to learn more about them.
- * You can ensure your document is in standards mode and not quirks mode by adding ``
- * to the top of your HTML document.
- *
- * SCE assists in writing code in way that (a) is secure by default and (b) makes auditing for
- * security vulnerabilities such as XSS, clickjacking, etc. a lot easier.
- *
- * Here's an example of a binding in a privileged context:
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
- * Notice that `ng-bind-html` is bound to `userHtml` controlled by the user. With SCE
- * disabled, this application allows the user to render arbitrary HTML into the DIV.
- * In a more realistic example, one may be rendering user comments, blog articles, etc. via
- * bindings. (HTML is just one example of a context where rendering user controlled input creates
- * security vulnerabilities.)
- *
- * For the case of HTML, you might use a library, either on the client side, or on the server side,
- * to sanitize unsafe HTML before binding to the value and rendering it in the document.
- *
- * How would you ensure that every place that used these types of bindings was bound to a value that
- * was sanitized by your library (or returned as safe for rendering by your server?) How can you
- * ensure that you didn't accidentally delete the line that sanitized the value, or renamed some
- * properties/fields and forgot to update the binding to the sanitized value?
- *
- * To be secure by default, you want to ensure that any such bindings are disallowed unless you can
- * determine that something explicitly says it's safe to use a value for binding in that
- * context. You can then audit your code (a simple grep would do) to ensure that this is only done
- * for those values that you can easily tell are safe - because they were received from your server,
- * sanitized by your library, etc. You can organize your codebase to help with this - perhaps
- * allowing only the files in a specific directory to do this. Ensuring that the internal API
- * exposed by that code doesn't markup arbitrary values as safe then becomes a more manageable task.
- *
- * In the case of AngularJS' SCE service, one uses {@link ng.$sce#trustAs $sce.trustAs}
- * (and shorthand methods such as {@link ng.$sce#trustAsHtml $sce.trustAsHtml}, etc.) to
- * obtain values that will be accepted by SCE / privileged contexts.
- *
- *
- * ## How does it work?
- *
- * In privileged contexts, directives and code will bind to the result of {@link ng.$sce#getTrusted
- * $sce.getTrusted(context, value)} rather than to the value directly. Directives use {@link
- * ng.$sce#parse $sce.parseAs} rather than `$parse` to watch attribute bindings, which performs the
- * {@link ng.$sce#getTrusted $sce.getTrusted} behind the scenes on non-constant literals.
- *
- * As an example, {@link ng.directive:ngBindHtml ngBindHtml} uses {@link
- * ng.$sce#parseAsHtml $sce.parseAsHtml(binding expression)}. Here's the actual code (slightly
- * simplified):
- *
- *
- * var ngBindHtmlDirective = ['$sce', function($sce) {
- * return function(scope, element, attr) {
- * scope.$watch($sce.parseAsHtml(attr.ngBindHtml), function(value) {
- * element.html(value || '');
- * });
- * };
- * }];
- *
- *
- * ## Impact on loading templates
- *
- * This applies both to the {@link ng.directive:ngInclude `ng-include`} directive as well as
- * `templateUrl`'s specified by {@link guide/directive directives}.
- *
- * By default, Angular only loads templates from the same domain and protocol as the application
- * document. This is done by calling {@link ng.$sce#getTrustedResourceUrl
- * $sce.getTrustedResourceUrl} on the template URL. To load templates from other domains and/or
- * protocols, you may either either {@link ng.$sceDelegateProvider#resourceUrlWhitelist whitelist
- * them} or {@link ng.$sce#trustAsResourceUrl wrap it} into a trusted value.
- *
- * *Please note*:
- * The browser's
- * [Same Origin Policy](https://code.google.com/p/browsersec/wiki/Part2#Same-origin_policy_for_XMLHttpRequest)
- * and [Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)](http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/)
- * policy apply in addition to this and may further restrict whether the template is successfully
- * loaded. This means that without the right CORS policy, loading templates from a different domain
- * won't work on all browsers. Also, loading templates from `file://` URL does not work on some
- * browsers.
- *
- * ## This feels like too much overhead
- *
- * It's important to remember that SCE only applies to interpolation expressions.
- *
- * If your expressions are constant literals, they're automatically trusted and you don't need to
- * call `$sce.trustAs` on them (remember to include the `ngSanitize` module) (e.g.
- * `
`) just works.
- *
- * Additionally, `a[href]` and `img[src]` automatically sanitize their URLs and do not pass them
- * through {@link ng.$sce#getTrusted $sce.getTrusted}. SCE doesn't play a role here.
- *
- * The included {@link ng.$sceDelegate $sceDelegate} comes with sane defaults to allow you to load
- * templates in `ng-include` from your application's domain without having to even know about SCE.
- * It blocks loading templates from other domains or loading templates over http from an https
- * served document. You can change these by setting your own custom {@link
- * ng.$sceDelegateProvider#resourceUrlWhitelist whitelists} and {@link
- * ng.$sceDelegateProvider#resourceUrlBlacklist blacklists} for matching such URLs.
- *
- * This significantly reduces the overhead. It is far easier to pay the small overhead and have an
- * application that's secure and can be audited to verify that with much more ease than bolting
- * security onto an application later.
- *
- *
- * ## What trusted context types are supported?
- *
- * | Context | Notes |
- * |---------------------|----------------|
- * | `$sce.HTML` | For HTML that's safe to source into the application. The {@link ng.directive:ngBindHtml ngBindHtml} directive uses this context for bindings. If an unsafe value is encountered and the {@link ngSanitize $sanitize} module is present this will sanitize the value instead of throwing an error. |
- * | `$sce.CSS` | For CSS that's safe to source into the application. Currently unused. Feel free to use it in your own directives. |
- * | `$sce.URL` | For URLs that are safe to follow as links. Currently unused (`
Note that `$sce.RESOURCE_URL` makes a stronger statement about the URL than `$sce.URL` does and therefore contexts requiring values trusted for `$sce.RESOURCE_URL` can be used anywhere that values trusted for `$sce.URL` are required. |
- * | `$sce.JS` | For JavaScript that is safe to execute in your application's context. Currently unused. Feel free to use it in your own directives. |
- *
- * ## Format of items in {@link ng.$sceDelegateProvider#resourceUrlWhitelist resourceUrlWhitelist}/{@link ng.$sceDelegateProvider#resourceUrlBlacklist Blacklist}
- *
- * Each element in these arrays must be one of the following:
- *
- * - **'self'**
- * - The special **string**, `'self'`, can be used to match against all URLs of the **same
- * domain** as the application document using the **same protocol**.
- * - **String** (except the special value `'self'`)
- * - The string is matched against the full *normalized / absolute URL* of the resource
- * being tested (substring matches are not good enough.)
- * - There are exactly **two wildcard sequences** - `*` and `**`. All other characters
- * match themselves.
- * - `*`: matches zero or more occurrences of any character other than one of the following 6
- * characters: '`:`', '`/`', '`.`', '`?`', '`&`' and ';'. It's a useful wildcard for use
- * in a whitelist.
- * - `**`: matches zero or more occurrences of *any* character. As such, it's not
- * not appropriate to use in for a scheme, domain, etc. as it would match too much. (e.g.
- * http://**.example.com/ would match http://evil.com/?ignore=.example.com/ and that might
- * not have been the intention.) Its usage at the very end of the path is ok. (e.g.
- * http://foo.example.com/templates/**).
- * - **RegExp** (*see caveat below*)
- * - *Caveat*: While regular expressions are powerful and offer great flexibility, their syntax
- * (and all the inevitable escaping) makes them *harder to maintain*. It's easy to
- * accidentally introduce a bug when one updates a complex expression (imho, all regexes should
- * have good test coverage.). For instance, the use of `.` in the regex is correct only in a
- * small number of cases. A `.` character in the regex used when matching the scheme or a
- * subdomain could be matched against a `:` or literal `.` that was likely not intended. It
- * is highly recommended to use the string patterns and only fall back to regular expressions
- * if they as a last resort.
- * - The regular expression must be an instance of RegExp (i.e. not a string.) It is
- * matched against the **entire** *normalized / absolute URL* of the resource being tested
- * (even when the RegExp did not have the `^` and `$` codes.) In addition, any flags
- * present on the RegExp (such as multiline, global, ignoreCase) are ignored.
- * - If you are generating your JavaScript from some other templating engine (not
- * recommended, e.g. in issue [#4006](https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/4006)),
- * remember to escape your regular expression (and be aware that you might need more than
- * one level of escaping depending on your templating engine and the way you interpolated
- * the value.) Do make use of your platform's escaping mechanism as it might be good
- * enough before coding your own. e.g. Ruby has
- * [Regexp.escape(str)](http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-2.0.0/Regexp.html#method-c-escape)
- * and Python has [re.escape](http://docs.python.org/library/re.html#re.escape).
- * Javascript lacks a similar built in function for escaping. Take a look at Google
- * Closure library's [goog.string.regExpEscape(s)](
- * http://docs.closure-library.googlecode.com/git/closure_goog_string_string.js.source.html#line962).
- *
- * Refer {@link ng.$sceDelegateProvider $sceDelegateProvider} for an example.
- *
- * ## Show me an example using SCE.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
-
User comments
- By default, HTML that isn't explicitly trusted (e.g. Alice's comment) is sanitized when
- $sanitize is available. If $sanitize isn't available, this results in an error instead of an
- exploit.
-
-
- {{userComment.name}}:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- var mySceApp = angular.module('mySceApp', ['ngSanitize']);
-
- mySceApp.controller("myAppController", function myAppController($http, $templateCache, $sce) {
- var self = this;
- $http.get("test_data.json", {cache: $templateCache}).success(function(userComments) {
- self.userComments = userComments;
- });
- self.explicitlyTrustedHtml = $sce.trustAsHtml(
- 'Hover over this text.');
- });
-
-
-
-[
- { "name": "Alice",
- "htmlComment":
- "Is anyone reading this?"
- },
- { "name": "Bob",
- "htmlComment": "Yes! Am I the only other one?"
- }
-]
-
-
-
- describe('SCE doc demo', function() {
- it('should sanitize untrusted values', function() {
- expect(element(by.css('.htmlComment')).getInnerHtml())
- .toBe('Is anyone reading this?');
- });
-
- it('should NOT sanitize explicitly trusted values', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('explicitlyTrustedHtml')).getInnerHtml()).toBe(
- 'Hover over this text.');
- });
- });
-
-
- *
- *
- *
- * ## Can I disable SCE completely?
