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1/**
2 * @license Angular v12.2.9
3 * (c) 2010-2021 Google LLC. https://angular.io/
4 * License: MIT
5 */
6
7import { ChangeDetectorRef } from '@angular/core';
8import { DoCheck } from '@angular/core';
9import { ElementRef } from '@angular/core';
10import { InjectionToken } from '@angular/core';
11import { Injector } from '@angular/core';
12import { IterableDiffers } from '@angular/core';
13import { KeyValueDiffers } from '@angular/core';
14import { NgIterable } from '@angular/core';
15import { NgModuleFactory } from '@angular/core';
16import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
17import { OnChanges } from '@angular/core';
18import { OnDestroy } from '@angular/core';
19import { PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';
20import { Provider } from '@angular/core';
21import { Renderer2 } from '@angular/core';
22import { SimpleChanges } from '@angular/core';
23import { Subscribable } from 'rxjs';
24import { SubscriptionLike } from 'rxjs';
25import { TemplateRef } from '@angular/core';
26import { TrackByFunction } from '@angular/core';
27import { Type } from '@angular/core';
28import { Version } from '@angular/core';
29import { ViewContainerRef } from '@angular/core';
30
31/**
32 * A predefined [DI token](guide/glossary#di-token) for the base href
33 * to be used with the `PathLocationStrategy`.
34 * The base href is the URL prefix that should be preserved when generating
35 * and recognizing URLs.
36 *
37 * @usageNotes
38 *
39 * The following example shows how to use this token to configure the root app injector
40 * with a base href value, so that the DI framework can supply the dependency anywhere in the app.
41 *
42 * ```typescript
43 * import {Component, NgModule} from '@angular/core';
44 * import {APP_BASE_HREF} from '@angular/common';
45 *
46 * @NgModule({
47 * providers: [{provide: APP_BASE_HREF, useValue: '/my/app'}]
48 * })
49 * class AppModule {}
50 * ```
51 *
52 * @publicApi
53 */
54export declare const APP_BASE_HREF: InjectionToken<string>;
55
56/**
57 * @ngModule CommonModule
58 * @description
59 *
60 * Unwraps a value from an asynchronous primitive.
61 *
62 * The `async` pipe subscribes to an `Observable` or `Promise` and returns the latest value it has
63 * emitted. When a new value is emitted, the `async` pipe marks the component to be checked for
64 * changes. When the component gets destroyed, the `async` pipe unsubscribes automatically to avoid
65 * potential memory leaks.
66 *
67 * @usageNotes
68 *
69 * ### Examples
70 *
71 * This example binds a `Promise` to the view. Clicking the `Resolve` button resolves the
72 * promise.
73 *
74 * {@example common/pipes/ts/async_pipe.ts region='AsyncPipePromise'}
75 *
76 * It's also possible to use `async` with Observables. The example below binds the `time` Observable
77 * to the view. The Observable continuously updates the view with the current time.
78 *
79 * {@example common/pipes/ts/async_pipe.ts region='AsyncPipeObservable'}
80 *
81 * @publicApi
82 */
83export declare class AsyncPipe implements OnDestroy, PipeTransform {
84 private _ref;
85 private _latestValue;
86 private _subscription;
87 private _obj;
88 private _strategy;
89 constructor(_ref: ChangeDetectorRef);
90 ngOnDestroy(): void;
91 transform<T>(obj: Observable<T> | Subscribable<T> | Promise<T>): T | null;
92 transform<T>(obj: null | undefined): null;
93 transform<T>(obj: Observable<T> | Subscribable<T> | Promise<T> | null | undefined): T | null;
94 private _subscribe;
95 private _selectStrategy;
96 private _dispose;
97 private _updateLatestValue;
98}
99
100
101/**
102 * Exports all the basic Angular directives and pipes,
103 * such as `NgIf`, `NgForOf`, `DecimalPipe`, and so on.
104 * Re-exported by `BrowserModule`, which is included automatically in the root
105 * `AppModule` when you create a new app with the CLI `new` command.
106 *
107 * * The `providers` options configure the NgModule's injector to provide
108 * localization dependencies to members.
109 * * The `exports` options make the declared directives and pipes available for import
110 * by other NgModules.
111 *
112 * @publicApi
113 */
114export declare class CommonModule {
115}
116
117/**
118 * @ngModule CommonModule
119 * @description
120 *
121 * Transforms a number to a currency string, formatted according to locale rules
122 * that determine group sizing and separator, decimal-point character,
123 * and other locale-specific configurations.
124 *
125 * {@a currency-code-deprecation}
126 * <div class="alert is-helpful">
127 *
128 * **Deprecation notice:**
129 *
130 * The default currency code is currently always `USD` but this is deprecated from v9.
131 *
132 * **In v11 the default currency code will be taken from the current locale identified by
133 * the `LOCALE_ID` token. See the [i18n guide](guide/i18n-common-locale-id) for
134 * more information.**
135 *
136 * If you need the previous behavior then set it by creating a `DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE` provider in
137 * your application `NgModule`:
138 *
139 * ```ts
140 * {provide: DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE, useValue: 'USD'}
141 * ```
142 *
143 * </div>
144 *
145 * @see `getCurrencySymbol()`
146 * @see `formatCurrency()`
147 *
148 * @usageNotes
149 * The following code shows how the pipe transforms numbers
150 * into text strings, according to various format specifications,
151 * where the caller's default locale is `en-US`.
152 *
153 * <code-example path="common/pipes/ts/currency_pipe.ts" region='CurrencyPipe'></code-example>
154 *
155 * @publicApi
156 */
157export declare class CurrencyPipe implements PipeTransform {
158 private _locale;
159 private _defaultCurrencyCode;
160 constructor(_locale: string, _defaultCurrencyCode?: string);
161 transform(value: number | string, currencyCode?: string, display?: 'code' | 'symbol' | 'symbol-narrow' | string | boolean, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
162 transform(value: null | undefined, currencyCode?: string, display?: 'code' | 'symbol' | 'symbol-narrow' | string | boolean, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): null;
163 transform(value: number | string | null | undefined, currencyCode?: string, display?: 'code' | 'symbol' | 'symbol-narrow' | string | boolean, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
164}
165
166/**
167 * @ngModule CommonModule
168 * @description
169 *
170 * Formats a date value according to locale rules.
171 *
172 * `DatePipe` is executed only when it detects a pure change to the input value.
173 * A pure change is either a change to a primitive input value
174 * (such as `String`, `Number`, `Boolean`, or `Symbol`),
175 * or a changed object reference (such as `Date`, `Array`, `Function`, or `Object`).
176 *
177 * Note that mutating a `Date` object does not cause the pipe to be rendered again.
178 * To ensure that the pipe is executed, you must create a new `Date` object.
179 *
180 * Only the `en-US` locale data comes with Angular. To localize dates
181 * in another language, you must import the corresponding locale data.
182 * See the [I18n guide](guide/i18n-common-format-data-locale) for more information.
183 *
184 * @see `formatDate()`
185 *
186 *
187 * @usageNotes
188 *
189 * The result of this pipe is not reevaluated when the input is mutated. To avoid the need to
190 * reformat the date on every change-detection cycle, treat the date as an immutable object
191 * and change the reference when the pipe needs to run again.
192 *
193 * ### Pre-defined format options
194 *
195 * | Option | Equivalent to | Examples (given in `en-US` locale) |
196 * |---------------|-------------------------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
197 * | `'short'` | `'M/d/yy, h:mm a'` | `6/15/15, 9:03 AM` |
198 * | `'medium'` | `'MMM d, y, h:mm:ss a'` | `Jun 15, 2015, 9:03:01 AM` |
199 * | `'long'` | `'MMMM d, y, h:mm:ss a z'` | `June 15, 2015 at 9:03:01 AM GMT+1` |
200 * | `'full'` | `'EEEE, MMMM d, y, h:mm:ss a zzzz'` | `Monday, June 15, 2015 at 9:03:01 AM GMT+01:00` |
201 * | `'shortDate'` | `'M/d/yy'` | `6/15/15` |
202 * | `'mediumDate'`| `'MMM d, y'` | `Jun 15, 2015` |
203 * | `'longDate'` | `'MMMM d, y'` | `June 15, 2015` |
204 * | `'fullDate'` | `'EEEE, MMMM d, y'` | `Monday, June 15, 2015` |
205 * | `'shortTime'` | `'h:mm a'` | `9:03 AM` |
206 * | `'mediumTime'`| `'h:mm:ss a'` | `9:03:01 AM` |
207 * | `'longTime'` | `'h:mm:ss a z'` | `9:03:01 AM GMT+1` |
208 * | `'fullTime'` | `'h:mm:ss a zzzz'` | `9:03:01 AM GMT+01:00` |
209 *
210 * ### Custom format options
211 *
212 * You can construct a format string using symbols to specify the components
213 * of a date-time value, as described in the following table.
214 * Format details depend on the locale.
215 * Fields marked with (*) are only available in the extra data set for the given locale.
