Email addresses can (under certain restrictions) include double quote characters. See http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3696#section-3. For example, `"Jo Bloggs"@abc.com` is a valid email address. When serializing emails to the `href` attribute of an anchor element, we must HTML encode these double quote characters. See http://www.w3.org/TR/html-markup/syntax.html#syntax-attr-double-quoted This commit does not attempt to improve the functionality (i.e. regex) that attempts to identify email addresses in a general string. Closes #8945 Closes #8964 Closes #5946 Closes #10090 Closes #9256
AngularJS 
AngularJS lets you write client-side web applications as if you had a smarter browser. It lets you use good old HTML (or HAML, Jade and friends!) as your template language and lets you extend HTML’s syntax to express your application’s components clearly and succinctly. It automatically synchronizes data from your UI (view) with your JavaScript objects (model) through 2-way data binding. To help you structure your application better and make it easy to test, AngularJS teaches the browser how to do dependency injection and inversion of control.
Oh yeah and it helps with server-side communication, taming async callbacks with promises and deferreds. It also makes client-side navigation and deeplinking with hashbang urls or HTML5 pushState a piece of cake. The best of all: it makes development fun!
- Web site: http://angularjs.org
- Tutorial: http://docs.angularjs.org/tutorial
- API Docs: http://docs.angularjs.org/api
- Developer Guide: http://docs.angularjs.org/guide
- Contribution guidelines: CONTRIBUTING.md
- Dashboard: http://dashboard.angularjs.org
Building AngularJS
Once you have your environment setup just run:
grunt package
Running Tests
To execute all unit tests, use:
grunt test:unit
To execute end-to-end (e2e) tests, use:
grunt package
grunt test:e2e
To learn more about the grunt tasks, run grunt --help and also read our
contribution guidelines.