- *
- * Yes, you can. However, this is strongly discouraged. SCE gives you a lot of security benefits
- * for little coding overhead. It will be much harder to take an SCE disabled application and
- * either secure it on your own or enable SCE at a later stage. It might make sense to disable SCE
- * for cases where you have a lot of existing code that was written before SCE was introduced and
- * you're migrating them a module at a time.
- *
- * That said, here's how you can completely disable SCE:
- *
- *
- * angular.module('myAppWithSceDisabledmyApp', []).config(function($sceProvider) {
- * // Completely disable SCE. For demonstration purposes only!
- * // Do not use in new projects.
- * $sceProvider.enabled(false);
- * });
- *
- *
- */
-/* jshint maxlen: 100 */
-
-function $SceProvider() {
- var enabled = true;
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sceProvider#enabled
- * @kind function
- *
- * @param {boolean=} value If provided, then enables/disables SCE.
- * @return {boolean} true if SCE is enabled, false otherwise.
- *
- * @description
- * Enables/disables SCE and returns the current value.
- */
- this.enabled = function (value) {
- if (arguments.length) {
- enabled = !!value;
- }
- return enabled;
- };
-
-
- /* Design notes on the default implementation for SCE.
- *
- * The API contract for the SCE delegate
- * -------------------------------------
- * The SCE delegate object must provide the following 3 methods:
- *
- * - trustAs(contextEnum, value)
- * This method is used to tell the SCE service that the provided value is OK to use in the
- * contexts specified by contextEnum. It must return an object that will be accepted by
- * getTrusted() for a compatible contextEnum and return this value.
- *
- * - valueOf(value)
- * For values that were not produced by trustAs(), return them as is. For values that were
- * produced by trustAs(), return the corresponding input value to trustAs. Basically, if
- * trustAs is wrapping the given values into some type, this operation unwraps it when given
- * such a value.
- *
- * - getTrusted(contextEnum, value)
- * This function should return the a value that is safe to use in the context specified by
- * contextEnum or throw and exception otherwise.
- *
- * NOTE: This contract deliberately does NOT state that values returned by trustAs() must be
- * opaque or wrapped in some holder object. That happens to be an implementation detail. For
- * instance, an implementation could maintain a registry of all trusted objects by context. In
- * such a case, trustAs() would return the same object that was passed in. getTrusted() would
- * return the same object passed in if it was found in the registry under a compatible context or
- * throw an exception otherwise. An implementation might only wrap values some of the time based
- * on some criteria. getTrusted() might return a value and not throw an exception for special
- * constants or objects even if not wrapped. All such implementations fulfill this contract.
- *
- *
- * A note on the inheritance model for SCE contexts
- * ------------------------------------------------
- * I've used inheritance and made RESOURCE_URL wrapped types a subtype of URL wrapped types. This
- * is purely an implementation details.
- *
- * The contract is simply this:
- *
- * getTrusted($sce.RESOURCE_URL, value) succeeding implies that getTrusted($sce.URL, value)
- * will also succeed.
- *
- * Inheritance happens to capture this in a natural way. In some future, we
- * may not use inheritance anymore. That is OK because no code outside of
- * sce.js and sceSpecs.js would need to be aware of this detail.
- */
-
- this.$get = ['$parse', '$sniffer', '$sceDelegate', function(
- $parse, $sniffer, $sceDelegate) {
- // Prereq: Ensure that we're not running in IE8 quirks mode. In that mode, IE allows
- // the "expression(javascript expression)" syntax which is insecure.
- if (enabled && $sniffer.msie && $sniffer.msieDocumentMode < 8) {
- throw $sceMinErr('iequirks',
- 'Strict Contextual Escaping does not support Internet Explorer version < 9 in quirks ' +
- 'mode. You can fix this by adding the text to the top of your HTML ' +
- 'document. See http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.$sce for more information.');
- }
-
- var sce = shallowCopy(SCE_CONTEXTS);
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#isEnabled
- * @kind function
- *
- * @return {Boolean} true if SCE is enabled, false otherwise. If you want to set the value, you
- * have to do it at module config time on {@link ng.$sceProvider $sceProvider}.
- *
- * @description
- * Returns a boolean indicating if SCE is enabled.
- */
- sce.isEnabled = function () {
- return enabled;
- };
- sce.trustAs = $sceDelegate.trustAs;
- sce.getTrusted = $sceDelegate.getTrusted;
- sce.valueOf = $sceDelegate.valueOf;
-
- if (!enabled) {
- sce.trustAs = sce.getTrusted = function(type, value) { return value; };
- sce.valueOf = identity;
- }
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parse
- *
- * @description
- * Converts Angular {@link guide/expression expression} into a function. This is like {@link
- * ng.$parse $parse} and is identical when the expression is a literal constant. Otherwise, it
- * wraps the expression in a call to {@link ng.$sce#getTrusted $sce.getTrusted(*type*,
- * *result*)}
- *
- * @param {string} type The kind of SCE context in which this result will be used.
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
- sce.parseAs = function sceParseAs(type, expr) {
- var parsed = $parse(expr);
- if (parsed.literal && parsed.constant) {
- return parsed;
- } else {
- return function sceParseAsTrusted(self, locals) {
- var result = sce.getTrusted(type, parsed(self, locals));
- sceParseAsTrusted.$$unwatch = parsed.$$unwatch;
- return result;
- };
- }
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#trustAs
- *
- * @description
- * Delegates to {@link ng.$sceDelegate#trustAs `$sceDelegate.trustAs`}. As such,
- * returns an object that is trusted by angular for use in specified strict contextual
- * escaping contexts (such as ng-bind-html, ng-include, any src attribute
- * interpolation, any dom event binding attribute interpolation such as for onclick, etc.)
- * that uses the provided value. See * {@link ng.$sce $sce} for enabling strict contextual
- * escaping.
- *
- * @param {string} type The kind of context in which this value is safe for use. e.g. url,
- * resource_url, html, js and css.
- * @param {*} value The value that that should be considered trusted/safe.
- * @returns {*} A value that can be used to stand in for the provided `value` in places
- * where Angular expects a $sce.trustAs() return value.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#trustAsHtml
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.trustAsHtml(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#trustAs `$sceDelegate.trustAs($sce.HTML, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to trustAs.
- * @returns {*} An object that can be passed to {@link ng.$sce#getTrustedHtml
- * $sce.getTrustedHtml(value)} to obtain the original value. (privileged directives
- * only accept expressions that are either literal constants or are the
- * return value of {@link ng.$sce#trustAs $sce.trustAs}.)
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#trustAsUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.trustAsUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#trustAs `$sceDelegate.trustAs($sce.URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to trustAs.
- * @returns {*} An object that can be passed to {@link ng.$sce#getTrustedUrl
- * $sce.getTrustedUrl(value)} to obtain the original value. (privileged directives
- * only accept expressions that are either literal constants or are the
- * return value of {@link ng.$sce#trustAs $sce.trustAs}.)
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#trustAsResourceUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.trustAsResourceUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#trustAs `$sceDelegate.trustAs($sce.RESOURCE_URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to trustAs.
- * @returns {*} An object that can be passed to {@link ng.$sce#getTrustedResourceUrl
- * $sce.getTrustedResourceUrl(value)} to obtain the original value. (privileged directives
- * only accept expressions that are either literal constants or are the return
- * value of {@link ng.$sce#trustAs $sce.trustAs}.)
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#trustAsJs
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.trustAsJs(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#trustAs `$sceDelegate.trustAs($sce.JS, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to trustAs.
- * @returns {*} An object that can be passed to {@link ng.$sce#getTrustedJs
- * $sce.getTrustedJs(value)} to obtain the original value. (privileged directives
- * only accept expressions that are either literal constants or are the
- * return value of {@link ng.$sce#trustAs $sce.trustAs}.)
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrusted
- *
- * @description
- * Delegates to {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted`}. As such,
- * takes the result of a {@link ng.$sce#trustAs `$sce.trustAs`}() call and returns the
- * originally supplied value if the queried context type is a supertype of the created type.
- * If this condition isn't satisfied, throws an exception.
- *
- * @param {string} type The kind of context in which this value is to be used.
- * @param {*} maybeTrusted The result of a prior {@link ng.$sce#trustAs `$sce.trustAs`}
- * call.
- * @returns {*} The value the was originally provided to
- * {@link ng.$sce#trustAs `$sce.trustAs`} if valid in this context.
- * Otherwise, throws an exception.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrustedHtml
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.getTrustedHtml(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted($sce.HTML, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to pass to `$sce.getTrusted`.
- * @returns {*} The return value of `$sce.getTrusted($sce.HTML, value)`
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrustedCss
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.getTrustedCss(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted($sce.CSS, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to pass to `$sce.getTrusted`.
- * @returns {*} The return value of `$sce.getTrusted($sce.CSS, value)`
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrustedUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.getTrustedUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted($sce.URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to pass to `$sce.getTrusted`.
- * @returns {*} The return value of `$sce.getTrusted($sce.URL, value)`
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrustedResourceUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.getTrustedResourceUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted($sce.RESOURCE_URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to pass to `$sceDelegate.getTrusted`.
- * @returns {*} The return value of `$sce.getTrusted($sce.RESOURCE_URL, value)`
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#getTrustedJs
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.getTrustedJs(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sceDelegate#getTrusted `$sceDelegate.getTrusted($sce.JS, value)`}
- *
- * @param {*} value The value to pass to `$sce.getTrusted`.
- * @returns {*} The return value of `$sce.getTrusted($sce.JS, value)`
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parseAsHtml
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.parseAsHtml(expression string)` →
- * {@link ng.$sce#parse `$sce.parseAs($sce.HTML, value)`}
- *
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parseAsCss
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.parseAsCss(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sce#parse `$sce.parseAs($sce.CSS, value)`}
- *
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parseAsUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.parseAsUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sce#parse `$sce.parseAs($sce.URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parseAsResourceUrl
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.parseAsResourceUrl(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sce#parse `$sce.parseAs($sce.RESOURCE_URL, value)`}
- *
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $sce#parseAsJs
- *
- * @description
- * Shorthand method. `$sce.parseAsJs(value)` →
- * {@link ng.$sce#parse `$sce.parseAs($sce.JS, value)`}
- *
- * @param {string} expression String expression to compile.
- * @returns {function(context, locals)} a function which represents the compiled expression:
- *
- * * `context` – `{object}` – an object against which any expressions embedded in the strings
- * are evaluated against (typically a scope object).
- * * `locals` – `{object=}` – local variables context object, useful for overriding values in
- * `context`.