216 *
217 * | Field type | Format | Description | Example Value |
218 * |-------------------- |-------------|---------------------------------------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------|
219 * | Era | G, GG & GGG | Abbreviated | AD |
220 * | | GGGG | Wide | Anno Domini |
221 * | | GGGGG | Narrow | A |
222 * | Year | y | Numeric: minimum digits | 2, 20, 201, 2017, 20173 |
223 * | | yy | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 02, 20, 01, 17, 73 |
224 * | | yyy | Numeric: 3 digits + zero padded | 002, 020, 201, 2017, 20173 |
225 * | | yyyy | Numeric: 4 digits or more + zero padded | 0002, 0020, 0201, 2017, 20173 |
226 * | Week-numbering year | Y | Numeric: minimum digits | 2, 20, 201, 2017, 20173 |
227 * | | YY | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 02, 20, 01, 17, 73 |
228 * | | YYY | Numeric: 3 digits + zero padded | 002, 020, 201, 2017, 20173 |
229 * | | YYYY | Numeric: 4 digits or more + zero padded | 0002, 0020, 0201, 2017, 20173 |
230 * | Month | M | Numeric: 1 digit | 9, 12 |
231 * | | MM | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 09, 12 |
232 * | | MMM | Abbreviated | Sep |
233 * | | MMMM | Wide | September |
234 * | | MMMMM | Narrow | S |
235 * | Month standalone | L | Numeric: 1 digit | 9, 12 |
236 * | | LL | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 09, 12 |
237 * | | LLL | Abbreviated | Sep |
238 * | | LLLL | Wide | September |
239 * | | LLLLL | Narrow | S |
240 * | Week of year | w | Numeric: minimum digits | 1... 53 |
241 * | | ww | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 01... 53 |
242 * | Week of month | W | Numeric: 1 digit | 1... 5 |
243 * | Day of month | d | Numeric: minimum digits | 1 |
244 * | | dd | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 01 |
245 * | Week day | E, EE & EEE | Abbreviated | Tue |
246 * | | EEEE | Wide | Tuesday |
247 * | | EEEEE | Narrow | T |
248 * | | EEEEEE | Short | Tu |
249 * | Week day standalone | c, cc | Numeric: 1 digit | 2 |
250 * | | ccc | Abbreviated | Tue |
251 * | | cccc | Wide | Tuesday |
252 * | | ccccc | Narrow | T |
253 * | | cccccc | Short | Tu |
254 * | Period | a, aa & aaa | Abbreviated | am/pm or AM/PM |
255 * | | aaaa | Wide (fallback to `a` when missing) | ante meridiem/post meridiem |
256 * | | aaaaa | Narrow | a/p |
257 * | Period* | B, BB & BBB | Abbreviated | mid. |
258 * | | BBBB | Wide | am, pm, midnight, noon, morning, afternoon, evening, night |
259 * | | BBBBB | Narrow | md |
260 * | Period standalone* | b, bb & bbb | Abbreviated | mid. |
261 * | | bbbb | Wide | am, pm, midnight, noon, morning, afternoon, evening, night |
262 * | | bbbbb | Narrow | md |
263 * | Hour 1-12 | h | Numeric: minimum digits | 1, 12 |
264 * | | hh | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 01, 12 |
265 * | Hour 0-23 | H | Numeric: minimum digits | 0, 23 |
266 * | | HH | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 00, 23 |
267 * | Minute | m | Numeric: minimum digits | 8, 59 |
268 * | | mm | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 08, 59 |
269 * | Second | s | Numeric: minimum digits | 0... 59 |
270 * | | ss | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 00... 59 |
271 * | Fractional seconds | S | Numeric: 1 digit | 0... 9 |
272 * | | SS | Numeric: 2 digits + zero padded | 00... 99 |
273 * | | SSS | Numeric: 3 digits + zero padded (= milliseconds) | 000... 999 |
274 * | Zone | z, zz & zzz | Short specific non location format (fallback to O) | GMT-8 |
275 * | | zzzz | Long specific non location format (fallback to OOOO) | GMT-08:00 |
276 * | | Z, ZZ & ZZZ | ISO8601 basic format | -0800 |
277 * | | ZZZZ | Long localized GMT format | GMT-8:00 |
278 * | | ZZZZZ | ISO8601 extended format + Z indicator for offset 0 (= XXXXX) | -08:00 |
279 * | | O, OO & OOO | Short localized GMT format | GMT-8 |
280 * | | OOOO | Long localized GMT format | GMT-08:00 |
281 *
282 *
283 * ### Format examples
284 *
285 * These examples transform a date into various formats,
286 * assuming that `dateObj` is a JavaScript `Date` object for
287 * year: 2015, month: 6, day: 15, hour: 21, minute: 43, second: 11,
288 * given in the local time for the `en-US` locale.
289 *
290 * ```
291 * {{ dateObj | date }} // output is 'Jun 15, 2015'
292 * {{ dateObj | date:'medium' }} // output is 'Jun 15, 2015, 9:43:11 PM'
293 * {{ dateObj | date:'shortTime' }} // output is '9:43 PM'
294 * {{ dateObj | date:'mm:ss' }} // output is '43:11'
295 * ```
296 *
297 * ### Usage example
298 *
299 * The following component uses a date pipe to display the current date in different formats.
300 *
301 * ```
302 * @Component({
303 * selector: 'date-pipe',
304 * template: `<div>
305 * <p>Today is {{today | date}}</p>
306 * <p>Or if you prefer, {{today | date:'fullDate'}}</p>
307 * <p>The time is {{today | date:'h:mm a z'}}</p>
308 * </div>`
309 * })
310 * // Get the current date and time as a date-time value.
311 * export class DatePipeComponent {
312 * today: number = Date.now();
313 * }
314 * ```
315 *
316 * @publicApi
317 */
318export declare class DatePipe implements PipeTransform {
319 private locale;
320 constructor(locale: string);
321 /**
322 * @param value The date expression: a `Date` object, a number
323 * (milliseconds since UTC epoch), or an ISO string (https://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime).
324 * @param format The date/time components to include, using predefined options or a
325 * custom format string.
326 * @param timezone A timezone offset (such as `'+0430'`), or a standard
327 * UTC/GMT or continental US timezone abbreviation.
328 * When not supplied, uses the end-user's local system timezone.
329 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
330 * When not supplied, uses the value of `LOCALE_ID`, which is `en-US` by default.
331 * See [Setting your app locale](guide/i18n-common-locale-id).
332 * @returns A date string in the desired format.
333 */
334 transform(value: Date | string | number, format?: string, timezone?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
335 transform(value: null | undefined, format?: string, timezone?: string, locale?: string): null;
336 transform(value: Date | string | number | null | undefined, format?: string, timezone?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
337}
338
339/**
340 * @ngModule CommonModule
341 * @description
342 *
343 * Formats a value according to digit options and locale rules.
344 * Locale determines group sizing and separator,
345 * decimal point character, and other locale-specific configurations.
346 *
347 * @see `formatNumber()`
348 *
349 * @usageNotes
350 *
351 * ### digitsInfo
352 *
353 * The value's decimal representation is specified by the `digitsInfo`
354 * parameter, written in the following format:<br>
355 *
356 * ```
357 * {minIntegerDigits}.{minFractionDigits}-{maxFractionDigits}
358 * ```
359 *
360 * - `minIntegerDigits`:
361 * The minimum number of integer digits before the decimal point.
362 * Default is 1.
363 *
364 * - `minFractionDigits`:
365 * The minimum number of digits after the decimal point.
366 * Default is 0.
367 *
368 * - `maxFractionDigits`:
369 * The maximum number of digits after the decimal point.
370 * Default is 3.
371 *
372 * If the formatted value is truncated it will be rounded using the "to-nearest" method:
373 *
374 * ```
375 * {{3.6 | number: '1.0-0'}}
376 * <!--will output '4'-->
377 *
378 * {{-3.6 | number:'1.0-0'}}
379 * <!--will output '-4'-->
380 * ```
381 *
382 * ### locale
383 *
384 * `locale` will format a value according to locale rules.
385 * Locale determines group sizing and separator,
386 * decimal point character, and other locale-specific configurations.
387 *
388 * When not supplied, uses the value of `LOCALE_ID`, which is `en-US` by default.
389 *
390 * See [Setting your app locale](guide/i18n-common-locale-id).
391 *
392 * ### Example
393 *
394 * The following code shows how the pipe transforms values
395 * according to various format specifications,
396 * where the caller's default locale is `en-US`.
397 *
398 * <code-example path="common/pipes/ts/number_pipe.ts" region='NumberPipe'></code-example>
399 *
400 * @publicApi
401 */
402export declare class DecimalPipe implements PipeTransform {
403 private _locale;
404 constructor(_locale: string);
405 transform(value: number | string, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
406 transform(value: null | undefined, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): null;
407 transform(value: number | string | null | undefined, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
408}
409
410/**
411 * A DI Token representing the main rendering context. In a browser this is the DOM Document.
412 *
413 * Note: Document might not be available in the Application Context when Application and Rendering
414 * Contexts are not the same (e.g. when running the application in a Web Worker).
