This CL improves mocking support for HTML5 validation, fixes the behaviour which invokes validators.
Previously, an input would only be revalidated if either its value changed, or if it was the empty
string but did not suffer from bad input --- now, it will be revalidated if either the value has
changed, or the value is the empty string, there is a ValidityState for the element, and that
ValidityState is being tested by one of the validators in the pipeline.
Closes#7937Closes#7957
Previously, <element ng-attr-foo="{{binding}}" foo="bar"></element>'s "foo" attribute would always
equal "bar", because the bound version was overwritten. This CL corrects this behaviour and ensures
that the ordering of attributes does not have an effect on whether or not ng-attr-bound attributes
do their work.
If a "replace" directive has an async template, which contains a transclusion
directive at its root node, then outer transclusions were failing to be
passed to this directive. An example would be uses of `ngIf` inside and
outside the template.
Collaborated with @caitp
Closes#7183Closes#7772
Nested isolated transclude directives.
This improves/fixes the fix in d414b78717.
See the changed ng-ifunit test: The template inside ng-if should be bound to the
isolate scope of `iso` directive (resp. its child scope). Not to a child of
the root scope. This shows the issue with ng-if. It’s however problem with
other directives too.
Instead of remembering the scope, we pass around the bound parent transclusion.
Conflicts:
test/ng/directive/ngIfSpec.js
If a directive provides a template but is not explicitly requesting transclusion
then the compiler should not pass a transclusion function to the directives
within the template.
If you have two directives that both expect to receive transcluded content
the outer directive works but the inner directive never receives a
transclusion function. This only failed if the first transclude directive
was not the first directive found in compilation.
Handles the regression identified in e994259739Fixes#7240Closes#7387
$http was previously checking cookies to find an xsrf-token prior to checking
the cache. This caused a performance penalty of about 2ms, which can be very
significant when loading hundreds of template instances on a page.
Fixes#7717
If a directives specifies `replace:true` and the template of the directive contains
a root element with an attribute which already exists at the place
where the directive is used with the same value, don't duplicate the value.
Closes#7463
If you have two directives that both expect to receive transcluded content
the outer directive works but the inner directive never receives a
transclusion function. This only failed if the first transclude directive
was not the first directive found in compilation.
Fixes#7240Closes#7387
All isolated scope directives that do not have `templateUrl` were marked
as `$isolateScopeNoTemplate` even if they did have a `template` attribute.
This caused `jqLite#scope()` to return the wrong value for child elements
within the directive's template.
Closes#6942
Due to a regression introduced several releases ago, the ability for multiple transclude functions
to work correctly changed, as they would break if different case labels had different numbers of
transclude functions.
This CL corrects this by not assuming that previous elements and scope count have the same length.
Fixes 7372
Closes 7373
Certain versions of IE inexplicably trigger an input event in response to a placeholder
being set.
It is not possible to sniff for this behaviour nicely as the event is not triggered if
the element is not attached to the document, and the event triggers asynchronously so
it is not possible to accomplish this without deferring DOM compilation and slowing down
load times.
Closes#2614Closes#5960
This CL fixes problems and adds test cases for changes from #6421. Changes
include fixing the algorithm for preprocessing href attribute values, as
well as supporting xlink:href attributes. Credit for the original URL
parsing algorithm still goes to @richardcrichardc.
Good work, champ!
This change brings Angular's JSONP behaviour closer in line with jQuery's. The feature has
already landed in the 1.3 branch as 6680b7b, however this alternative version is intended
to implement the feature in an IE8-compatible fashion.
Closes#7031
Previously, ctreq would possibly reference the incorrect directive name,
due to relying on a directiveName living outside of the closure which
throws the exception, which can change before the call is ever made.
This change saves the current value of directiveName as a property of
the link function, which prevents this from occurring.
Closes#7062Closes#7067
parseInt(Infinity, 10) will result in NaN, which becomes undesirable when the expected behaviour is
to return the entire input.
I believe this is possibly useful as a way to toggle input limiting based on certain factors.
Closes#6771Closes#7118
When a async task interacts with a scope that has been destroyed already
and if it interacts with a property that is prototypically inherited from
some parent scope then resetting proto would make these inherited properties
inaccessible and would result in NPEs
The basic approach is to introduce a new elt.data() called $classCounts that keeps
track of how many times ngClass, ngClassEven, or ngClassOdd tries to add a given class.