- */
-
- // Shorthand delegations.
- var parse = sce.parseAs,
- getTrusted = sce.getTrusted,
- trustAs = sce.trustAs;
-
- forEach(SCE_CONTEXTS, function (enumValue, name) {
- var lName = lowercase(name);
- sce[camelCase("parse_as_" + lName)] = function (expr) {
- return parse(enumValue, expr);
- };
- sce[camelCase("get_trusted_" + lName)] = function (value) {
- return getTrusted(enumValue, value);
- };
- sce[camelCase("trust_as_" + lName)] = function (value) {
- return trustAs(enumValue, value);
- };
- });
-
- return sce;
- }];
-}
-
-/**
- * !!! This is an undocumented "private" service !!!
- *
- * @name $sniffer
- * @requires $window
- * @requires $document
- *
- * @property {boolean} history Does the browser support html5 history api ?
- * @property {boolean} hashchange Does the browser support hashchange event ?
- * @property {boolean} transitions Does the browser support CSS transition events ?
- * @property {boolean} animations Does the browser support CSS animation events ?
- *
- * @description
- * This is very simple implementation of testing browser's features.
- */
-function $SnifferProvider() {
- this.$get = ['$window', '$document', function($window, $document) {
- var eventSupport = {},
- android =
- int((/android (\d+)/.exec(lowercase(($window.navigator || {}).userAgent)) || [])[1]),
- boxee = /Boxee/i.test(($window.navigator || {}).userAgent),
- document = $document[0] || {},
- documentMode = document.documentMode,
- vendorPrefix,
- vendorRegex = /^(Moz|webkit|O|ms)(?=[A-Z])/,
- bodyStyle = document.body && document.body.style,
- transitions = false,
- animations = false,
- match;
-
- if (bodyStyle) {
- for(var prop in bodyStyle) {
- if(match = vendorRegex.exec(prop)) {
- vendorPrefix = match[0];
- vendorPrefix = vendorPrefix.substr(0, 1).toUpperCase() + vendorPrefix.substr(1);
- break;
- }
- }
-
- if(!vendorPrefix) {
- vendorPrefix = ('WebkitOpacity' in bodyStyle) && 'webkit';
- }
-
- transitions = !!(('transition' in bodyStyle) || (vendorPrefix + 'Transition' in bodyStyle));
- animations = !!(('animation' in bodyStyle) || (vendorPrefix + 'Animation' in bodyStyle));
-
- if (android && (!transitions||!animations)) {
- transitions = isString(document.body.style.webkitTransition);
- animations = isString(document.body.style.webkitAnimation);
- }
- }
-
-
- return {
- // Android has history.pushState, but it does not update location correctly
- // so let's not use the history API at all.
- // http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=17471
- // https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/904
-
- // older webkit browser (533.9) on Boxee box has exactly the same problem as Android has
- // so let's not use the history API also
- // We are purposefully using `!(android < 4)` to cover the case when `android` is undefined
- // jshint -W018
- history: !!($window.history && $window.history.pushState && !(android < 4) && !boxee),
- // jshint +W018
- hashchange: 'onhashchange' in $window &&
- // IE8 compatible mode lies
- (!documentMode || documentMode > 7),
- hasEvent: function(event) {
- // IE9 implements 'input' event it's so fubared that we rather pretend that it doesn't have
- // it. In particular the event is not fired when backspace or delete key are pressed or
- // when cut operation is performed.
- if (event == 'input' && msie == 9) return false;
-
- if (isUndefined(eventSupport[event])) {
- var divElm = document.createElement('div');
- eventSupport[event] = 'on' + event in divElm;
- }
-
- return eventSupport[event];
- },
- csp: csp(),
- vendorPrefix: vendorPrefix,
- transitions : transitions,
- animations : animations,
- android: android,
- msie : msie,
- msieDocumentMode: documentMode
- };
- }];
-}
-
-function $TimeoutProvider() {
- this.$get = ['$rootScope', '$browser', '$q', '$exceptionHandler',
- function($rootScope, $browser, $q, $exceptionHandler) {
- var deferreds = {};
-
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc service
- * @name $timeout
- *
- * @description
- * Angular's wrapper for `window.setTimeout`. The `fn` function is wrapped into a try/catch
- * block and delegates any exceptions to
- * {@link ng.$exceptionHandler $exceptionHandler} service.
- *
- * The return value of registering a timeout function is a promise, which will be resolved when
- * the timeout is reached and the timeout function is executed.
- *
- * To cancel a timeout request, call `$timeout.cancel(promise)`.
- *
- * In tests you can use {@link ngMock.$timeout `$timeout.flush()`} to
- * synchronously flush the queue of deferred functions.
- *
- * @param {function()} fn A function, whose execution should be delayed.
- * @param {number=} [delay=0] Delay in milliseconds.
- * @param {boolean=} [invokeApply=true] If set to `false` skips model dirty checking, otherwise
- * will invoke `fn` within the {@link ng.$rootScope.Scope#$apply $apply} block.
- * @returns {Promise} Promise that will be resolved when the timeout is reached. The value this
- * promise will be resolved with is the return value of the `fn` function.
- *
- */
- function timeout(fn, delay, invokeApply) {
- var deferred = $q.defer(),
- promise = deferred.promise,
- skipApply = (isDefined(invokeApply) && !invokeApply),
- timeoutId;
-
- timeoutId = $browser.defer(function() {
- try {
- deferred.resolve(fn());
- } catch(e) {
- deferred.reject(e);
- $exceptionHandler(e);
- }
- finally {
- delete deferreds[promise.$$timeoutId];
- }
-
- if (!skipApply) $rootScope.$apply();
- }, delay);
-
- promise.$$timeoutId = timeoutId;
- deferreds[timeoutId] = deferred;
-
- return promise;
- }
-
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $timeout#cancel
- *
- * @description
- * Cancels a task associated with the `promise`. As a result of this, the promise will be
- * resolved with a rejection.
- *
- * @param {Promise=} promise Promise returned by the `$timeout` function.
- * @returns {boolean} Returns `true` if the task hasn't executed yet and was successfully
- * canceled.
- */
- timeout.cancel = function(promise) {
- if (promise && promise.$$timeoutId in deferreds) {
- deferreds[promise.$$timeoutId].reject('canceled');
- delete deferreds[promise.$$timeoutId];
- return $browser.defer.cancel(promise.$$timeoutId);
- }
- return false;
- };
-
- return timeout;
- }];
-}
-
-// NOTE: The usage of window and document instead of $window and $document here is
-// deliberate. This service depends on the specific behavior of anchor nodes created by the
-// browser (resolving and parsing URLs) that is unlikely to be provided by mock objects and
-// cause us to break tests. In addition, when the browser resolves a URL for XHR, it
-// doesn't know about mocked locations and resolves URLs to the real document - which is
-// exactly the behavior needed here. There is little value is mocking these out for this
-// service.
-var urlParsingNode = document.createElement("a");
-var originUrl = urlResolve(window.location.href, true);
-
-
-/**
- *
- * Implementation Notes for non-IE browsers
- * ----------------------------------------
- * Assigning a URL to the href property of an anchor DOM node, even one attached to the DOM,
- * results both in the normalizing and parsing of the URL. Normalizing means that a relative
- * URL will be resolved into an absolute URL in the context of the application document.
- * Parsing means that the anchor node's host, hostname, protocol, port, pathname and related
- * properties are all populated to reflect the normalized URL. This approach has wide
- * compatibility - Safari 1+, Mozilla 1+, Opera 7+,e etc. See
- * http://www.aptana.com/reference/html/api/HTMLAnchorElement.html
- *
- * Implementation Notes for IE
- * ---------------------------
- * IE >= 8 and <= 10 normalizes the URL when assigned to the anchor node similar to the other
- * browsers. However, the parsed components will not be set if the URL assigned did not specify
- * them. (e.g. if you assign a.href = "foo", then a.protocol, a.host, etc. will be empty.) We
- * work around that by performing the parsing in a 2nd step by taking a previously normalized
- * URL (e.g. by assigning to a.href) and assigning it a.href again. This correctly populates the
- * properties such as protocol, hostname, port, etc.
- *
- * IE7 does not normalize the URL when assigned to an anchor node. (Apparently, it does, if one
- * uses the inner HTML approach to assign the URL as part of an HTML snippet -
- * http://stackoverflow.com/a/472729) However, setting img[src] does normalize the URL.
- * Unfortunately, setting img[src] to something like "javascript:foo" on IE throws an exception.
- * Since the primary usage for normalizing URLs is to sanitize such URLs, we can't use that
- * method and IE < 8 is unsupported.
- *
- * References:
- * http://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/HTMLAnchorElement
- * http://www.aptana.com/reference/html/api/HTMLAnchorElement.html
- * http://url.spec.whatwg.org/#urlutils
- * https://github.com/angular/angular.js/pull/2902
- * http://james.padolsey.com/javascript/parsing-urls-with-the-dom/
- *
- * @kind function
- * @param {string} url The URL to be parsed.
- * @description Normalizes and parses a URL.
- * @returns {object} Returns the normalized URL as a dictionary.
- *
- * | member name | Description |
- * |---------------|----------------|
- * | href | A normalized version of the provided URL if it was not an absolute URL |
- * | protocol | The protocol including the trailing colon |
- * | host | The host and port (if the port is non-default) of the normalizedUrl |
- * | search | The search params, minus the question mark |
- * | hash | The hash string, minus the hash symbol
- * | hostname | The hostname
- * | port | The port, without ":"
- * | pathname | The pathname, beginning with "/"
- *
- */
-function urlResolve(url, base) {
- var href = url;
-
- if (msie) {
- // Normalize before parse. Refer Implementation Notes on why this is
- // done in two steps on IE.
- urlParsingNode.setAttribute("href", href);
- href = urlParsingNode.href;
- }
-
- urlParsingNode.setAttribute('href', href);
-
- // urlParsingNode provides the UrlUtils interface - http://url.spec.whatwg.org/#urlutils
- return {
- href: urlParsingNode.href,
- protocol: urlParsingNode.protocol ? urlParsingNode.protocol.replace(/:$/, '') : '',
- host: urlParsingNode.host,
- search: urlParsingNode.search ? urlParsingNode.search.replace(/^\?/, '') : '',
- hash: urlParsingNode.hash ? urlParsingNode.hash.replace(/^#/, '') : '',
- hostname: urlParsingNode.hostname,
- port: urlParsingNode.port,
- pathname: (urlParsingNode.pathname.charAt(0) === '/')
- ? urlParsingNode.pathname
- : '/' + urlParsingNode.pathname
- };
-}
-
-/**
- * Parse a request URL and determine whether this is a same-origin request as the application document.