415 *
416 * @publicApi
417 */
418export declare const DOCUMENT: InjectionToken<Document>;
419
420/**
421 * @ngModule CommonModule
422 * @description
423 *
424 * Formats a number as currency using locale rules.
425 *
426 * @param value The number to format.
427 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
428 * @param currency A string containing the currency symbol or its name,
429 * such as "$" or "Canadian Dollar". Used in output string, but does not affect the operation
430 * of the function.
431 * @param currencyCode The [ISO 4217](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_4217)
432 * currency code, such as `USD` for the US dollar and `EUR` for the euro.
433 * Used to determine the number of digits in the decimal part.
434 * @param digitsInfo Decimal representation options, specified by a string in the following format:
435 * `{minIntegerDigits}.{minFractionDigits}-{maxFractionDigits}`. See `DecimalPipe` for more details.
436 *
437 * @returns The formatted currency value.
438 *
439 * @see `formatNumber()`
440 * @see `DecimalPipe`
441 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
442 *
443 * @publicApi
444 */
445export declare function formatCurrency(value: number, locale: string, currency: string, currencyCode?: string, digitsInfo?: string): string;
446
447/**
448 * @ngModule CommonModule
449 * @description
450 *
451 * Formats a date according to locale rules.
452 *
453 * @param value The date to format, as a Date, or a number (milliseconds since UTC epoch)
454 * or an [ISO date-time string](https://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime).
455 * @param format The date-time components to include. See `DatePipe` for details.
456 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
457 * @param timezone The time zone. A time zone offset from GMT (such as `'+0430'`),
458 * or a standard UTC/GMT or continental US time zone abbreviation.
459 * If not specified, uses host system settings.
460 *
461 * @returns The formatted date string.
462 *
463 * @see `DatePipe`
464 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
465 *
466 * @publicApi
467 */
468export declare function formatDate(value: string | number | Date, format: string, locale: string, timezone?: string): string;
469
470/**
471 * @ngModule CommonModule
472 * @description
473 *
474 * Formats a number as text, with group sizing, separator, and other
475 * parameters based on the locale.
476 *
477 * @param value The number to format.
478 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
479 * @param digitsInfo Decimal representation options, specified by a string in the following format:
480 * `{minIntegerDigits}.{minFractionDigits}-{maxFractionDigits}`. See `DecimalPipe` for more details.
481 *
482 * @returns The formatted text string.
483 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
484 *
485 * @publicApi
486 */
487export declare function formatNumber(value: number, locale: string, digitsInfo?: string): string;
488
489/**
490 * @ngModule CommonModule
491 * @description
492 *
493 * Formats a number as a percentage according to locale rules.
494 *
495 * @param value The number to format.
496 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
497 * @param digitsInfo Decimal representation options, specified by a string in the following format:
498 * `{minIntegerDigits}.{minFractionDigits}-{maxFractionDigits}`. See `DecimalPipe` for more details.
499 *
500 * @returns The formatted percentage value.
501 *
502 * @see `formatNumber()`
503 * @see `DecimalPipe`
504 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
505 * @publicApi
506 *
507 */
508export declare function formatPercent(value: number, locale: string, digitsInfo?: string): string;
509
510/**
511 * String widths available for date-time formats.
512 * The specific character widths are locale-specific.
513 * Examples are given for `en-US`.
514 *
515 * @see `getLocaleDateFormat()`
516 * @see `getLocaleTimeFormat()`
517 * @see `getLocaleDateTimeFormat()`
518 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
519 * @publicApi
520 */
521export declare enum FormatWidth {
522 /**
523 * For `en-US`, 'M/d/yy, h:mm a'`
524 * (Example: `6/15/15, 9:03 AM`)
525 */
526 Short = 0,
527 /**
528 * For `en-US`, `'MMM d, y, h:mm:ss a'`
529 * (Example: `Jun 15, 2015, 9:03:01 AM`)
530 */
531 Medium = 1,
532 /**
533 * For `en-US`, `'MMMM d, y, h:mm:ss a z'`
534 * (Example: `June 15, 2015 at 9:03:01 AM GMT+1`)
535 */
536 Long = 2,
537 /**
538 * For `en-US`, `'EEEE, MMMM d, y, h:mm:ss a zzzz'`
539 * (Example: `Monday, June 15, 2015 at 9:03:01 AM GMT+01:00`)
540 */
541 Full = 3
542}
543
544/**
545 * Context-dependant translation forms for strings.
546 * Typically the standalone version is for the nominative form of the word,
547 * and the format version is used for the genitive case.
548 * @see [CLDR website](http://cldr.unicode.org/translation/date-time-1/date-time#TOC-Standalone-vs.-Format-Styles)
549 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
550 *
551 * @publicApi
552 */
553export declare enum FormStyle {
554 Format = 0,
555 Standalone = 1
556}
557
558/**
559 * Retrieves the currency symbol for a given currency code.
560 *
561 * For example, for the default `en-US` locale, the code `USD` can
562 * be represented by the narrow symbol `$` or the wide symbol `US$`.
563 *
564 * @param code The currency code.
565 * @param format The format, `wide` or `narrow`.
566 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
567 *
568 * @returns The symbol, or the currency code if no symbol is available.
569 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
570 *
571 * @publicApi
572 */
573export declare function getCurrencySymbol(code: string, format: 'wide' | 'narrow', locale?: string): string;
574
575/**
576 * Retrieves the default currency code for the given locale.
577 *
578 * The default is defined as the first currency which is still in use.
579 *
580 * @param locale The code of the locale whose currency code we want.
581 * @returns The code of the default currency for the given locale.
582 *
583 * @publicApi
584 */
585export declare function getLocaleCurrencyCode(locale: string): string | null;
586
587/**
588 * Retrieves the name of the currency for the main country corresponding
589 * to a given locale. For example, 'US Dollar' for `en-US`.
590 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
591 * @returns The currency name,
592 * or `null` if the main country cannot be determined.
593 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
594 *
595 * @publicApi
596 */
597export declare function getLocaleCurrencyName(locale: string): string | null;
598
599/**
600 * Retrieves the symbol used to represent the currency for the main country
601 * corresponding to a given locale. For example, '$' for `en-US`.
602 *
603 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
604 * @returns The localized symbol character,
605 * or `null` if the main country cannot be determined.
606 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
607 *
608 * @publicApi
609 */
610export declare function getLocaleCurrencySymbol(locale: string): string | null;
611
612/**
613 * Retrieves a localized date-value formating string.
614 *
615 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
616 * @param width The format type.
617 * @returns The localized formating string.
618 * @see `FormatWidth`
619 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
620 *
621 * @publicApi
622 */
623export declare function getLocaleDateFormat(locale: string, width: FormatWidth): string;
624
625/**
626 * Retrieves a localized date-time formatting string.
627 *
628 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
629 * @param width The format type.
630 * @returns The localized formatting string.
631 * @see `FormatWidth`
632 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
633 *
634 * @publicApi
635 */
636export declare function getLocaleDateTimeFormat(locale: string, width: FormatWidth): string;
637
638/**
639 * Retrieves days of the week for the given locale, using the Gregorian calendar.
640 *
641 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
642 * @param formStyle The required grammatical form.
643 * @param width The required character width.
644 * @returns An array of localized name strings.
645 * For example,`[Sunday, Monday, ... Saturday]` for `en-US`.
646 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
647 *
648 * @publicApi
649 */
650export declare function getLocaleDayNames(locale: string, formStyle: FormStyle, width: TranslationWidth): ReadonlyArray<string>;
651
652/**
653 * Retrieves day period strings for the given locale.
654 *
655 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
656 * @param formStyle The required grammatical form.
657 * @param width The required character width.
658 * @returns An array of localized period strings. For example, `[AM, PM]` for `en-US`.
659 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
660 *
661 * @publicApi
662 */
663export declare function getLocaleDayPeriods(locale: string, formStyle: FormStyle, width: TranslationWidth): Readonly<[string, string]>;
664
665/**
666 * Retrieves the writing direction of a specified locale
667 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
668 * @publicApi
669 * @returns 'rtl' or 'ltr'
670 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
671 */
672export declare function getLocaleDirection(locale: string): 'ltr' | 'rtl';
673
674/**
675 * Retrieves Gregorian-calendar eras for the given locale.
676 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
677 * @param width The required character width.
678
679 * @returns An array of localized era strings.
680 * For example, `[AD, BC]` for `en-US`.
681 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
682 *
683 * @publicApi
684 */
685export declare function getLocaleEraNames(locale: string, width: TranslationWidth): Readonly<[string, string]>;
686
687/**
688 * Retrieves locale-specific rules used to determine which day period to use
689 * when more than one period is defined for a locale.
690 *
691 * There is a rule for each defined day period. The
692 * first rule is applied to the first day period and so on.
693 * Fall back to AM/PM when no rules are available.
694 *
695 * A rule can specify a period as time range, or as a single time value.
696 *
697 * This functionality is only available when you have loaded the full locale data.
698 * See the ["I18n guide"](guide/i18n-common-format-data-locale).
699 *
700 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
701 * @returns The rules for the locale, a single time value or array of *from-time, to-time*,
702 * or null if no periods are available.
