they have no significant effect on minified and gziped size. in fact
they make things worse.
file | before | after removal
----------------------------------------
concat | 325415 | 325297
min | 62070 | 62161
min + gzip | 25187 | 25176
The bottom line is that we are getting 0.05% decrease in size after
gzip without all of the hassle of using underscores everywhere.
so it is possible to easily compile just a part of a document.
e.g.:
<html>
<head>
<title>partially compiled doc</title>
<script src="angular.js" ng:autobind="compileThis"></script>
</head>
<body>
this part won't be compiled: {{1+2}}
<div id="compileThis" ng:init="i=0" ng:click="i = i+1">
Click count: {{i}}
</div>
</body>
</html>
")]}\',\n" is a commonly used security prefix added to json http
responses iat google and elsewhere in order to prevent certain
cross-site attacks
$xhr service now autodetects the prefix and strips it before
deserializing the json.
the implementation should be more flexible to allow for wider range
of prefixes, but we need this one right now and can address other
usecases later.
angular.compile()() returns {scope:scope, view:view},
this isn't useful at all and only makes tests more verbose.
Instead, this change makes the linking function return scope directly
and if anyone needs the linked dom there are two ways to do it
documented in angular.compile.
other changes:
- moved angular.compile docs to the compiler so that they are closer to
the compiler
- fixed some typos and updated angular.compile docs with the new return
value
- split up services into files under src/service
- split up specs into files under test/service
- rewrite all specs so that they don't depend on one global forEach
- get rid of obsolete code and tests in ng:switch
- rename mock $log spec from "$log" to "$log mock"
I extracted mock $log factory into stand alone function, so we can access it and test, because this service is rewritten by real service during testing, so we can't access it through angular.$service('$log')...