- *
- * @param {string|object} requestUrl The url of the request as a string that will be resolved
- * or a parsed URL object.
- * @returns {boolean} Whether the request is for the same origin as the application document.
- */
-function urlIsSameOrigin(requestUrl) {
- var parsed = (isString(requestUrl)) ? urlResolve(requestUrl) : requestUrl;
- return (parsed.protocol === originUrl.protocol &&
- parsed.host === originUrl.host);
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc service
- * @name $window
- *
- * @description
- * A reference to the browser's `window` object. While `window`
- * is globally available in JavaScript, it causes testability problems, because
- * it is a global variable. In angular we always refer to it through the
- * `$window` service, so it may be overridden, removed or mocked for testing.
- *
- * Expressions, like the one defined for the `ngClick` directive in the example
- * below, are evaluated with respect to the current scope. Therefore, there is
- * no risk of inadvertently coding in a dependency on a global value in such an
- * expression.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- it('should display the greeting in the input box', function() {
- element(by.model('greeting')).sendKeys('Hello, E2E Tests');
- // If we click the button it will block the test runner
- // element(':button').click();
- });
-
-
- */
-function $WindowProvider(){
- this.$get = valueFn(window);
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc provider
- * @name $filterProvider
- * @description
- *
- * Filters are just functions which transform input to an output. However filters need to be
- * Dependency Injected. To achieve this a filter definition consists of a factory function which is
- * annotated with dependencies and is responsible for creating a filter function.
- *
- * ```js
- * // Filter registration
- * function MyModule($provide, $filterProvider) {
- * // create a service to demonstrate injection (not always needed)
- * $provide.value('greet', function(name){
- * return 'Hello ' + name + '!';
- * });
- *
- * // register a filter factory which uses the
- * // greet service to demonstrate DI.
- * $filterProvider.register('greet', function(greet){
- * // return the filter function which uses the greet service
- * // to generate salutation
- * return function(text) {
- * // filters need to be forgiving so check input validity
- * return text && greet(text) || text;
- * };
- * });
- * }
- * ```
- *
- * The filter function is registered with the `$injector` under the filter name suffix with
- * `Filter`.
- *
- * ```js
- * it('should be the same instance', inject(
- * function($filterProvider) {
- * $filterProvider.register('reverse', function(){
- * return ...;
- * });
- * },
- * function($filter, reverseFilter) {
- * expect($filter('reverse')).toBe(reverseFilter);
- * });
- * ```
- *
- *
- * For more information about how angular filters work, and how to create your own filters, see
- * {@link guide/filter Filters} in the Angular Developer Guide.
- */
-/**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $filterProvider#register
- * @description
- * Register filter factory function.
- *
- * @param {String} name Name of the filter.
- * @param {Function} fn The filter factory function which is injectable.
- */
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc service
- * @name $filter
- * @kind function
- * @description
- * Filters are used for formatting data displayed to the user.
- *
- * The general syntax in templates is as follows:
- *
- * {{ expression [| filter_name[:parameter_value] ... ] }}
- *
- * @param {String} name Name of the filter function to retrieve
- * @return {Function} the filter function
- * @example
-
-
-
-
{{ originalText }}
- {{ filteredText }}
-
-
-
-
- angular.module('filterExample', [])
- .controller('MainCtrl', function($scope, $filter) {
- $scope.originalText = 'hello';
- $scope.filteredText = $filter('uppercase')($scope.originalText);
- });
-
-
- */
-$FilterProvider.$inject = ['$provide'];
-function $FilterProvider($provide) {
- var suffix = 'Filter';
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name $controllerProvider#register
- * @param {string|Object} name Name of the filter function, or an object map of filters where
- * the keys are the filter names and the values are the filter factories.
- * @returns {Object} Registered filter instance, or if a map of filters was provided then a map
- * of the registered filter instances.
- */
- function register(name, factory) {
- if(isObject(name)) {
- var filters = {};
- forEach(name, function(filter, key) {
- filters[key] = register(key, filter);
- });
- return filters;
- } else {
- return $provide.factory(name + suffix, factory);
- }
- }
- this.register = register;
-
- this.$get = ['$injector', function($injector) {
- return function(name) {
- return $injector.get(name + suffix);
- };
- }];
-
- ////////////////////////////////////////
-
- /* global
- currencyFilter: false,
- dateFilter: false,
- filterFilter: false,
- jsonFilter: false,
- limitToFilter: false,
- lowercaseFilter: false,
- numberFilter: false,
- orderByFilter: false,
- uppercaseFilter: false,
- */
-
- register('currency', currencyFilter);
- register('date', dateFilter);
- register('filter', filterFilter);
- register('json', jsonFilter);
- register('limitTo', limitToFilter);
- register('lowercase', lowercaseFilter);
- register('number', numberFilter);
- register('orderBy', orderByFilter);
- register('uppercase', uppercaseFilter);
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name filter
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Selects a subset of items from `array` and returns it as a new array.
- *
- * @param {Array} array The source array.
- * @param {string|Object|function()} expression The predicate to be used for selecting items from
- * `array`.
- *
- * Can be one of:
- *
- * - `string`: The string is evaluated as an expression and the resulting value is used for substring match against
- * the contents of the `array`. All strings or objects with string properties in `array` that contain this string
- * will be returned. The predicate can be negated by prefixing the string with `!`.
- *
- * - `Object`: A pattern object can be used to filter specific properties on objects contained
- * by `array`. For example `{name:"M", phone:"1"}` predicate will return an array of items
- * which have property `name` containing "M" and property `phone` containing "1". A special
- * property name `$` can be used (as in `{$:"text"}`) to accept a match against any
- * property of the object. That's equivalent to the simple substring match with a `string`
- * as described above.
- *
- * - `function(value)`: A predicate function can be used to write arbitrary filters. The function is
- * called for each element of `array`. The final result is an array of those elements that
- * the predicate returned true for.
- *
- * @param {function(actual, expected)|true|undefined} comparator Comparator which is used in
- * determining if the expected value (from the filter expression) and actual value (from
- * the object in the array) should be considered a match.
- *
- * Can be one of:
- *
- * - `function(actual, expected)`:
- * The function will be given the object value and the predicate value to compare and
- * should return true if the item should be included in filtered result.
- *
- * - `true`: A shorthand for `function(actual, expected) { return angular.equals(expected, actual)}`.
- * this is essentially strict comparison of expected and actual.
- *
- * - `false|undefined`: A short hand for a function which will look for a substring match in case
- * insensitive way.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
- Search:
-
- Name | Phone |
-
- {{friend.name}} |
- {{friend.phone}} |
-
-
-
- Any:
- Name only
- Phone only
- Equality
-
- Name | Phone |
-
- {{friendObj.name}} |
- {{friendObj.phone}} |
-
-
-
-
- var expectFriendNames = function(expectedNames, key) {
- element.all(by.repeater(key + ' in friends').column(key + '.name')).then(function(arr) {
- arr.forEach(function(wd, i) {
- expect(wd.getText()).toMatch(expectedNames[i]);
- });
- });
- };
-
- it('should search across all fields when filtering with a string', function() {
- var searchText = element(by.model('searchText'));
- searchText.clear();
- searchText.sendKeys('m');
- expectFriendNames(['Mary', 'Mike', 'Adam'], 'friend');
-
- searchText.clear();
- searchText.sendKeys('76');
- expectFriendNames(['John', 'Julie'], 'friend');
- });
-
- it('should search in specific fields when filtering with a predicate object', function() {
- var searchAny = element(by.model('search.$'));
- searchAny.clear();
- searchAny.sendKeys('i');
- expectFriendNames(['Mary', 'Mike', 'Julie', 'Juliette'], 'friendObj');
- });
- it('should use a equal comparison when comparator is true', function() {
- var searchName = element(by.model('search.name'));
- var strict = element(by.model('strict'));
- searchName.clear();
- searchName.sendKeys('Julie');
- strict.click();
- expectFriendNames(['Julie'], 'friendObj');
- });
-
-
- */
-function filterFilter() {
- return function(array, expression, comparator) {
- if (!isArray(array)) return array;
-
- var comparatorType = typeof(comparator),
- predicates = [];
-
- predicates.check = function(value) {
- for (var j = 0; j < predicates.length; j++) {
- if(!predicates[j](value)) {
- return false;
- }
- }
- return true;
- };
-
- if (comparatorType !== 'function') {
- if (comparatorType === 'boolean' && comparator) {
- comparator = function(obj, text) {
- return angular.equals(obj, text);
- };
- } else {
- comparator = function(obj, text) {
- if (obj && text && typeof obj === 'object' && typeof text === 'object') {
- for (var objKey in obj) {
- if (objKey.charAt(0) !== '$' && hasOwnProperty.call(obj, objKey) &&
- comparator(obj[objKey], text[objKey])) {
- return true;
- }
- }
- return false;
- }
- text = (''+text).toLowerCase();
- return (''+obj).toLowerCase().indexOf(text) > -1;
- };
- }
- }
-
- var search = function(obj, text){
- if (typeof text == 'string' && text.charAt(0) === '!') {
- return !search(obj, text.substr(1));
- }
- switch (typeof obj) {
- case "boolean":
- case "number":
- case "string":
- return comparator(obj, text);
- case "object":
- switch (typeof text) {
- case "object":
- return comparator(obj, text);
- default:
- for ( var objKey in obj) {
- if (objKey.charAt(0) !== '$' && search(obj[objKey], text)) {
- return true;
- }
- }
- break;
- }
- return false;
- case "array":
- for ( var i = 0; i < obj.length; i++) {
- if (search(obj[i], text)) {
- return true;
- }
- }
- return false;
- default:
- return false;
- }
- };
- switch (typeof expression) {
- case "boolean":
- case "number":
- case "string":
- // Set up expression object and fall through
- expression = {$:expression};
- // jshint -W086
- case "object":
- // jshint +W086
- for (var key in expression) {
- (function(path) {
- if (typeof expression[path] == 'undefined') return;
- predicates.push(function(value) {
- return search(path == '$' ? value : (value && value[path]), expression[path]);
- });
- })(key);
- }
- break;
- case 'function':
- predicates.push(expression);
- break;
- default:
- return array;
- }
- var filtered = [];
- for ( var j = 0; j < array.length; j++) {
- var value = array[j];
- if (predicates.check(value)) {
- filtered.push(value);
- }
- }
- return filtered;
- };
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name currency
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Formats a number as a currency (ie $1,234.56). When no currency symbol is provided, default
- * symbol for current locale is used.