703 *
704 * @see `getLocaleExtraDayPeriods()`
705 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
706 *
707 * @publicApi
708 */
709export declare function getLocaleExtraDayPeriodRules(locale: string): (Time | [Time, Time])[];
710
711/**
712 * Retrieves locale-specific day periods, which indicate roughly how a day is broken up
713 * in different languages.
714 * For example, for `en-US`, periods are morning, noon, afternoon, evening, and midnight.
715 *
716 * This functionality is only available when you have loaded the full locale data.
717 * See the ["I18n guide"](guide/i18n-common-format-data-locale).
718 *
719 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
720 * @param formStyle The required grammatical form.
721 * @param width The required character width.
722 * @returns The translated day-period strings.
723 * @see `getLocaleExtraDayPeriodRules()`
724 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
725 *
726 * @publicApi
727 */
728export declare function getLocaleExtraDayPeriods(locale: string, formStyle: FormStyle, width: TranslationWidth): string[];
729
730/**
731 * Retrieves the first day of the week for the given locale.
732 *
733 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
734 * @returns A day index number, using the 0-based week-day index for `en-US`
735 * (Sunday = 0, Monday = 1, ...).
736 * For example, for `fr-FR`, returns 1 to indicate that the first day is Monday.
737 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
738 *
739 * @publicApi
740 */
741export declare function getLocaleFirstDayOfWeek(locale: string): WeekDay;
742
743/**
744 * Retrieves the locale ID from the currently loaded locale.
745 * The loaded locale could be, for example, a global one rather than a regional one.
746 * @param locale A locale code, such as `fr-FR`.
747 * @returns The locale code. For example, `fr`.
748 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
749 *
750 * @publicApi
751 */
752export declare function getLocaleId(locale: string): string;
753
754/**
755 * Retrieves months of the year for the given locale, using the Gregorian calendar.
756 *
757 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
758 * @param formStyle The required grammatical form.
759 * @param width The required character width.
760 * @returns An array of localized name strings.
761 * For example, `[January, February, ...]` for `en-US`.
762 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
763 *
764 * @publicApi
765 */
766export declare function getLocaleMonthNames(locale: string, formStyle: FormStyle, width: TranslationWidth): ReadonlyArray<string>;
767
768/**
769 * Retrieves a number format for a given locale.
770 *
771 * Numbers are formatted using patterns, like `#,###.00`. For example, the pattern `#,###.00`
772 * when used to format the number 12345.678 could result in "12'345,678". That would happen if the
773 * grouping separator for your language is an apostrophe, and the decimal separator is a comma.
774 *
775 * <b>Important:</b> The characters `.` `,` `0` `#` (and others below) are special placeholders
776 * that stand for the decimal separator, and so on, and are NOT real characters.
777 * You must NOT "translate" the placeholders. For example, don't change `.` to `,` even though in
778 * your language the decimal point is written with a comma. The symbols should be replaced by the
779 * local equivalents, using the appropriate `NumberSymbol` for your language.
780 *
781 * Here are the special characters used in number patterns:
782 *
783 * | Symbol | Meaning |
784 * |--------|---------|
785 * | . | Replaced automatically by the character used for the decimal point. |
786 * | , | Replaced by the "grouping" (thousands) separator. |
787 * | 0 | Replaced by a digit (or zero if there aren't enough digits). |
788 * | # | Replaced by a digit (or nothing if there aren't enough). |
789 * | ¤ | Replaced by a currency symbol, such as $ or USD. |
790 * | % | Marks a percent format. The % symbol may change position, but must be retained. |
791 * | E | Marks a scientific format. The E symbol may change position, but must be retained. |
792 * | ' | Special characters used as literal characters are quoted with ASCII single quotes. |
793 *
794 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
795 * @param type The type of numeric value to be formatted (such as `Decimal` or `Currency`.)
796 * @returns The localized format string.
797 * @see `NumberFormatStyle`
798 * @see [CLDR website](http://cldr.unicode.org/translation/number-patterns)
799 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
800 *
801 * @publicApi
802 */
803export declare function getLocaleNumberFormat(locale: string, type: NumberFormatStyle): string;
804
805/**
806 * Retrieves a localized number symbol that can be used to replace placeholders in number formats.
807 * @param locale The locale code.
808 * @param symbol The symbol to localize.
809 * @returns The character for the localized symbol.
810 * @see `NumberSymbol`
811 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
812 *
813 * @publicApi
814 */
815export declare function getLocaleNumberSymbol(locale: string, symbol: NumberSymbol): string;
816
817/**
818 * @alias core/ɵgetLocalePluralCase
819 * @publicApi
820 */
821export declare const getLocalePluralCase: (locale: string) => ((value: number) => Plural);
822
823/**
824 * Retrieves a localized time-value formatting string.
825 *
826 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
827 * @param width The format type.
828 * @returns The localized formatting string.
829 * @see `FormatWidth`
830 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
831
832 * @publicApi
833 */
834export declare function getLocaleTimeFormat(locale: string, width: FormatWidth): string;
835
836/**
837 * Range of week days that are considered the week-end for the given locale.
838 *
839 * @param locale A locale code for the locale format rules to use.
840 * @returns The range of day values, `[startDay, endDay]`.
841 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
842 *
843 * @publicApi
844 */
845export declare function getLocaleWeekEndRange(locale: string): [WeekDay, WeekDay];
846
847/**
848 * Reports the number of decimal digits for a given currency.
849 * The value depends upon the presence of cents in that particular currency.
850 *
851 * @param code The currency code.
852 * @returns The number of decimal digits, typically 0 or 2.
853 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
854 *
855 * @publicApi
856 */
857export declare function getNumberOfCurrencyDigits(code: string): number;
858
859/**
860 * @description
861 * A {@link LocationStrategy} used to configure the {@link Location} service to
862 * represent its state in the
863 * [hash fragment](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Locator#Syntax)
864 * of the browser's URL.
865 *
866 * For instance, if you call `location.go('/foo')`, the browser's URL will become
867 * `example.com#/foo`.
868 *
869 * @usageNotes
870 *
871 * ### Example
872 *
873 * {@example common/location/ts/hash_location_component.ts region='LocationComponent'}
874 *
875 * @publicApi
876 */
877export declare class HashLocationStrategy extends LocationStrategy implements OnDestroy {
878 private _platformLocation;
879 private _baseHref;
880 private _removeListenerFns;
881 constructor(_platformLocation: PlatformLocation, _baseHref?: string);
882 ngOnDestroy(): void;
883 onPopState(fn: LocationChangeListener): void;
884 getBaseHref(): string;
885 path(includeHash?: boolean): string;
886 prepareExternalUrl(internal: string): string;
887 pushState(state: any, title: string, path: string, queryParams: string): void;
888 replaceState(state: any, title: string, path: string, queryParams: string): void;
889 forward(): void;
890 back(): void;
891 historyGo(relativePosition?: number): void;
892}
893
894/**
895 * @ngModule CommonModule
896 * @description
897 *
898 * Maps a value to a string that pluralizes the value according to locale rules.
899 *
900 * @usageNotes
901 *
902 * ### Example
903 *
904 * {@example common/pipes/ts/i18n_pipe.ts region='I18nPluralPipeComponent'}
905 *
906 * @publicApi
907 */
908export declare class I18nPluralPipe implements PipeTransform {
909 private _localization;
910 constructor(_localization: NgLocalization);
911 /**
912 * @param value the number to be formatted
913 * @param pluralMap an object that mimics the ICU format, see
914 * http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/messages.
915 * @param locale a `string` defining the locale to use (uses the current {@link LOCALE_ID} by
916 * default).
917 */
918 transform(value: number | null | undefined, pluralMap: {
919 [count: string]: string;
920 }, locale?: string): string;
921}
922
923/**
924 * @ngModule CommonModule
925 * @description
926 *
927 * Generic selector that displays the string that matches the current value.
928 *
929 * If none of the keys of the `mapping` match the `value`, then the content
930 * of the `other` key is returned when present, otherwise an empty string is returned.
931 *
932 * @usageNotes
933 *
934 * ### Example
935 *
936 * {@example common/pipes/ts/i18n_pipe.ts region='I18nSelectPipeComponent'}
937 *
938 * @publicApi
939 */
940export declare class I18nSelectPipe implements PipeTransform {
941 /**
942 * @param value a string to be internationalized.
943 * @param mapping an object that indicates the text that should be displayed
944 * for different values of the provided `value`.
945 */
946 transform(value: string | null | undefined, mapping: {
947 [key: string]: string;
948 }): string;
949}
950
951/**
952 * Returns whether a platform id represents a browser platform.
953 * @publicApi
954 */
955export declare function isPlatformBrowser(platformId: Object): boolean;
956
957/**
958 * Returns whether a platform id represents a server platform.
959 * @publicApi
960 */
961export declare function isPlatformServer(platformId: Object): boolean;
962
963/**
964 * Returns whether a platform id represents a web worker app platform.
965 * @publicApi
966 */
967export declare function isPlatformWorkerApp(platformId: Object): boolean;
968
969/**
970 * Returns whether a platform id represents a web worker UI platform.
