Short summary: if you use local node server everything should work as before,
if you use GAE, everything should work now as well, but we pull assets from CDN.
- GAE doesn't support ':' in filenames, so I had to replace it with '_'
but only in the filename, all servers were reconfigured to rewrite the
urls from : to _ when doing file lookup
- We now pull angular assets from google CDN when deployed on GAE (locally
or in production). When running on a non GAE server we pull assets from
../ directory as before
- Since only certain versions of Angular are available on CDN and we want
to be able to autodeploy docs, I had to pin down the Angular files
to a "stable" version when running on GAE
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.