- *
- * @param {number} amount Input to filter.
- * @param {string=} symbol Currency symbol or identifier to be displayed.
- * @returns {string} Formatted number.
- *
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
-
- default currency symbol ($): {{amount | currency}}
- custom currency identifier (USD$): {{amount | currency:"USD$"}}
-
-
-
- it('should init with 1234.56', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('currency-default')).getText()).toBe('$1,234.56');
- expect(element(by.binding('amount | currency:"USD$"')).getText()).toBe('USD$1,234.56');
- });
- it('should update', function() {
- if (browser.params.browser == 'safari') {
- // Safari does not understand the minus key. See
- // https://github.com/angular/protractor/issues/481
- return;
- }
- element(by.model('amount')).clear();
- element(by.model('amount')).sendKeys('-1234');
- expect(element(by.id('currency-default')).getText()).toBe('($1,234.00)');
- expect(element(by.binding('amount | currency:"USD$"')).getText()).toBe('(USD$1,234.00)');
- });
-
-
- */
-currencyFilter.$inject = ['$locale'];
-function currencyFilter($locale) {
- var formats = $locale.NUMBER_FORMATS;
- return function(amount, currencySymbol){
- if (isUndefined(currencySymbol)) currencySymbol = formats.CURRENCY_SYM;
- return formatNumber(amount, formats.PATTERNS[1], formats.GROUP_SEP, formats.DECIMAL_SEP, 2).
- replace(/\u00A4/g, currencySymbol);
- };
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name number
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Formats a number as text.
- *
- * If the input is not a number an empty string is returned.
- *
- * @param {number|string} number Number to format.
- * @param {(number|string)=} fractionSize Number of decimal places to round the number to.
- * If this is not provided then the fraction size is computed from the current locale's number
- * formatting pattern. In the case of the default locale, it will be 3.
- * @returns {string} Number rounded to decimalPlaces and places a “,” after each third digit.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
- Enter number:
- Default formatting: {{val | number}}
- No fractions: {{val | number:0}}
- Negative number: {{-val | number:4}}
-
-
-
- it('should format numbers', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('number-default')).getText()).toBe('1,234.568');
- expect(element(by.binding('val | number:0')).getText()).toBe('1,235');
- expect(element(by.binding('-val | number:4')).getText()).toBe('-1,234.5679');
- });
-
- it('should update', function() {
- element(by.model('val')).clear();
- element(by.model('val')).sendKeys('3374.333');
- expect(element(by.id('number-default')).getText()).toBe('3,374.333');
- expect(element(by.binding('val | number:0')).getText()).toBe('3,374');
- expect(element(by.binding('-val | number:4')).getText()).toBe('-3,374.3330');
- });
-
-
- */
-
-
-numberFilter.$inject = ['$locale'];
-function numberFilter($locale) {
- var formats = $locale.NUMBER_FORMATS;
- return function(number, fractionSize) {
- return formatNumber(number, formats.PATTERNS[0], formats.GROUP_SEP, formats.DECIMAL_SEP,
- fractionSize);
- };
-}
-
-var DECIMAL_SEP = '.';
-function formatNumber(number, pattern, groupSep, decimalSep, fractionSize) {
- if (number == null || !isFinite(number) || isObject(number)) return '';
-
- var isNegative = number < 0;
- number = Math.abs(number);
- var numStr = number + '',
- formatedText = '',
- parts = [];
-
- var hasExponent = false;
- if (numStr.indexOf('e') !== -1) {
- var match = numStr.match(/([\d\.]+)e(-?)(\d+)/);
- if (match && match[2] == '-' && match[3] > fractionSize + 1) {
- numStr = '0';
- } else {
- formatedText = numStr;
- hasExponent = true;
- }
- }
-
- if (!hasExponent) {
- var fractionLen = (numStr.split(DECIMAL_SEP)[1] || '').length;
-
- // determine fractionSize if it is not specified
- if (isUndefined(fractionSize)) {
- fractionSize = Math.min(Math.max(pattern.minFrac, fractionLen), pattern.maxFrac);
- }
-
- var pow = Math.pow(10, fractionSize + 1);
- number = Math.floor(number * pow + 5) / pow;
- var fraction = ('' + number).split(DECIMAL_SEP);
- var whole = fraction[0];
- fraction = fraction[1] || '';
-
- var i, pos = 0,
- lgroup = pattern.lgSize,
- group = pattern.gSize;
-
- if (whole.length >= (lgroup + group)) {
- pos = whole.length - lgroup;
- for (i = 0; i < pos; i++) {
- if ((pos - i)%group === 0 && i !== 0) {
- formatedText += groupSep;
- }
- formatedText += whole.charAt(i);
- }
- }
-
- for (i = pos; i < whole.length; i++) {
- if ((whole.length - i)%lgroup === 0 && i !== 0) {
- formatedText += groupSep;
- }
- formatedText += whole.charAt(i);
- }
-
- // format fraction part.
- while(fraction.length < fractionSize) {
- fraction += '0';
- }
-
- if (fractionSize && fractionSize !== "0") formatedText += decimalSep + fraction.substr(0, fractionSize);
- } else {
-
- if (fractionSize > 0 && number > -1 && number < 1) {
- formatedText = number.toFixed(fractionSize);
- }
- }
-
- parts.push(isNegative ? pattern.negPre : pattern.posPre);
- parts.push(formatedText);
- parts.push(isNegative ? pattern.negSuf : pattern.posSuf);
- return parts.join('');
-}
-
-function padNumber(num, digits, trim) {
- var neg = '';
- if (num < 0) {
- neg = '-';
- num = -num;
- }
- num = '' + num;
- while(num.length < digits) num = '0' + num;
- if (trim)
- num = num.substr(num.length - digits);
- return neg + num;
-}
-
-
-function dateGetter(name, size, offset, trim) {
- offset = offset || 0;
- return function(date) {
- var value = date['get' + name]();
- if (offset > 0 || value > -offset)
- value += offset;
- if (value === 0 && offset == -12 ) value = 12;
- return padNumber(value, size, trim);
- };
-}
-
-function dateStrGetter(name, shortForm) {
- return function(date, formats) {
- var value = date['get' + name]();
- var get = uppercase(shortForm ? ('SHORT' + name) : name);
-
- return formats[get][value];
- };
-}
-
-function timeZoneGetter(date) {
- var zone = -1 * date.getTimezoneOffset();
- var paddedZone = (zone >= 0) ? "+" : "";
-
- paddedZone += padNumber(Math[zone > 0 ? 'floor' : 'ceil'](zone / 60), 2) +
- padNumber(Math.abs(zone % 60), 2);
-
- return paddedZone;
-}
-
-function getFirstThursdayOfYear(year) {
- // 0 = index of January
- var dayOfWeekOnFirst = (new Date(year, 0, 1)).getDay();
- // 4 = index of Thursday (+1 to account for 1st = 5)
- // 11 = index of *next* Thursday (+1 account for 1st = 12)
- return new Date(year, 0, ((dayOfWeekOnFirst <= 4) ? 5 : 12) - dayOfWeekOnFirst);
-}
-
-function getThursdayThisWeek(datetime) {
- return new Date(datetime.getFullYear(), datetime.getMonth(),
- // 4 = index of Thursday
- datetime.getDate() + (4 - datetime.getDay()));
-}
-
-function weekGetter(size) {
- return function(date) {
- var firstThurs = getFirstThursdayOfYear(date.getFullYear()),
- thisThurs = getThursdayThisWeek(date);
-
- var diff = +thisThurs - +firstThurs,
- result = 1 + Math.round(diff / 6.048e8); // 6.048e8 ms per week
-
- return padNumber(result, size);
- };
-}
-
-function ampmGetter(date, formats) {
- return date.getHours() < 12 ? formats.AMPMS[0] : formats.AMPMS[1];
-}
-
-var DATE_FORMATS = {
- yyyy: dateGetter('FullYear', 4),
- yy: dateGetter('FullYear', 2, 0, true),
- y: dateGetter('FullYear', 1),
- MMMM: dateStrGetter('Month'),
- MMM: dateStrGetter('Month', true),
- MM: dateGetter('Month', 2, 1),
- M: dateGetter('Month', 1, 1),
- dd: dateGetter('Date', 2),
- d: dateGetter('Date', 1),
- HH: dateGetter('Hours', 2),
- H: dateGetter('Hours', 1),
- hh: dateGetter('Hours', 2, -12),
- h: dateGetter('Hours', 1, -12),
- mm: dateGetter('Minutes', 2),
- m: dateGetter('Minutes', 1),
- ss: dateGetter('Seconds', 2),
- s: dateGetter('Seconds', 1),
- // while ISO 8601 requires fractions to be prefixed with `.` or `,`
- // we can be just safely rely on using `sss` since we currently don't support single or two digit fractions
- sss: dateGetter('Milliseconds', 3),
- EEEE: dateStrGetter('Day'),
- EEE: dateStrGetter('Day', true),
- a: ampmGetter,
- Z: timeZoneGetter,
- ww: weekGetter(2),
- w: weekGetter(1)
-};
-
-var DATE_FORMATS_SPLIT = /((?:[^yMdHhmsaZEw']+)|(?:'(?:[^']|'')*')|(?:E+|y+|M+|d+|H+|h+|m+|s+|a|Z|w+))(.*)/,
- NUMBER_STRING = /^\-?\d+$/;
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name date
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Formats `date` to a string based on the requested `format`.