971 * @publicApi
972 */
973export declare function isPlatformWorkerUi(platformId: Object): boolean;
974
975/**
976 * @ngModule CommonModule
977 * @description
978 *
979 * Converts a value into its JSON-format representation. Useful for debugging.
980 *
981 * @usageNotes
982 *
983 * The following component uses a JSON pipe to convert an object
984 * to JSON format, and displays the string in both formats for comparison.
985 *
986 * {@example common/pipes/ts/json_pipe.ts region='JsonPipe'}
987 *
988 * @publicApi
989 */
990export declare class JsonPipe implements PipeTransform {
991 /**
992 * @param value A value of any type to convert into a JSON-format string.
993 */
994 transform(value: any): string;
995}
996
997/**
998 * A key value pair.
999 * Usually used to represent the key value pairs from a Map or Object.
1000 *
1001 * @publicApi
1002 */
1003export declare interface KeyValue<K, V> {
1004 key: K;
1005 value: V;
1006}
1007
1008/**
1009 * @ngModule CommonModule
1010 * @description
1011 *
1012 * Transforms Object or Map into an array of key value pairs.
1013 *
1014 * The output array will be ordered by keys.
1015 * By default the comparator will be by Unicode point value.
1016 * You can optionally pass a compareFn if your keys are complex types.
1017 *
1018 * @usageNotes
1019 * ### Examples
1020 *
1021 * This examples show how an Object or a Map can be iterated by ngFor with the use of this
1022 * keyvalue pipe.
1023 *
1024 * {@example common/pipes/ts/keyvalue_pipe.ts region='KeyValuePipe'}
1025 *
1026 * @publicApi
1027 */
1028export declare class KeyValuePipe implements PipeTransform {
1029 private readonly differs;
1030 constructor(differs: KeyValueDiffers);
1031 private differ;
1032 private keyValues;
1033 private compareFn;
1034 transform<K, V>(input: ReadonlyMap<K, V>, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<K, V>, b: KeyValue<K, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<K, V>>;
1035 transform<K extends number, V>(input: Record<K, V>, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<string, V>, b: KeyValue<string, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<string, V>>;
1036 transform<K extends string, V>(input: Record<K, V> | ReadonlyMap<K, V>, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<K, V>, b: KeyValue<K, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<K, V>>;
1037 transform(input: null | undefined, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<unknown, unknown>, b: KeyValue<unknown, unknown>) => number): null;
1038 transform<K, V>(input: ReadonlyMap<K, V> | null | undefined, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<K, V>, b: KeyValue<K, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<K, V>> | null;
1039 transform<K extends number, V>(input: Record<K, V> | null | undefined, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<string, V>, b: KeyValue<string, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<string, V>> | null;
1040 transform<K extends string, V>(input: Record<K, V> | ReadonlyMap<K, V> | null | undefined, compareFn?: (a: KeyValue<K, V>, b: KeyValue<K, V>) => number): Array<KeyValue<K, V>> | null;
1041}
1042
1043/**
1044 * @description
1045 *
1046 * A service that applications can use to interact with a browser's URL.
1047 *
1048 * Depending on the `LocationStrategy` used, `Location` persists
1049 * to the URL's path or the URL's hash segment.
1050 *
1051 * @usageNotes
1052 *
1053 * It's better to use the `Router.navigate()` service to trigger route changes. Use
1054 * `Location` only if you need to interact with or create normalized URLs outside of
1055 * routing.
1056 *
1057 * `Location` is responsible for normalizing the URL against the application's base href.
1058 * A normalized URL is absolute from the URL host, includes the application's base href, and has no
1059 * trailing slash:
1060 * - `/my/app/user/123` is normalized
1061 * - `my/app/user/123` **is not** normalized
1062 * - `/my/app/user/123/` **is not** normalized
1063 *
1064 * ### Example
1065 *
1066 * <code-example path='common/location/ts/path_location_component.ts'
1067 * region='LocationComponent'></code-example>
1068 *
1069 * @publicApi
1070 */
1071declare class Location_2 {
1072 constructor(platformStrategy: LocationStrategy, platformLocation: PlatformLocation);
1073 /**
1074 * Normalizes the URL path for this location.
1075 *
1076 * @param includeHash True to include an anchor fragment in the path.
1077 *
1078 * @returns The normalized URL path.
1079 */
1080 path(includeHash?: boolean): string;
1081 /**
1082 * Reports the current state of the location history.
1083 * @returns The current value of the `history.state` object.
1084 */
1085 getState(): unknown;
1086 /**
1087 * Normalizes the given path and compares to the current normalized path.
1088 *
1089 * @param path The given URL path.
1090 * @param query Query parameters.
1091 *
1092 * @returns True if the given URL path is equal to the current normalized path, false
1093 * otherwise.
1094 */
1095 isCurrentPathEqualTo(path: string, query?: string): boolean;
1096 /**
1097 * Normalizes a URL path by stripping any trailing slashes.
1098 *
1099 * @param url String representing a URL.
1100 *
1101 * @returns The normalized URL string.
1102 */
1103 normalize(url: string): string;
1104 /**
1105 * Normalizes an external URL path.
1106 * If the given URL doesn't begin with a leading slash (`'/'`), adds one
1107 * before normalizing. Adds a hash if `HashLocationStrategy` is
1108 * in use, or the `APP_BASE_HREF` if the `PathLocationStrategy` is in use.
1109 *
1110 * @param url String representing a URL.
1111 *
1112 * @returns A normalized platform-specific URL.
1113 */
1114 prepareExternalUrl(url: string): string;
1115 /**
1116 * Changes the browser's URL to a normalized version of a given URL, and pushes a
1117 * new item onto the platform's history.
1118 *
1119 * @param path URL path to normalize.
1120 * @param query Query parameters.
1121 * @param state Location history state.
1122 *
1123 */
1124 go(path: string, query?: string, state?: any): void;
1125 /**
1126 * Changes the browser's URL to a normalized version of the given URL, and replaces
1127 * the top item on the platform's history stack.
1128 *
1129 * @param path URL path to normalize.
1130 * @param query Query parameters.
1131 * @param state Location history state.
1132 */
1133 replaceState(path: string, query?: string, state?: any): void;
1134 /**
1135 * Navigates forward in the platform's history.
1136 */
1137 forward(): void;
1138 /**
1139 * Navigates back in the platform's history.
1140 */
1141 back(): void;
1142 /**
1143 * Navigate to a specific page from session history, identified by its relative position to the
1144 * current page.
1145 *
1146 * @param relativePosition Position of the target page in the history relative to the current
1147 * page.
1148 * A negative value moves backwards, a positive value moves forwards, e.g. `location.historyGo(2)`
1149 * moves forward two pages and `location.historyGo(-2)` moves back two pages. When we try to go
1150 * beyond what's stored in the history session, we stay in the current page. Same behaviour occurs
1151 * when `relativePosition` equals 0.
1152 * @see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API#Moving_to_a_specific_point_in_history
1153 */
1154 historyGo(relativePosition?: number): void;
1155 /**
1156 * Registers a URL change listener. Use to catch updates performed by the Angular
1157 * framework that are not detectible through "popstate" or "hashchange" events.
1158 *
1159 * @param fn The change handler function, which take a URL and a location history state.
1160 */
1161 onUrlChange(fn: (url: string, state: unknown) => void): void;
1162 /**
1163 * Subscribes to the platform's `popState` events.
1164 *
1165 * Note: `Location.go()` does not trigger the `popState` event in the browser. Use
1166 * `Location.onUrlChange()` to subscribe to URL changes instead.
1167 *
1168 * @param value Event that is triggered when the state history changes.
1169 * @param exception The exception to throw.
1170 *
1171 * @see [onpopstate](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WindowEventHandlers/onpopstate)
1172 *
1173 * @returns Subscribed events.
1174 */
1175 subscribe(onNext: (value: PopStateEvent_2) => void, onThrow?: ((exception: any) => void) | null, onReturn?: (() => void) | null): SubscriptionLike;
1176 /**
1177 * Normalizes URL parameters by prepending with `?` if needed.
1178 *
1179 * @param params String of URL parameters.
1180 *
1181 * @returns The normalized URL parameters string.
1182 */
1183 static normalizeQueryParams: (params: string) => string;
1184 /**
1185 * Joins two parts of a URL with a slash if needed.
1186 *
1187 * @param start URL string
1188 * @param end URL string
1189 *
1190 *
1191 * @returns The joined URL string.
1192 */
1193 static joinWithSlash: (start: string, end: string) => string;
1194 /**
1195 * Removes a trailing slash from a URL string if needed.
1196 * Looks for the first occurrence of either `#`, `?`, or the end of the
1197 * line as `/` characters and removes the trailing slash if one exists.
1198 *
1199 * @param url URL string.
1200 *
1201 * @returns The URL string, modified if needed.
1202 */
1203 static stripTrailingSlash: (url: string) => string;
1204}
1205export { Location_2 as Location }
1206
1207/**
1208 * @description
1209 * Indicates when a location is initialized.
