- A `null` parent tag in all of our other API represents "any" parent tag, or in this case "root". Prior to this change we'd expect the caller to do their own verification of the parent and then assume all `TagHelperDescriptor`s are valid; this isn't sufficient because only our code base should have that knowledge.
#1188
- Prior to this change the `TagHelper` parsing would strip the opt-out character (`!`) from tag names that got passed to the TagHelper matching services. At design time this proved to be a problem because they have their own understanding of the HTML document and only pass us full tag names (names that include `!`). This changes the matching conventions to immediately return false if a tag name is seen to contain the `TagHelper` opt-out.
- Added two `DefaultTagHelperFactService` tests to verify that tag names with opt-out prefixes are denied `TagHelperDescriptor`s.
#1186
- Add API to enable the editor to query information on the state of `TagHelper`s within a Razor document.
- Refactored methods from `TagHelperDescriptorProvider` to be in a `TagHelperDescriptorConventions` class so the language service could use them.
- Added `DefaultTagHelperFactService` tests.
#1120
- Removed all design time descriptors and put their API surface into their corresponding descriptor. Part of removing the design time API surface was removing the tracking of `<Remarks>`, it wasn't used so there's on need to track it until we need it.
- Removed the Type requirement from `TagHelperDescriptor`. With this separation we'll be able to have abstract `TagHelper`s that aren't based on a class implementation.
- Removed Prefix from the `TagHelperDescriptor` API surface. It was a legacy requirement based on how the Razor parser was put together. We can work around this now.
- Stripped correlation information from the immediate `TagHelperDescriptor` API surface. Instead this information is now tracked in `TagMatchingRule`s. This change means that you will not have multiple `TagHelperDescriptor`s per `TagHelper`; instead it's all tracked in a single descriptor. A side effect of this change was the transformation of `IsIndexer` => 3 new properties.
- Renamed many descriptor types and property names.
- Added builder APIs to construct TagHelpers since they're inherently immutable in their API surface.
- Added `ITagHelperDescriptorBuilder` to represent `TagHelper`s that are built from an `ITagHelper` implementing class. It re-introduces the `TypeName` association of a `TagHelper`.
- Added `ITagHelperBoundAttributeDescriptorBuilder` to represent that an attribute was associated with a property.
- Added validation methods to the descriptor builders to enable consumers to validate the current state of the builder and add diagnostics as necessary.
- Moved descriptors away from RazorError.
- Updated the various comparers to understand the descriptors new API.
- Added a new `RazorDiagnosticFactory` abstraction to handle `RazorDiagnostic`s and their corresponding errors/ids etc. This new API should allow for easy addition of new `RazorDiagnostic` errors.
- Updated the `DefaultTagHelperDescriptorFactory` to construct `TagHelperDescriptor`s using the new builder APIs and in the new descriptor format (1 descriptor per type).
- Updated `ViewComponentTagHelperDescriptorFactory` to construct `TagHelperDescriptor`s with the builder API.
- With both factory implementations code was duplicated because the ViewComponent work will be moving outside of Razor once we have the proper hooks.
- Updated `TagHelper` binding bits to capture a binding result in order to query which rules appy to a given tag name.
Addressed feedback
- Update tests to react to new `TagHelperDescriptor` API.
- Remove case sensitive comparers and some cleanup
- Added TagHelperDescriptorJsonConverter, RazorDiagnosticJsonConverter and added serialization tests
VS has gone RTM so, updating to the RTM versions of those dependencies.
Roslyn does not publish our shim packages on NuGet.org, so updating those
to a non-ancient version for projects that use 2.0.0. The projects that
use 1.3.x are staying put for now.
The code change is dealing with something that was obsoleted.