- *
- * `format` string can be composed of the following elements:
- *
- * * `'yyyy'`: 4 digit representation of year (e.g. AD 1 => 0001, AD 2010 => 2010)
- * * `'yy'`: 2 digit representation of year, padded (00-99). (e.g. AD 2001 => 01, AD 2010 => 10)
- * * `'y'`: 1 digit representation of year, e.g. (AD 1 => 1, AD 199 => 199)
- * * `'MMMM'`: Month in year (January-December)
- * * `'MMM'`: Month in year (Jan-Dec)
- * * `'MM'`: Month in year, padded (01-12)
- * * `'M'`: Month in year (1-12)
- * * `'dd'`: Day in month, padded (01-31)
- * * `'d'`: Day in month (1-31)
- * * `'EEEE'`: Day in Week,(Sunday-Saturday)
- * * `'EEE'`: Day in Week, (Sun-Sat)
- * * `'HH'`: Hour in day, padded (00-23)
- * * `'H'`: Hour in day (0-23)
- * * `'hh'`: Hour in am/pm, padded (01-12)
- * * `'h'`: Hour in am/pm, (1-12)
- * * `'mm'`: Minute in hour, padded (00-59)
- * * `'m'`: Minute in hour (0-59)
- * * `'ss'`: Second in minute, padded (00-59)
- * * `'s'`: Second in minute (0-59)
- * * `'.sss' or ',sss'`: Millisecond in second, padded (000-999)
- * * `'a'`: am/pm marker
- * * `'Z'`: 4 digit (+sign) representation of the timezone offset (-1200-+1200)
- * * `'ww'`: ISO-8601 week of year (00-53)
- * * `'w'`: ISO-8601 week of year (0-53)
- *
- * `format` string can also be one of the following predefined
- * {@link guide/i18n localizable formats}:
- *
- * * `'medium'`: equivalent to `'MMM d, y h:mm:ss a'` for en_US locale
- * (e.g. Sep 3, 2010 12:05:08 pm)
- * * `'short'`: equivalent to `'M/d/yy h:mm a'` for en_US locale (e.g. 9/3/10 12:05 pm)
- * * `'fullDate'`: equivalent to `'EEEE, MMMM d, y'` for en_US locale
- * (e.g. Friday, September 3, 2010)
- * * `'longDate'`: equivalent to `'MMMM d, y'` for en_US locale (e.g. September 3, 2010)
- * * `'mediumDate'`: equivalent to `'MMM d, y'` for en_US locale (e.g. Sep 3, 2010)
- * * `'shortDate'`: equivalent to `'M/d/yy'` for en_US locale (e.g. 9/3/10)
- * * `'mediumTime'`: equivalent to `'h:mm:ss a'` for en_US locale (e.g. 12:05:08 pm)
- * * `'shortTime'`: equivalent to `'h:mm a'` for en_US locale (e.g. 12:05 pm)
- *
- * `format` string can contain literal values. These need to be quoted with single quotes (e.g.
- * `"h 'in the morning'"`). In order to output single quote, use two single quotes in a sequence
- * (e.g. `"h 'o''clock'"`).
- *
- * @param {(Date|number|string)} date Date to format either as Date object, milliseconds (string or
- * number) or various ISO 8601 datetime string formats (e.g. yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ss.SSSZ and its
- * shorter versions like yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mmZ, yyyy-MM-dd or yyyyMMddTHHmmssZ). If no timezone is
- * specified in the string input, the time is considered to be in the local timezone.
- * @param {string=} format Formatting rules (see Description). If not specified,
- * `mediumDate` is used.
- * @returns {string} Formatted string or the input if input is not recognized as date/millis.
- *
- * @example
-
-
- {{1288323623006 | date:'medium'}}:
- {{1288323623006 | date:'medium'}}
- {{1288323623006 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'}}:
- {{1288323623006 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'}}
- {{1288323623006 | date:'MM/dd/yyyy @ h:mma'}}:
- {{'1288323623006' | date:'MM/dd/yyyy @ h:mma'}}
-
-
- it('should format date', function() {
- expect(element(by.binding("1288323623006 | date:'medium'")).getText()).
- toMatch(/Oct 2\d, 2010 \d{1,2}:\d{2}:\d{2} (AM|PM)/);
- expect(element(by.binding("1288323623006 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'")).getText()).
- toMatch(/2010\-10\-2\d \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2} (\-|\+)?\d{4}/);
- expect(element(by.binding("'1288323623006' | date:'MM/dd/yyyy @ h:mma'")).getText()).
- toMatch(/10\/2\d\/2010 @ \d{1,2}:\d{2}(AM|PM)/);
- });
-
-
- */
-dateFilter.$inject = ['$locale'];
-function dateFilter($locale) {
-
-
- var R_ISO8601_STR = /^(\d{4})-?(\d\d)-?(\d\d)(?:T(\d\d)(?::?(\d\d)(?::?(\d\d)(?:\.(\d+))?)?)?(Z|([+-])(\d\d):?(\d\d))?)?$/;
- // 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
- function jsonStringToDate(string) {
- var match;
- if (match = string.match(R_ISO8601_STR)) {
- var date = new Date(0),
- tzHour = 0,
- tzMin = 0,
- dateSetter = match[8] ? date.setUTCFullYear : date.setFullYear,
- timeSetter = match[8] ? date.setUTCHours : date.setHours;
-
- if (match[9]) {
- tzHour = int(match[9] + match[10]);
- tzMin = int(match[9] + match[11]);
- }
- dateSetter.call(date, int(match[1]), int(match[2]) - 1, int(match[3]));
- var h = int(match[4]||0) - tzHour;
- var m = int(match[5]||0) - tzMin;
- var s = int(match[6]||0);
- var ms = Math.round(parseFloat('0.' + (match[7]||0)) * 1000);
- timeSetter.call(date, h, m, s, ms);
- return date;
- }
- return string;
- }
-
-
- return function(date, format) {
- var text = '',
- parts = [],
- fn, match;
-
- format = format || 'mediumDate';
- format = $locale.DATETIME_FORMATS[format] || format;
- if (isString(date)) {
- if (NUMBER_STRING.test(date)) {
- date = int(date);
- } else {
- date = jsonStringToDate(date);
- }
- }
-
- if (isNumber(date)) {
- date = new Date(date);
- }
-
- if (!isDate(date)) {
- return date;
- }
-
- while(format) {
- match = DATE_FORMATS_SPLIT.exec(format);
- if (match) {
- parts = concat(parts, match, 1);
- format = parts.pop();
- } else {
- parts.push(format);
- format = null;
- }
- }
-
- forEach(parts, function(value){
- fn = DATE_FORMATS[value];
- text += fn ? fn(date, $locale.DATETIME_FORMATS)
- : value.replace(/(^'|'$)/g, '').replace(/''/g, "'");
- });
-
- return text;
- };
-}
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name json
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Allows you to convert a JavaScript object into JSON string.
- *
- * This filter is mostly useful for debugging. When using the double curly {{value}} notation
- * the binding is automatically converted to JSON.
- *
- * @param {*} object Any JavaScript object (including arrays and primitive types) to filter.
- * @returns {string} JSON string.
- *
- *
- * @example
-
-
- {{ {'name':'value'} | json }}
-
-
- it('should jsonify filtered objects', function() {
- expect(element(by.binding("{'name':'value'}")).getText()).toMatch(/\{\n "name": ?"value"\n}/);
- });
-
-
- *
- */
-function jsonFilter() {
- return function(object) {
- return toJson(object, true);
- };
-}
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name lowercase
- * @kind function
- * @description
- * Converts string to lowercase.
- * @see angular.lowercase
- */
-var lowercaseFilter = valueFn(lowercase);
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name uppercase
- * @kind function
- * @description
- * Converts string to uppercase.
- * @see angular.uppercase
- */
-var uppercaseFilter = valueFn(uppercase);
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc filter
- * @name limitTo
- * @kind function
- *
- * @description
- * Creates a new array or string containing only a specified number of elements. The elements
- * are taken from either the beginning or the end of the source array or string, as specified by
- * the value and sign (positive or negative) of `limit`.
- *
- * @param {Array|string} input Source array or string to be limited.
- * @param {string|number} limit The length of the returned array or string. If the `limit` number
- * is positive, `limit` number of items from the beginning of the source array/string are copied.
- * If the number is negative, `limit` number of items from the end of the source array/string
- * are copied. The `limit` will be trimmed if it exceeds `array.length`
- * @returns {Array|string} A new sub-array or substring of length `limit` or less if input array
- * had less than `limit` elements.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
- Limit {{numbers}} to:
-
Output numbers: {{ numbers | limitTo:numLimit }}
- Limit {{letters}} to:
-
Output letters: {{ letters | limitTo:letterLimit }}
-
-
-
- var numLimitInput = element(by.model('numLimit'));
- var letterLimitInput = element(by.model('letterLimit'));
- var limitedNumbers = element(by.binding('numbers | limitTo:numLimit'));
- var limitedLetters = element(by.binding('letters | limitTo:letterLimit'));
-
- it('should limit the number array to first three items', function() {
- expect(numLimitInput.getAttribute('value')).toBe('3');
- expect(letterLimitInput.getAttribute('value')).toBe('3');
- expect(limitedNumbers.getText()).toEqual('Output numbers: [1,2,3]');
- expect(limitedLetters.getText()).toEqual('Output letters: abc');
- });
-
- it('should update the output when -3 is entered', function() {
- numLimitInput.clear();
- numLimitInput.sendKeys('-3');
- letterLimitInput.clear();
- letterLimitInput.sendKeys('-3');
- expect(limitedNumbers.getText()).toEqual('Output numbers: [7,8,9]');
- expect(limitedLetters.getText()).toEqual('Output letters: ghi');
- });
-
- it('should not exceed the maximum size of input array', function() {
- numLimitInput.clear();
- numLimitInput.sendKeys('100');
- letterLimitInput.clear();
- letterLimitInput.sendKeys('100');
- expect(limitedNumbers.getText()).toEqual('Output numbers: [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]');
- expect(limitedLetters.getText()).toEqual('Output letters: abcdefghi');
- });
-
-
- */
-function limitToFilter(){
- return function(input, limit) {
- if (!isArray(input) && !isString(input)) return input;
-
- if (Math.abs(Number(limit)) === Infinity) {
- limit = Number(limit);
- } else {
- limit = int(limit);
- }
-
- if (isString(input)) {
- //NaN check on limit
- if (limit) {
- return limit >= 0 ? input.slice(0, limit) : input.slice(limit, input.length);
- } else {
- return "";
- }
- }
-
- var out = [],
- i, n;
-
- // if abs(limit) exceeds maximum length, trim it
- if (limit > input.length)
- limit = input.length;
- else if (limit < -input.length)
- limit = -input.length;
-
- if (limit > 0) {
- i = 0;
- n = limit;
- } else {
- i = input.length + limit;
- n = input.length;
- }
-
- for (; i
} expression A predicate to be
- * used by the comparator to determine the order of elements.
- *
- * Can be one of:
- *
- * - `function`: Getter function. The result of this function will be sorted using the
- * `<`, `=`, `>` operator.
- * - `string`: An Angular expression which evaluates to an object to order by, such as 'name'
- * to sort by a property called 'name'. Optionally prefixed with `+` or `-` to control
- * ascending or descending sort order (for example, +name or -name).
- * - `Array`: An array of function or string predicates. The first predicate in the array
- * is used for sorting, but when two items are equivalent, the next predicate is used.
- *
- * @param {boolean=} reverse Reverse the order of the array.