1210 *
1211 * @publicApi
1212 */
1213export declare const LOCATION_INITIALIZED: InjectionToken<Promise<any>>;
1214
1215/**
1216 * @description
1217 * A serializable version of the event from `onPopState` or `onHashChange`
1218 *
1219 * @publicApi
1220 */
1221export declare interface LocationChangeEvent {
1222 type: string;
1223 state: any;
1224}
1225
1226/**
1227 * @publicApi
1228 */
1229export declare interface LocationChangeListener {
1230 (event: LocationChangeEvent): any;
1231}
1232
1233/**
1234 * Enables the `Location` service to read route state from the browser's URL.
1235 * Angular provides two strategies:
1236 * `HashLocationStrategy` and `PathLocationStrategy`.
1237 *
1238 * Applications should use the `Router` or `Location` services to
1239 * interact with application route state.
1240 *
1241 * For instance, `HashLocationStrategy` produces URLs like
1242 * <code class="no-auto-link">http://example.com#/foo</code>,
1243 * and `PathLocationStrategy` produces
1244 * <code class="no-auto-link">http://example.com/foo</code> as an equivalent URL.
1245 *
1246 * See these two classes for more.
1247 *
1248 * @publicApi
1249 */
1250export declare abstract class LocationStrategy {
1251 abstract path(includeHash?: boolean): string;
1252 abstract prepareExternalUrl(internal: string): string;
1253 abstract pushState(state: any, title: string, url: string, queryParams: string): void;
1254 abstract replaceState(state: any, title: string, url: string, queryParams: string): void;
1255 abstract forward(): void;
1256 abstract back(): void;
1257 historyGo?(relativePosition: number): void;
1258 abstract onPopState(fn: LocationChangeListener): void;
1259 abstract getBaseHref(): string;
1260}
1261
1262/**
1263 * Transforms text to all lower case.
1264 *
1265 * @see `UpperCasePipe`
1266 * @see `TitleCasePipe`
1267 * @usageNotes
1268 *
1269 * The following example defines a view that allows the user to enter
1270 * text, and then uses the pipe to convert the input text to all lower case.
1271 *
1272 * <code-example path="common/pipes/ts/lowerupper_pipe.ts" region='LowerUpperPipe'></code-example>
1273 *
1274 * @ngModule CommonModule
1275 * @publicApi
1276 */
1277export declare class LowerCasePipe implements PipeTransform {
1278 /**
1279 * @param value The string to transform to lower case.
1280 */
1281 transform(value: string): string;
1282 transform(value: null | undefined): null;
1283 transform(value: string | null | undefined): string | null;
1284}
1285
1286/**
1287 * @ngModule CommonModule
1288 *
1289 * @usageNotes
1290 * ```
1291 * <some-element [ngClass]="'first second'">...</some-element>
1292 *
1293 * <some-element [ngClass]="['first', 'second']">...</some-element>
1294 *
1295 * <some-element [ngClass]="{'first': true, 'second': true, 'third': false}">...</some-element>
1296 *
1297 * <some-element [ngClass]="stringExp|arrayExp|objExp">...</some-element>
1298 *
1299 * <some-element [ngClass]="{'class1 class2 class3' : true}">...</some-element>
1300 * ```
1301 *
1302 * @description
1303 *
1304 * Adds and removes CSS classes on an HTML element.
1305 *
1306 * The CSS classes are updated as follows, depending on the type of the expression evaluation:
1307 * - `string` - the CSS classes listed in the string (space delimited) are added,
1308 * - `Array` - the CSS classes declared as Array elements are added,
1309 * - `Object` - keys are CSS classes that get added when the expression given in the value
1310 * evaluates to a truthy value, otherwise they are removed.
1311 *
1312 * @publicApi
1313 */
1314export declare class NgClass implements DoCheck {
1315 private _iterableDiffers;
1316 private _keyValueDiffers;
1317 private _ngEl;
1318 private _renderer;
1319 private _iterableDiffer;
1320 private _keyValueDiffer;
1321 private _initialClasses;
1322 private _rawClass;
1323 constructor(_iterableDiffers: IterableDiffers, _keyValueDiffers: KeyValueDiffers, _ngEl: ElementRef, _renderer: Renderer2);
1324 set klass(value: string);
1325 set ngClass(value: string | string[] | Set<string> | {
1326 [klass: string]: any;
1327 });
1328 ngDoCheck(): void;
1329 private _applyKeyValueChanges;
1330 private _applyIterableChanges;
1331 /**
1332 * Applies a collection of CSS classes to the DOM element.
1333 *
1334 * For argument of type Set and Array CSS class names contained in those collections are always
1335 * added.
1336 * For argument of type Map CSS class name in the map's key is toggled based on the value (added
1337 * for truthy and removed for falsy).
1338 */
1339 private _applyClasses;
1340 /**
1341 * Removes a collection of CSS classes from the DOM element. This is mostly useful for cleanup
1342 * purposes.
1343 */
1344 private _removeClasses;
1345 private _toggleClass;
1346}
1347
1348/**
1349 * Instantiates a {@link Component} type and inserts its Host View into the current View.
1350 * `NgComponentOutlet` provides a declarative approach for dynamic component creation.
1351 *
1352 * `NgComponentOutlet` requires a component type, if a falsy value is set the view will clear and
1353 * any existing component will be destroyed.
1354 *
1355 * @usageNotes
1356 *
1357 * ### Fine tune control
1358 *
1359 * You can control the component creation process by using the following optional attributes:
1360 *
1361 * * `ngComponentOutletInjector`: Optional custom {@link Injector} that will be used as parent for
1362 * the Component. Defaults to the injector of the current view container.
1363 *
1364 * * `ngComponentOutletContent`: Optional list of projectable nodes to insert into the content
1365 * section of the component, if it exists.
1366 *
1367 * * `ngComponentOutletNgModuleFactory`: Optional module factory to allow loading another
1368 * module dynamically, then loading a component from that module.
1369 *
1370 * ### Syntax
1371 *
1372 * Simple
1373 * ```
1374 * <ng-container *ngComponentOutlet="componentTypeExpression"></ng-container>
1375 * ```
1376 *
1377 * Customized injector/content
1378 * ```
1379 * <ng-container *ngComponentOutlet="componentTypeExpression;
1380 * injector: injectorExpression;
1381 * content: contentNodesExpression;">
1382 * </ng-container>
1383 * ```
1384 *
1385 * Customized ngModuleFactory
1386 * ```
1387 * <ng-container *ngComponentOutlet="componentTypeExpression;
1388 * ngModuleFactory: moduleFactory;">
1389 * </ng-container>
1390 * ```
1391 *
1392 * ### A simple example
1393 *
1394 * {@example common/ngComponentOutlet/ts/module.ts region='SimpleExample'}
1395 *
1396 * A more complete example with additional options:
1397 *
1398 * {@example common/ngComponentOutlet/ts/module.ts region='CompleteExample'}
1399 *
1400 * @publicApi
1401 * @ngModule CommonModule
1402 */
1403export declare class NgComponentOutlet implements OnChanges, OnDestroy {
1404 private _viewContainerRef;
1405 ngComponentOutlet: Type<any>;
1406 ngComponentOutletInjector: Injector;
1407 ngComponentOutletContent: any[][];
1408 ngComponentOutletNgModuleFactory: NgModuleFactory<any>;
1409 private _componentRef;
1410 private _moduleRef;
1411 constructor(_viewContainerRef: ViewContainerRef);
1412 ngOnChanges(changes: SimpleChanges): void;
1413 ngOnDestroy(): void;
1414}
1415
1416/**
1417 * A [structural directive](guide/structural-directives) that renders
1418 * a template for each item in a collection.
1419 * The directive is placed on an element, which becomes the parent
1420 * of the cloned templates.
1421 *
1422 * The `ngForOf` directive is generally used in the
1423 * [shorthand form](guide/structural-directives#asterisk) `*ngFor`.
1424 * In this form, the template to be rendered for each iteration is the content
1425 * of an anchor element containing the directive.
1426 *
1427 * The following example shows the shorthand syntax with some options,
1428 * contained in an `<li>` element.
1429 *
1430 * ```
1431 * <li *ngFor="let item of items; index as i; trackBy: trackByFn">...</li>
1432 * ```
1433 *
1434 * The shorthand form expands into a long form that uses the `ngForOf` selector
1435 * on an `<ng-template>` element.
1436 * The content of the `<ng-template>` element is the `<li>` element that held the
1437 * short-form directive.
1438 *
1439 * Here is the expanded version of the short-form example.
1440 *
1441 * ```
1442 * <ng-template ngFor let-item [ngForOf]="items" let-i="index" [ngForTrackBy]="trackByFn">
1443 * <li>...</li>
1444 * </ng-template>
1445 * ```
1446 *
1447 * Angular automatically expands the shorthand syntax as it compiles the template.
1448 * The context for each embedded view is logically merged to the current component
1449 * context according to its lexical position.
1450 *
1451 * When using the shorthand syntax, Angular allows only [one structural directive
1452 * on an element](guide/built-in-directives#one-per-element).
