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Angular Build Status

This is the repository for the upcoming 2.0 version. If you're looking for the current official version of Angular you should go to angular/angular.js

Build

Prerequisites

If you don't already have npm, get it by installing node.js.

  1. npm install
  2. npm install -g gulp (you might need to prefix this command with sudo)
  3. npm install -g protractor (you might need to prefix this command with sudo)
  4. webdriver-manager update
  5. If you plan to use Dart:
  6. Install the Dart SDK - Includes the pub command line tool. This repository requires pub in version >=1.9.0-dev.8.0 <2.0.0
  7. Add the Dart SDK's bin directory to your system path
  8. Get the pub packages you need: pub get
  9. gulp build

Folder structure

  • modules/*: modules that will be loaded in the browser
  • tools/*: tools that are needed to build Angular

File endings

  • *.js: javascript files that get transpiled to Dart and EcmaScript 5
  • *.es6: javascript files that get transpiled only to EcmaScript 5
  • *.es5: javascript files that don't get transpiled
  • *.dart: dart files that don't get transpiled

Build

  1. gulp build -> result is in dist folder
  • will also run pub get for the subfolders in modules and run dartanalyzer for every file that matches <module>/src/<module>.dart, e.g. di/src/di.dart
  1. gulp clean -> cleans the dist folder

Unit tests

  1. gulp test.unit.js: JS tests
  2. gulp test.unit.dart: Dart tests

Notes for transpiler tests:

The karma preprocessor is setup in a way so that after every test run the transpiler is reloaded. With that it is possible to make changes to the preprocessor and run the tests without exiting karma (just touch a test file that you would like to run).

E2e tests

  1. gulp build.js.cjs (builds benchpress and tests into dist/js/cjs folder)
  2. gulp serve.js.prod serve.js.dart2js (runs local webserver)
  3. protractor protractor-js.conf.js: JS e2e tests
  4. protractor protractor-dart2js.conf.js: Dart2JS e2e tests

Angular specific command line options when running protractor:

  • protractor protractor-{js|dart2js}-conf.js --ng-help

Performance tests

  1. gulp build.js.cjs (builds benchpress and tests into dist/js/cjs folder)
  2. gulp serve.js.prod serve.js.dart2js (runs local webserver)
  3. protractor protractor-js.conf.js --benchmark: JS performance tests
  4. protractor protractor-dart2js.conf.js --benchmark: Dart2JS performance tests

Angular specific command line options when running protractor (e.g. force gc, ...): protractor protractor-{js|dart2js}-conf.js --ng-help

Examples

To see the examples, first build the project as described above.

Hello World Example

This example consists of three basic pieces - a component, a decorator and a service. They are all constructed via injection. For more information see the comments in the source modules/examples/src/hello_world/index.js.

You can build this example as either JS or Dart app:

  • (JS) gulp serve.js.dev and open localhost:8000/examples/src/hello_world/ in Chrome.
  • (Dart) gulp serve/examples.dart and open localhost:8080/src/hello_world in Chrome (for dart2js) or Dartium (for Dart VM).

Debug the transpiler

If you need to debug the transpiler:

  • add a debugger; statement in the transpiler code,
  • from the root folder, execute node debug node_modules/.bin/gulp build to enter the node debugger
  • press "c" to execute the program until you reach the debugger; statement,
  • you can then type "repl" to enter the REPL and inspect variables in the context.

See the Node.js manual for more information.

Notes:

  • You can also execute node node_modules/.bin/karma start karma-dart.conf.js depending on which code you want to debug (the former will process the "modules" folder while the later processes the transpiler specs),
  • You can also add debugger; statements in the specs (JavaScript). The execution will halt when the developer tools are opened in the browser running Karma.

Debug the tests

If you need to debug the tests:

  • add a debugger; statement to the test you want to debug (oe the source code),
  • execute karma gulp test.js,
  • press the top right "DEBUG" button,
  • open the dev tools and press F5,
  • the execution halt at the debugger; statement

Note (WebStorm users): You can create a Karma run config from WebStorm. Then in the "Run" menu, press "Debug 'karma-js.conf.js'", WebStorm will stop in the generated code on the debugger; statement. You can then step into the code and add watches. The debugger; statement is needed because WebStorm will stop in a transpiled file. Breakpoints in the original source files are not supported at the moment.

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  • JavaScript 68.9%
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  • HTML 6.4%
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