- * @returns {Array} Sorted copy of the source array.
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
-
Sorting predicate = {{predicate}}; reverse = {{reverse}}
-
- [
unsorted ]
-
-
-
-
- *
- * It's also possible to call the orderBy filter manually, by injecting `$filter`, retrieving the
- * filter routine with `$filter('orderBy')`, and calling the returned filter routine with the
- * desired parameters.
- *
- * Example:
- *
- * @example
-
-
-
-
-
-
- function Ctrl($scope, $filter) {
- var orderBy = $filter('orderBy');
- $scope.friends = [
- { name: 'John', phone: '555-1212', age: 10 },
- { name: 'Mary', phone: '555-9876', age: 19 },
- { name: 'Mike', phone: '555-4321', age: 21 },
- { name: 'Adam', phone: '555-5678', age: 35 },
- { name: 'Julie', phone: '555-8765', age: 29 }
- ];
-
- $scope.order = function(predicate, reverse) {
- $scope.friends = orderBy($scope.friends, predicate, reverse);
- };
- $scope.order('-age',false);
- }
-
-
- */
-orderByFilter.$inject = ['$parse'];
-function orderByFilter($parse){
- return function(array, sortPredicate, reverseOrder) {
- if (!isArray(array)) return array;
- if (!sortPredicate) return array;
- sortPredicate = isArray(sortPredicate) ? sortPredicate: [sortPredicate];
- sortPredicate = map(sortPredicate, function(predicate){
- var descending = false, get = predicate || identity;
- if (isString(predicate)) {
- if ((predicate.charAt(0) == '+' || predicate.charAt(0) == '-')) {
- descending = predicate.charAt(0) == '-';
- predicate = predicate.substring(1);
- }
- get = $parse(predicate);
- if (get.constant) {
- var key = get();
- return reverseComparator(function(a,b) {
- return compare(a[key], b[key]);
- }, descending);
- }
- }
- return reverseComparator(function(a,b){
- return compare(get(a),get(b));
- }, descending);
- });
- var arrayCopy = [];
- for ( var i = 0; i < array.length; i++) { arrayCopy.push(array[i]); }
- return arrayCopy.sort(reverseComparator(comparator, reverseOrder));
-
- function comparator(o1, o2){
- for ( var i = 0; i < sortPredicate.length; i++) {
- var comp = sortPredicate[i](o1, o2);
- if (comp !== 0) return comp;
- }
- return 0;
- }
- function reverseComparator(comp, descending) {
- return toBoolean(descending)
- ? function(a,b){return comp(b,a);}
- : comp;
- }
- function compare(v1, v2){
- var t1 = typeof v1;
- var t2 = typeof v2;
- if (t1 == t2) {
- if (t1 == "string") {
- v1 = v1.toLowerCase();
- v2 = v2.toLowerCase();
- }
- if (v1 === v2) return 0;
- return v1 < v2 ? -1 : 1;
- } else {
- return t1 < t2 ? -1 : 1;
- }
- }
- };
-}
-
-function ngDirective(directive) {
- if (isFunction(directive)) {
- directive = {
- link: directive
- };
- }
- directive.restrict = directive.restrict || 'AC';
- return valueFn(directive);
-}
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name a
- * @restrict E
- *
- * @description
- * Modifies the default behavior of the html A tag so that the default action is prevented when
- * the href attribute is empty.
- *
- * This change permits the easy creation of action links with the `ngClick` directive
- * without changing the location or causing page reloads, e.g.:
- * `Add Item`
- */
-var htmlAnchorDirective = valueFn({
- restrict: 'E',
- compile: function(element, attr) {
-
- if (msie <= 8) {
-
- // turn link into a stylable link in IE
- // but only if it doesn't have name attribute, in which case it's an anchor
- if (!attr.href && !attr.name) {
- attr.$set('href', '');
- }
-
- // add a comment node to anchors to workaround IE bug that causes element content to be reset
- // to new attribute content if attribute is updated with value containing @ and element also
- // contains value with @
- // see issue #1949
- element.append(document.createComment('IE fix'));
- }
-
- if (!attr.href && !attr.xlinkHref && !attr.name) {
- return function(scope, element) {
- // SVGAElement does not use the href attribute, but rather the 'xlinkHref' attribute.
- var href = toString.call(element.prop('href')) === '[object SVGAnimatedString]' ?
- 'xlink:href' : 'href';
- element.on('click', function(event){
- // if we have no href url, then don't navigate anywhere.
- if (!element.attr(href)) {
- event.preventDefault();
- }
- });
- };
- }
- }
-});
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngHref
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 99
- *
- * @description
- * Using Angular markup like `{{hash}}` in an href attribute will
- * make the link go to the wrong URL if the user clicks it before
- * Angular has a chance to replace the `{{hash}}` markup with its
- * value. Until Angular replaces the markup the link will be broken
- * and will most likely return a 404 error.
- *
- * The `ngHref` directive solves this problem.
- *
- * The wrong way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * The correct way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * @element A
- * @param {template} ngHref any string which can contain `{{}}` markup.
- *
- * @example
- * This example shows various combinations of `href`, `ng-href` and `ng-click` attributes
- * in links and their different behaviors:
-
-
-
- link 1 (link, don't reload)
- link 2 (link, don't reload)
- link 3 (link, reload!)
- anchor (link, don't reload)
- anchor (no link)
- link (link, change location)
-
-
- it('should execute ng-click but not reload when href without value', function() {
- element(by.id('link-1')).click();
- expect(element(by.model('value')).getAttribute('value')).toEqual('1');
- expect(element(by.id('link-1')).getAttribute('href')).toBe('');
- });
-
- it('should execute ng-click but not reload when href empty string', function() {
- element(by.id('link-2')).click();
- expect(element(by.model('value')).getAttribute('value')).toEqual('2');
- expect(element(by.id('link-2')).getAttribute('href')).toBe('');
- });
-
- it('should execute ng-click and change url when ng-href specified', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('link-3')).getAttribute('href')).toMatch(/\/123$/);
-
- element(by.id('link-3')).click();
-
- // At this point, we navigate away from an Angular page, so we need
- // to use browser.driver to get the base webdriver.
-
- browser.wait(function() {
- return browser.driver.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url) {
- return url.match(/\/123$/);
- });
- }, 1000, 'page should navigate to /123');
- });
-
- xit('should execute ng-click but not reload when href empty string and name specified', function() {
- element(by.id('link-4')).click();
- expect(element(by.model('value')).getAttribute('value')).toEqual('4');
- expect(element(by.id('link-4')).getAttribute('href')).toBe('');
- });
-
- it('should execute ng-click but not reload when no href but name specified', function() {
- element(by.id('link-5')).click();
- expect(element(by.model('value')).getAttribute('value')).toEqual('5');
- expect(element(by.id('link-5')).getAttribute('href')).toBe(null);
- });
-
- it('should only change url when only ng-href', function() {
- element(by.model('value')).clear();
- element(by.model('value')).sendKeys('6');
- expect(element(by.id('link-6')).getAttribute('href')).toMatch(/\/6$/);
-
- element(by.id('link-6')).click();
-
- // At this point, we navigate away from an Angular page, so we need
- // to use browser.driver to get the base webdriver.
- browser.wait(function() {
- return browser.driver.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url) {
- return url.match(/\/6$/);
- });
- }, 1000, 'page should navigate to /6');
- });
-
-
- */
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngSrc
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 99
- *
- * @description
- * Using Angular markup like `{{hash}}` in a `src` attribute doesn't
- * work right: The browser will fetch from the URL with the literal
- * text `{{hash}}` until Angular replaces the expression inside
- * `{{hash}}`. The `ngSrc` directive solves this problem.
- *
- * The buggy way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * The correct way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * @element IMG
- * @param {template} ngSrc any string which can contain `{{}}` markup.
- */
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngSrcset
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 99
- *
- * @description
- * Using Angular markup like `{{hash}}` in a `srcset` attribute doesn't
- * work right: The browser will fetch from the URL with the literal
- * text `{{hash}}` until Angular replaces the expression inside
- * `{{hash}}`. The `ngSrcset` directive solves this problem.
- *
- * The buggy way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * The correct way to write it:
- * ```html
- *
- * ```
- *
- * @element IMG
- * @param {template} ngSrcset any string which can contain `{{}}` markup.
- */
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngDisabled
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 100
- *
- * @description
- *
- * The following markup will make the button enabled on Chrome/Firefox but not on IE8 and older IEs:
- * ```html
- *
- *
- *
- * ```
- *
- * The HTML specification does not require browsers to preserve the values of boolean attributes
- * such as disabled. (Their presence means true and their absence means false.)
- * If we put an Angular interpolation expression into such an attribute then the
- * binding information would be lost when the browser removes the attribute.
- * The `ngDisabled` directive solves this problem for the `disabled` attribute.
- * This complementary directive is not removed by the browser and so provides
- * a permanent reliable place to store the binding information.
- *
- * @example
-
-
- Click me to toggle:
-
-
-
- it('should toggle button', function() {
- expect(element(by.css('button')).getAttribute('disabled')).toBeFalsy();
- element(by.model('checked')).click();
- expect(element(by.css('button')).getAttribute('disabled')).toBeTruthy();
- });
-
-
- *
- * @element INPUT
- * @param {expression} ngDisabled If the {@link guide/expression expression} is truthy,
- * then special attribute "disabled" will be set on the element
- */
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngChecked
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 100
- *
- * @description
- * The HTML specification does not require browsers to preserve the values of boolean attributes
- * such as checked. (Their presence means true and their absence means false.)
- * If we put an Angular interpolation expression into such an attribute then the
- * binding information would be lost when the browser removes the attribute.
- * The `ngChecked` directive solves this problem for the `checked` attribute.
- * This complementary directive is not removed by the browser and so provides
- * a permanent reliable place to store the binding information.
- * @example
-
-
- Check me to check both:
-
-
-
- it('should check both checkBoxes', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('checkSlave')).getAttribute('checked')).toBeFalsy();
- element(by.model('master')).click();
- expect(element(by.id('checkSlave')).getAttribute('checked')).toBeTruthy();
- });
-
-
- *
- * @element INPUT
- * @param {expression} ngChecked If the {@link guide/expression expression} is truthy,
- * then special attribute "checked" will be set on the element
- */
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngReadonly
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 100
- *
- * @description
- * The HTML specification does not require browsers to preserve the values of boolean attributes
- * such as readonly. (Their presence means true and their absence means false.)
- * If we put an Angular interpolation expression into such an attribute then the
- * binding information would be lost when the browser removes the attribute.