1453 * If you want to iterate conditionally, for example,
1454 * put the `*ngIf` on a container element that wraps the `*ngFor` element.
1455 * For futher discussion, see
1456 * [Structural Directives](guide/built-in-directives#one-per-element).
1457 *
1458 * @usageNotes
1459 *
1460 * ### Local variables
1461 *
1462 * `NgForOf` provides exported values that can be aliased to local variables.
1463 * For example:
1464 *
1465 * ```
1466 * <li *ngFor="let user of users; index as i; first as isFirst">
1467 * {{i}}/{{users.length}}. {{user}} <span *ngIf="isFirst">default</span>
1468 * </li>
1469 * ```
1470 *
1471 * The following exported values can be aliased to local variables:
1472 *
1473 * - `$implicit: T`: The value of the individual items in the iterable (`ngForOf`).
1474 * - `ngForOf: NgIterable<T>`: The value of the iterable expression. Useful when the expression is
1475 * more complex then a property access, for example when using the async pipe (`userStreams |
1476 * async`).
1477 * - `index: number`: The index of the current item in the iterable.
1478 * - `count: number`: The length of the iterable.
1479 * - `first: boolean`: True when the item is the first item in the iterable.
1480 * - `last: boolean`: True when the item is the last item in the iterable.
1481 * - `even: boolean`: True when the item has an even index in the iterable.
1482 * - `odd: boolean`: True when the item has an odd index in the iterable.
1483 *
1484 * ### Change propagation
1485 *
1486 * When the contents of the iterator changes, `NgForOf` makes the corresponding changes to the DOM:
1487 *
1488 * * When an item is added, a new instance of the template is added to the DOM.
1489 * * When an item is removed, its template instance is removed from the DOM.
1490 * * When items are reordered, their respective templates are reordered in the DOM.
1491 *
1492 * Angular uses object identity to track insertions and deletions within the iterator and reproduce
1493 * those changes in the DOM. This has important implications for animations and any stateful
1494 * controls that are present, such as `<input>` elements that accept user input. Inserted rows can
1495 * be animated in, deleted rows can be animated out, and unchanged rows retain any unsaved state
1496 * such as user input.
1497 * For more on animations, see [Transitions and Triggers](guide/transition-and-triggers).
1498 *
1499 * The identities of elements in the iterator can change while the data does not.
1500 * This can happen, for example, if the iterator is produced from an RPC to the server, and that
1501 * RPC is re-run. Even if the data hasn't changed, the second response produces objects with
1502 * different identities, and Angular must tear down the entire DOM and rebuild it (as if all old
1503 * elements were deleted and all new elements inserted).
1504 *
1505 * To avoid this expensive operation, you can customize the default tracking algorithm.
1506 * by supplying the `trackBy` option to `NgForOf`.
1507 * `trackBy` takes a function that has two arguments: `index` and `item`.
1508 * If `trackBy` is given, Angular tracks changes by the return value of the function.
1509 *
1510 * @see [Structural Directives](guide/structural-directives)
1511 * @ngModule CommonModule
1512 * @publicApi
1513 */
1514export declare class NgForOf<T, U extends NgIterable<T> = NgIterable<T>> implements DoCheck {
1515 private _viewContainer;
1516 private _template;
1517 private _differs;
1518 /**
1519 * The value of the iterable expression, which can be used as a
1520 * [template input variable](guide/structural-directives#shorthand).
1521 */
1522 set ngForOf(ngForOf: U & NgIterable<T> | undefined | null);
1523 /**
1524 * Specifies a custom `TrackByFunction` to compute the identity of items in an iterable.
1525 *
1526 * If a custom `TrackByFunction` is not provided, `NgForOf` will use the item's [object
1527 * identity](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/is)
1528 * as the key.
1529 *
1530 * `NgForOf` uses the computed key to associate items in an iterable with DOM elements
1531 * it produces for these items.
1532 *
1533 * A custom `TrackByFunction` is useful to provide good user experience in cases when items in an
1534 * iterable rendered using `NgForOf` have a natural identifier (for example, custom ID or a
1535 * primary key), and this iterable could be updated with new object instances that still
1536 * represent the same underlying entity (for example, when data is re-fetched from the server,
1537 * and the iterable is recreated and re-rendered, but most of the data is still the same).
1538 *
1539 * @see `TrackByFunction`
1540 */
1541 set ngForTrackBy(fn: TrackByFunction<T>);
1542 get ngForTrackBy(): TrackByFunction<T>;
1543 private _ngForOf;
1544 private _ngForOfDirty;
1545 private _differ;
1546 private _trackByFn;
1547 constructor(_viewContainer: ViewContainerRef, _template: TemplateRef<NgForOfContext<T, U>>, _differs: IterableDiffers);
1548 /**
1549 * A reference to the template that is stamped out for each item in the iterable.
1550 * @see [template reference variable](guide/template-reference-variables)
1551 */
1552 set ngForTemplate(value: TemplateRef<NgForOfContext<T, U>>);
1553 /**
1554 * Applies the changes when needed.
1555 */
1556 ngDoCheck(): void;
1557 private _applyChanges;
1558 private _perViewChange;
1559 /**
1560 * Asserts the correct type of the context for the template that `NgForOf` will render.
1561 *
1562 * The presence of this method is a signal to the Ivy template type-check compiler that the
1563 * `NgForOf` structural directive renders its template with a specific context type.
1564 */
1565 static ngTemplateContextGuard<T, U extends NgIterable<T>>(dir: NgForOf<T, U>, ctx: any): ctx is NgForOfContext<T, U>;
1566}
1567
1568/**
1569 * @publicApi
1570 */
1571export declare class NgForOfContext<T, U extends NgIterable<T> = NgIterable<T>> {
1572 $implicit: T;
1573 ngForOf: U;
1574 index: number;
1575 count: number;
1576 constructor($implicit: T, ngForOf: U, index: number, count: number);
1577 get first(): boolean;
1578 get last(): boolean;
1579 get even(): boolean;
1580 get odd(): boolean;
1581}
1582
1583/**
1584 * A structural directive that conditionally includes a template based on the value of
1585 * an expression coerced to Boolean.
1586 * When the expression evaluates to true, Angular renders the template
1587 * provided in a `then` clause, and when false or null,
1588 * Angular renders the template provided in an optional `else` clause. The default
1589 * template for the `else` clause is blank.
1590 *
1591 * A [shorthand form](guide/structural-directives#asterisk) of the directive,
1592 * `*ngIf="condition"`, is generally used, provided
1593 * as an attribute of the anchor element for the inserted template.
1594 * Angular expands this into a more explicit version, in which the anchor element
1595 * is contained in an `<ng-template>` element.
1596 *
1597 * Simple form with shorthand syntax:
1598 *
1599 * ```
1600 * <div *ngIf="condition">Content to render when condition is true.</div>
1601 * ```
1602 *
1603 * Simple form with expanded syntax:
1604 *
1605 * ```
1606 * <ng-template [ngIf]="condition"><div>Content to render when condition is
1607 * true.</div></ng-template>
1608 * ```
1609 *
1610 * Form with an "else" block:
1611 *
1612 * ```
1613 * <div *ngIf="condition; else elseBlock">Content to render when condition is true.</div>
1614 * <ng-template #elseBlock>Content to render when condition is false.</ng-template>
1615 * ```
1616 *
1617 * Shorthand form with "then" and "else" blocks:
1618 *
1619 * ```
1620 * <div *ngIf="condition; then thenBlock else elseBlock"></div>
1621 * <ng-template #thenBlock>Content to render when condition is true.</ng-template>
1622 * <ng-template #elseBlock>Content to render when condition is false.</ng-template>
1623 * ```
1624 *
1625 * Form with storing the value locally:
1626 *
1627 * ```
1628 * <div *ngIf="condition as value; else elseBlock">{{value}}</div>
1629 * <ng-template #elseBlock>Content to render when value is null.</ng-template>
1630 * ```
1631 *
1632 * @usageNotes
1633 *
1634 * The `*ngIf` directive is most commonly used to conditionally show an inline template,
1635 * as seen in the following example.
1636 * The default `else` template is blank.
1637 *
1638 * {@example common/ngIf/ts/module.ts region='NgIfSimple'}
1639 *
1640 * ### Showing an alternative template using `else`
1641 *
1642 * To display a template when `expression` evaluates to false, use an `else` template
1643 * binding as shown in the following example.
1644 * The `else` binding points to an `<ng-template>` element labeled `#elseBlock`.
1645 * The template can be defined anywhere in the component view, but is typically placed right after
1646 * `ngIf` for readability.
1647 *
1648 * {@example common/ngIf/ts/module.ts region='NgIfElse'}
1649 *
1650 * ### Using an external `then` template
1651 *
1652 * In the previous example, the then-clause template is specified inline, as the content of the
1653 * tag that contains the `ngIf` directive. You can also specify a template that is defined
1654 * externally, by referencing a labeled `<ng-template>` element. When you do this, you can
1655 * change which template to use at runtime, as shown in the following example.