The class is added only when the count goes from 0 to 1, and removed only when the
count hits 0.
To avoid duplicating work, some of the logic for checking which classes
to add/remove move into this directive and the directive calls $animate.
Closes#5271
Due to a known V8 memory leak[1] we need to perform extra cleanup to make it easier
for GC to collect this scope object.
V8 leaks are due to strong references from optimized code (fixed in M34) and inline
caches (fix in works). Inline caches are caches that the virtual machine builds on the
fly to speed up property access for javascript objects. These caches contain strong
references to objects so under certain conditions this can create a leak.
The reason why these leaks are extra bad for Scope instances is that scopes hold on
to ton of stuff, so when a single scope leaks, it makes a ton of other stuff leak.
This change removes references to objects that might be holding other big
objects. This means that even if the destroyed scope leaks, the child scopes
should not leak because we are not explicitly holding onto them.
Additionally in theory we should also help make the current scope eligible for GC
by changing properties of the current Scope object.
I was able to manually verify that this fixes the problem for the following
example app: http://plnkr.co/edit/FrSw6SCEVODk02Ljo8se
Given the nature of the problem I'm not 100% sure that this will work around
the V8 problem in scenarios common for Angular apps, but I guess it's better
than nothing.
This is a second attempt to enhance the cleanup, the first one failed and was
reverted because it was too aggressive and caused problems for existing apps.
See: #6897
[1] V8 bug: https://code.google.com/p/v8/issues/detail?id=2073Closes#6794Closes#6856Closes#6968
Previously, constant numbers with a unary minus sign were not treated as constants. This fix corrects
this behaviour, and may provide a small performance boost for certain applications, due to constant
watches being automatically unregistered after their first listener call.
Closes#6932
Makes xhr status text accessible is $http success/error callback.
See www.w3.org/TR/XMLHttpRequest/#dom-xmlhttprequest-statustext
Closes#2335Closes#2665Closes#6713
fb6062fb9d implements a
fix for NaN values causing $watchCollection to throw an infdig error. This change updates the test
by adding an assertion which explains what is actually being tested a bit better, and may also
provide better information in the event that the test ever fails.
Closes#6758
$watchCollection checks if oldValue !== newValue which does not work for NaN. This was causing
infinite digest errors, since comparing NaN to NaN in $watchCollection would always return false,
indicating that a change was occuring on each loop.
This fix adds a simple check to see if the current value and previous value are both NaN, and
if so, does not count it as a change.
Closes#4605
The orderBy filter now allows string predicates passed to the orderBy filter to make use property
name predicates containing non-ident strings, such as spaces or percent signs, or non-latin
characters.
This behaviour requires the predicate string to be double-quoted.
In markup, this might look like so:
```html
<div ng-repeat="item in items | orderBy:'\"Tip %\"'">
...
</div>
```
Or in JS:
```js
var sorted = $filter('orderBy')(array, ['"Tip %"', '-"Subtotal $"'], false);
```
Closes#6143Closes#6144
In Firefox, hovering over an option in an open select menu updates the selected property of option
elements. This means that when a render is triggered by the digest cycle, and the list of options
is being rendered, the selected properties are reset to the values from the model and the option
hovered over changes. This fix changes the code to only use DOM elements' selected properties in a
comparison when a change event has been fired. Otherwise, the internal new and existing option
arrays are used.
Closes#2448Closes#5994Closes#6769
Originally we destroyed the oldValue by incrementaly copying over portions of the newValue
into the oldValue during dirty-checking, this resulted in oldValue to be equal to newValue
by the time we called the watchCollection listener.
The fix creates a copy of the newValue each time a change is detected and then uses that
copy *the next time* a change is detected.
To make `$watchCollection` behave the same way as `$watch`, during the first iteration
the listener is called with newValue and oldValue being identical.
Since many of the corner-cases are already covered by existing tests, I refactored the
test logging to include oldValue and made the tests more readable.
Closes#2621Closes#5661Closes#5688Closes#6736
PR #5547 introduced conversion of all 0 status codes to 404 for cases
where no response was recieved (previously this was done for the
file:// protocol only). But this mechanism is too eager and
masks legitimate cases where status 0 should be returned. This commits
reverts to the previous mechanism of handling 0 status code for the
file:// protocol (converting 0 to 404) while retaining the returned
status code 0 for all the protocols other than file://
Fixes#6074Fixes#6155