- * The `ngReadonly` directive solves this problem for the `readonly` attribute.
- * This complementary directive is not removed by the browser and so provides
- * a permanent reliable place to store the binding information.
- * @example
-
-
- Check me to make text readonly:
-
-
-
- it('should toggle readonly attr', function() {
- expect(element(by.css('[type="text"]')).getAttribute('readonly')).toBeFalsy();
- element(by.model('checked')).click();
- expect(element(by.css('[type="text"]')).getAttribute('readonly')).toBeTruthy();
- });
-
-
- *
- * @element INPUT
- * @param {expression} ngReadonly If the {@link guide/expression expression} is truthy,
- * then special attribute "readonly" will be set on the element
- */
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngSelected
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 100
- *
- * @description
- * The HTML specification does not require browsers to preserve the values of boolean attributes
- * such as selected. (Their presence means true and their absence means false.)
- * If we put an Angular interpolation expression into such an attribute then the
- * binding information would be lost when the browser removes the attribute.
- * The `ngSelected` directive solves this problem for the `selected` attribute.
- * This complementary directive is not removed by the browser and so provides
- * a permanent reliable place to store the binding information.
- *
- * @example
-
-
- Check me to select:
-
-
-
- it('should select Greetings!', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('greet')).getAttribute('selected')).toBeFalsy();
- element(by.model('selected')).click();
- expect(element(by.id('greet')).getAttribute('selected')).toBeTruthy();
- });
-
-
- *
- * @element OPTION
- * @param {expression} ngSelected If the {@link guide/expression expression} is truthy,
- * then special attribute "selected" will be set on the element
- */
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngOpen
- * @restrict A
- * @priority 100
- *
- * @description
- * The HTML specification does not require browsers to preserve the values of boolean attributes
- * such as open. (Their presence means true and their absence means false.)
- * If we put an Angular interpolation expression into such an attribute then the
- * binding information would be lost when the browser removes the attribute.
- * The `ngOpen` directive solves this problem for the `open` attribute.
- * This complementary directive is not removed by the browser and so provides
- * a permanent reliable place to store the binding information.
- * @example
-
-
- Check me check multiple:
-
- Show/Hide me
-
-
-
- it('should toggle open', function() {
- expect(element(by.id('details')).getAttribute('open')).toBeFalsy();
- element(by.model('open')).click();
- expect(element(by.id('details')).getAttribute('open')).toBeTruthy();
- });
-
-
- *
- * @element DETAILS
- * @param {expression} ngOpen If the {@link guide/expression expression} is truthy,
- * then special attribute "open" will be set on the element
- */
-
-var ngAttributeAliasDirectives = {};
-
-
-// boolean attrs are evaluated
-forEach(BOOLEAN_ATTR, function(propName, attrName) {
- // binding to multiple is not supported
- if (propName == "multiple") return;
-
- var normalized = directiveNormalize('ng-' + attrName);
- ngAttributeAliasDirectives[normalized] = function() {
- return {
- priority: 100,
- link: function(scope, element, attr) {
- scope.$watch(attr[normalized], function ngBooleanAttrWatchAction(value) {
- attr.$set(attrName, !!value);
- });
- }
- };
- };
-});
-
-
-// ng-src, ng-srcset, ng-href are interpolated
-forEach(['src', 'srcset', 'href'], function(attrName) {
- var normalized = directiveNormalize('ng-' + attrName);
- ngAttributeAliasDirectives[normalized] = function() {
- return {
- priority: 99, // it needs to run after the attributes are interpolated
- link: function(scope, element, attr) {
- var propName = attrName,
- name = attrName;
-
- if (attrName === 'href' &&
- toString.call(element.prop('href')) === '[object SVGAnimatedString]') {
- name = 'xlinkHref';
- attr.$attr[name] = 'xlink:href';
- propName = null;
- }
-
- attr.$observe(normalized, function(value) {
- if (!value)
- return;
-
- attr.$set(name, value);
-
- // on IE, if "ng:src" directive declaration is used and "src" attribute doesn't exist
- // then calling element.setAttribute('src', 'foo') doesn't do anything, so we need
- // to set the property as well to achieve the desired effect.
- // we use attr[attrName] value since $set can sanitize the url.
- if (msie && propName) element.prop(propName, attr[name]);
- });
- }
- };
- };
-});
-
-/* global -nullFormCtrl */
-var nullFormCtrl = {
- $addControl: noop,
- $removeControl: noop,
- $setValidity: noop,
- $setDirty: noop,
- $setPristine: noop
-};
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc type
- * @name form.FormController
- *
- * @property {boolean} $pristine True if user has not interacted with the form yet.
- * @property {boolean} $dirty True if user has already interacted with the form.
- * @property {boolean} $valid True if all of the containing forms and controls are valid.
- * @property {boolean} $invalid True if at least one containing control or form is invalid.
- *
- * @property {Object} $error Is an object hash, containing references to all invalid controls or
- * forms, where:
- *
- * - keys are validation tokens (error names),
- * - values are arrays of controls or forms that are invalid for given error name.
- *
- *
- * Built-in validation tokens:
- *
- * - `email`
- * - `max`
- * - `maxlength`
- * - `min`
- * - `minlength`
- * - `number`
- * - `pattern`
- * - `required`
- * - `url`
- *
- * @description
- * `FormController` keeps track of all its controls and nested forms as well as the state of them,
- * such as being valid/invalid or dirty/pristine.
- *
- * Each {@link ng.directive:form form} directive creates an instance
- * of `FormController`.
- *
- */
-//asks for $scope to fool the BC controller module
-FormController.$inject = ['$element', '$attrs', '$scope', '$animate'];
-function FormController(element, attrs, $scope, $animate) {
- var form = this,
- parentForm = element.parent().controller('form') || nullFormCtrl,
- invalidCount = 0, // used to easily determine if we are valid
- errors = form.$error = {},
- controls = [];
-
- // init state
- form.$name = attrs.name || attrs.ngForm;
- form.$dirty = false;
- form.$pristine = true;
- form.$valid = true;
- form.$invalid = false;
-
- parentForm.$addControl(form);
-
- // Setup initial state of the control
- element.addClass(PRISTINE_CLASS);
- toggleValidCss(true);
-
- // convenience method for easy toggling of classes
- function toggleValidCss(isValid, validationErrorKey) {
- validationErrorKey = validationErrorKey ? '-' + snake_case(validationErrorKey, '-') : '';
- $animate.removeClass(element, (isValid ? INVALID_CLASS : VALID_CLASS) + validationErrorKey);
- $animate.addClass(element, (isValid ? VALID_CLASS : INVALID_CLASS) + validationErrorKey);
- }
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$commitViewValue
- *
- * @description
- * Commit all form controls pending updates to the `$modelValue`.
- *
- * Updates may be pending by a debounced event or because the input is waiting for a some future
- * event defined in `ng-model-options`. This method is rarely needed as `NgModelController`
- * usually handles calling this in response to input events.
- */
- form.$commitViewValue = function() {
- forEach(controls, function(control) {
- control.$commitViewValue();
- });
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$addControl
- *
- * @description
- * Register a control with the form.
- *
- * Input elements using ngModelController do this automatically when they are linked.
- */
- form.$addControl = function(control) {
- // Breaking change - before, inputs whose name was "hasOwnProperty" were quietly ignored
- // and not added to the scope. Now we throw an error.
- assertNotHasOwnProperty(control.$name, 'input');
- controls.push(control);
-
- if (control.$name) {
- form[control.$name] = control;
- }
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$removeControl
- *
- * @description
- * Deregister a control from the form.
- *
- * Input elements using ngModelController do this automatically when they are destroyed.
- */
- form.$removeControl = function(control) {
- if (control.$name && form[control.$name] === control) {
- delete form[control.$name];
- }
- forEach(errors, function(queue, validationToken) {
- form.$setValidity(validationToken, true, control);
- });
-
- arrayRemove(controls, control);
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$setValidity
- *
- * @description
- * Sets the validity of a form control.
- *
- * This method will also propagate to parent forms.
- */
- form.$setValidity = function(validationToken, isValid, control) {
- var queue = errors[validationToken];
-
- if (isValid) {
- if (queue) {
- arrayRemove(queue, control);
- if (!queue.length) {
- invalidCount--;
- if (!invalidCount) {
- toggleValidCss(isValid);
- form.$valid = true;
- form.$invalid = false;
- }
- errors[validationToken] = false;
- toggleValidCss(true, validationToken);
- parentForm.$setValidity(validationToken, true, form);
- }
- }
-
- } else {
- if (!invalidCount) {
- toggleValidCss(isValid);
- }
- if (queue) {
- if (includes(queue, control)) return;
- } else {
- errors[validationToken] = queue = [];
- invalidCount++;
- toggleValidCss(false, validationToken);
- parentForm.$setValidity(validationToken, false, form);
- }
- queue.push(control);
-
- form.$valid = false;
- form.$invalid = true;
- }
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$setDirty
- *
- * @description
- * Sets the form to a dirty state.
- *
- * This method can be called to add the 'ng-dirty' class and set the form to a dirty
- * state (ng-dirty class). This method will also propagate to parent forms.
- */
- form.$setDirty = function() {
- $animate.removeClass(element, PRISTINE_CLASS);
- $animate.addClass(element, DIRTY_CLASS);
- form.$dirty = true;
- form.$pristine = false;
- parentForm.$setDirty();
- };
-
- /**
- * @ngdoc method
- * @name form.FormController#$setPristine
- *
- * @description
- * Sets the form to its pristine state.
- *
- * This method can be called to remove the 'ng-dirty' class and set the form to its pristine
- * state (ng-pristine class). This method will also propagate to all the controls contained
- * in this form.
- *
- * Setting a form back to a pristine state is often useful when we want to 'reuse' a form after
- * saving or resetting it.
- */
- form.$setPristine = function () {
- $animate.removeClass(element, DIRTY_CLASS);
- $animate.addClass(element, PRISTINE_CLASS);
- form.$dirty = false;
- form.$pristine = true;
- forEach(controls, function(control) {
- control.$setPristine();
- });
- };
-}
-
-
-/**
- * @ngdoc directive
- * @name ngForm
- * @restrict EAC
- *
- * @description
- * Nestable alias of {@link ng.directive:form `form`} directive. HTML
- * does not allow nesting of form elements. It is useful to nest forms, for example if the validity of a
- * sub-group of controls needs to be determined.
- *
- * Note: the purpose of `ngForm` is to group controls,
- * but not to be a replacement for the `