{{foo}}">
After:
JS: scope.foo = function() { alert(1); }
HTML: <div ng-click="foo()">
Ref: 9532234bf1
BREAKING CHANGE: img[src] URLs are now sanitized using the same whitelist
as a[href] URLs. The most obvious impact is if you were using data:
URIs. data: URIs will be whitelisted for img[src] in a future
commit.
jQuery switched to a completely new event binding implementation as of
1.7.0, centering around on/off methods instead of previous bind/unbind.
This patch makes jqLite match this implementation while still supporting
previous bind/unbind methods.
$route, $routeParams and ngView have been pulled from core angular.js
to angular-route.js/ngRoute module.
This is was done to in order keep the core focused on most commonly
used functionality and allow community routers to be freely used
instead of $route service.
There is no need to panic, angular-route will keep on being supported
by the angular team.
Note: I'm intentionally not fixing tutorial links. Tutorial will need
bigger changes and those should be done when we update tutorial to
1.2.
BREAKING CHANGE: applications that use $route will now need to load
angular-route.js file and define dependency on ngRoute module.
Before:
```
...
<script src="angular.js"></script>
...
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['someOtherModule']);
...
```
After:
```
...
<script src="angular.js"></script>
<script src="angular-route.js"></script>
...
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['ngRoute', 'someOtherModule']);
...
```
Closes#2804
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>
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
Add '?' token to lexer, add ternary rule to parser at
(hopefully) proper precedence and associativity (based
on https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Operator_Precedence).
Since (exp1 && exp2 || exp3) is supported by the parser,
and (exp1 ? exp2 : exp3) works the same way, it seems
reasonable to add this minor form of control to templates
(see #719).
The default header is now application/json which while not perfect
in all cases is better than the browser default application/xml.
The new headers also makes for better compatibility with Rails 4
In line with ngSrc and ngHref, this new directive ensures that the
`srcset` HTML5 attribute does not include a pre-interpolated string.
Without it the browser will fetch from the URL with the literal text
`{{hash}}` until AngularJS replaces the expression inside `{{hash}}`.
Closes#2601
Added a comma separator in the statement
Removed the word the from the statement
Used whose instead of who's in the following statement
Italicized false in the statement
Used a comma separator in the statement
Extend ng-options with a new clause, "track by [trackByExpression]", which can be used when
working with objects. The `trackByExpression` should uniquely identify select options objects.
This solves the problem of previously having to match ng-options objects by identity.
You can now write: `ng-options="obj as obj.name for obj in objects track by obj.id"`
The "track by" expression will be used when checking for equality of objects.
Examples:
<select
ng-model="user.favMovieStub"
ng-options="movie as movie.name for movie in movies track by movie.id">
</select>
scope: {
user: { name: 'Test user', favMovieStub: { id: 1, name: 'Starwars' } }
movies: [{ id: 1, name: 'Starwars', rating: 5, ... }, { id: 13, ... }]
}
The select input will match user favMovieStub to the first movie in the movies array, and show
"Star Wars" as the selected item.
ngAnimate: Rename CSS classes in example code to work with new ngAnimate naming conventions
ngInclude: Include animations toggle in ngInclude example code
ngAnimate: Remove ms- prefix and fix up CSS animation example code
With this change, $browser.cookies()["foo"] will behave like
docCookies.getItem("foo") where docCookies is defined at
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/document.cookie
This fixes the issue where, if there's a value for the XSRF-TOKEN cookie
value with the path /, then that value is used for all applications in
the domain even if they set path specific values for XSRF-TOKEN.
Closes#2635
BREAKING CHANGE: css classes foo-setup/foo-start become foo/foo-active
The CSS transition classes have changed suffixes. To migrate rename
.foo-setup {...} to .foo {...}
.foo-start {...} to .foo-active {...}
or for type: enter, leave, move, show, hide
.foo-type-setup {...} to .foo-type {...}
.foo-type-start {...} to .foo-type-active {...}
This date {{2003-09-10T13:02:03.123456Z | date: yyyy-mm-dd ss} is now
treated as having 123.45ms. Previously it had 123456ms so 123 seconds
were added to the formatted date.
Use local date in unit tests so they work in any time zone
Fix a check inside render for select elements with ngOptions, which
compares the selected property of an element with it's desired state.
Ensure the placeholder, if available, is explicitly selected if the model
value can not be found in the option list.
Without these fixes it's up to the browser implementation to decide which
option to choose. In most browsers, this has the effect of displaying the
first item in the list. In IE9 however, this causes the select to display
nothing.
Closes#2150, #1826
In older Android browsers, `undefined` does not act like `0` in some
arithmetic operations. This leads to dates being formatted with `NaN`
strings in the dateFilter because the implementation of the `dateGetter`
function allows offset to be an optional parameter.
The fix is to convert offset to 0 if it is undefined.
Closes#2277, #2275
Adding a $includeContentRequested event in order to better keep track of
how many includes are sent and be able to compare it with how many have
finished.
Documentation implies that timeout works for all requests, though it
only works with XHR. To implement:
- Change $httpBackend to set a timeout for JSONP requests which will
immediately resolve the request when fired.
- Cancel the timeout when requests are completed.
Fix a context duplication and invocation to a previous context when
doing an access modifier function on the result of a function
Currently, when doing `foo().bar()`, `foo` is called twice, the first
time to get the context and the second one for `bar` to get the
underlying object. Then the call to `bar` is called using the second
instance as self
This is equivalent to doing:
```
var instance1 = foo();
var instance2 = foo();
instance2.bar.apply(instance1);
```
Closes#2496
Change modulo % 2 operations to bitwise & 1
Read about this in Nicholas C. Zakas book "High Performance JavaScript"(ISBN: 978-0-596-80279-0)
Use the Fast Parts --> Bitwise Operators --> Page 156++
Proven at http://jsperf.com/modulo-vs-bitwise/11
Support ng-controller="MyController as my" syntax
which publishes the controller instance to the
current scope.
Also supports exporting a controller defined with route:
````javascript
angular.module('routes', [], function($routeProvider) {
$routeProvider.when('/home', {controller: 'Ctrl as home', templateUrl: '...'});
});
````
This directive is adapted from ui-if in the AngularUI project and provides a complement
to the ngShow/ngHide directives that only change the visibility of the DOM element and
ngSwitch which does change the DOM but is more verbose.
In IE the model is not updated when the input value is modified using the context
menu, e.g. pasting from the clipboard, or cutting all or part of the current value.
To capture these changes, we bind to the proprietary 'paste' and 'cut' events.
Closes#1462
If you wire up ngClass directly to an object on the scope, e.g. ng-class="myClasses",
where scope.myClasses = { 'classA': true, 'classB': false },
there was a bug that changing scope.myClasses.classA = false, was not being picked
up and classA was not being removed from the element's CSS classes.
This fix uses angular.equals for the comparison and ensures that oldVal is a copy of
(rather than a reference to) the newVal.