1656 *
1657 * {@example common/ngIf/ts/module.ts region='NgIfThenElse'}
1658 *
1659 * ### Storing a conditional result in a variable
1660 *
1661 * You might want to show a set of properties from the same object. If you are waiting
1662 * for asynchronous data, the object can be undefined.
1663 * In this case, you can use `ngIf` and store the result of the condition in a local
1664 * variable as shown in the following example.
1665 *
1666 * {@example common/ngIf/ts/module.ts region='NgIfAs'}
1667 *
1668 * This code uses only one `AsyncPipe`, so only one subscription is created.
1669 * The conditional statement stores the result of `userStream|async` in the local variable `user`.
1670 * You can then bind the local `user` repeatedly.
1671 *
1672 * The conditional displays the data only if `userStream` returns a value,
1673 * so you don't need to use the
1674 * safe-navigation-operator (`?.`)
1675 * to guard against null values when accessing properties.
1676 * You can display an alternative template while waiting for the data.
1677 *
1678 * ### Shorthand syntax
1679 *
1680 * The shorthand syntax `*ngIf` expands into two separate template specifications
1681 * for the "then" and "else" clauses. For example, consider the following shorthand statement,
1682 * that is meant to show a loading page while waiting for data to be loaded.
1683 *
1684 * ```
1685 * <div class="hero-list" *ngIf="heroes else loading">
1686 * ...
1687 * </div>
1688 *
1689 * <ng-template #loading>
1690 * <div>Loading...</div>
1691 * </ng-template>
1692 * ```
1693 *
1694 * You can see that the "else" clause references the `<ng-template>`
1695 * with the `#loading` label, and the template for the "then" clause
1696 * is provided as the content of the anchor element.
1697 *
1698 * However, when Angular expands the shorthand syntax, it creates
1699 * another `<ng-template>` tag, with `ngIf` and `ngIfElse` directives.
1700 * The anchor element containing the template for the "then" clause becomes
1701 * the content of this unlabeled `<ng-template>` tag.
1702 *
1703 * ```
1704 * <ng-template [ngIf]="heroes" [ngIfElse]="loading">
1705 * <div class="hero-list">
1706 * ...
1707 * </div>
1708 * </ng-template>
1709 *
1710 * <ng-template #loading>
1711 * <div>Loading...</div>
1712 * </ng-template>
1713 * ```
1714 *
1715 * The presence of the implicit template object has implications for the nesting of
1716 * structural directives. For more on this subject, see
1717 * [Structural Directives](https://angular.io/guide/built-in-directives#one-per-element).
1718 *
1719 * @ngModule CommonModule
1720 * @publicApi
1721 */
1722export declare class NgIf<T = unknown> {
1723 private _viewContainer;
1724 private _context;
1725 private _thenTemplateRef;
1726 private _elseTemplateRef;
1727 private _thenViewRef;
1728 private _elseViewRef;
1729 constructor(_viewContainer: ViewContainerRef, templateRef: TemplateRef<NgIfContext<T>>);
1730 /**
1731 * The Boolean expression to evaluate as the condition for showing a template.
1732 */
1733 set ngIf(condition: T);
1734 /**
1735 * A template to show if the condition expression evaluates to true.
1736 */
1737 set ngIfThen(templateRef: TemplateRef<NgIfContext<T>> | null);
1738 /**
1739 * A template to show if the condition expression evaluates to false.
1740 */
1741 set ngIfElse(templateRef: TemplateRef<NgIfContext<T>> | null);
1742 private _updateView;
1743 /**
1744 * Assert the correct type of the expression bound to the `ngIf` input within the template.
1745 *
1746 * The presence of this static field is a signal to the Ivy template type check compiler that
1747 * when the `NgIf` structural directive renders its template, the type of the expression bound
1748 * to `ngIf` should be narrowed in some way. For `NgIf`, the binding expression itself is used to
1749 * narrow its type, which allows the strictNullChecks feature of TypeScript to work with `NgIf`.
1750 */
1751 static ngTemplateGuard_ngIf: 'binding';
1752 /**
1753 * Asserts the correct type of the context for the template that `NgIf` will render.
1754 *
1755 * The presence of this method is a signal to the Ivy template type-check compiler that the
1756 * `NgIf` structural directive renders its template with a specific context type.
1757 */
1758 static ngTemplateContextGuard<T>(dir: NgIf<T>, ctx: any): ctx is NgIfContext<Exclude<T, false | 0 | '' | null | undefined>>;
1759}
1760
1761/**
1762 * @publicApi
1763 */
1764export declare class NgIfContext<T = unknown> {
1765 $implicit: T;
1766 ngIf: T;
1767}
1768
1769/**
1770 * Returns the plural case based on the locale
1771 *
1772 * @publicApi
1773 */
1774export declare class NgLocaleLocalization extends NgLocalization {
1775 protected locale: string;
1776 constructor(locale: string);
1777 getPluralCategory(value: any, locale?: string): string;
1778}
1779
1780
1781/**
1782 * @publicApi
1783 */
1784export declare abstract class NgLocalization {
1785 abstract getPluralCategory(value: any, locale?: string): string;
1786}
1787
1788/**
1789 * @ngModule CommonModule
1790 *
1791 * @usageNotes
1792 * ```
1793 * <some-element [ngPlural]="value">
1794 * <ng-template ngPluralCase="=0">there is nothing</ng-template>
1795 * <ng-template ngPluralCase="=1">there is one</ng-template>
1796 * <ng-template ngPluralCase="few">there are a few</ng-template>
1797 * </some-element>
1798 * ```
1799 *
1800 * @description
1801 *
1802 * Adds / removes DOM sub-trees based on a numeric value. Tailored for pluralization.
1803 *
1804 * Displays DOM sub-trees that match the switch expression value, or failing that, DOM sub-trees
1805 * that match the switch expression's pluralization category.
1806 *
1807 * To use this directive you must provide a container element that sets the `[ngPlural]` attribute
1808 * to a switch expression. Inner elements with a `[ngPluralCase]` will display based on their
1809 * expression:
1810 * - if `[ngPluralCase]` is set to a value starting with `=`, it will only display if the value
1811 * matches the switch expression exactly,
1812 * - otherwise, the view will be treated as a "category match", and will only display if exact
1813 * value matches aren't found and the value maps to its category for the defined locale.
1814 *
1815 * See http://cldr.unicode.org/index/cldr-spec/plural-rules
1816 *
1817 * @publicApi
1818 */
1819export declare class NgPlural {
1820 private _localization;
1821 private _switchValue;
1822 private _activeView;
1823 private _caseViews;
1824 constructor(_localization: NgLocalization);
1825 set ngPlural(value: number);
1826 addCase(value: string, switchView: SwitchView): void;
1827 private _updateView;
1828 private _clearViews;
1829 private _activateView;
1830}
1831
1832/**
1833 * @ngModule CommonModule
1834 *
1835 * @description
1836 *
1837 * Creates a view that will be added/removed from the parent {@link NgPlural} when the
1838 * given expression matches the plural expression according to CLDR rules.
1839 *
1840 * @usageNotes
1841 * ```
1842 * <some-element [ngPlural]="value">
1843 * <ng-template ngPluralCase="=0">...</ng-template>
1844 * <ng-template ngPluralCase="other">...</ng-template>
1845 * </some-element>
1846 *```
1847 *
1848 * See {@link NgPlural} for more details and example.
1849 *
1850 * @publicApi
1851 */
1852export declare class NgPluralCase {
1853 value: string;
1854 constructor(value: string, template: TemplateRef<Object>, viewContainer: ViewContainerRef, ngPlural: NgPlural);
1855}
1856
1857/**
1858 * @ngModule CommonModule
1859 *
1860 * @usageNotes
1861 *
1862 * Set the font of the containing element to the result of an expression.
1863 *
1864 * ```
1865 * <some-element [ngStyle]="{'font-style': styleExp}">...</some-element>
1866 * ```
1867 *
1868 * Set the width of the containing element to a pixel value returned by an expression.
1869 *
1870 * ```
1871 * <some-element [ngStyle]="{'max-width.px': widthExp}">...</some-element>
1872 * ```
1873 *
1874 * Set a collection of style values using an expression that returns key-value pairs.
1875 *
1876 * ```
1877 * <some-element [ngStyle]="objExp">...</some-element>
1878 * ```
1879 *
1880 * @description
1881 *
1882 * An attribute directive that updates styles for the containing HTML element.
1883 * Sets one or more style properties, specified as colon-separated key-value pairs.
1884 * The key is a style name, with an optional `.<unit>` suffix
1885 * (such as 'top.px', 'font-style.em').
1886 * The value is an expression to be evaluated.
1887 * The resulting non-null value, expressed in the given unit,
1888 * is assigned to the given style property.
1889 * If the result of evaluation is null, the corresponding style is removed.
1890 *
1891 * @publicApi
1892 */
1893export declare class NgStyle implements DoCheck {
1894 private _ngEl;
1895 private _differs;
1896 private _renderer;
1897 private _ngStyle;
1898 private _differ;
1899 constructor(_ngEl: ElementRef, _differs: KeyValueDiffers, _renderer: Renderer2);
1900 set ngStyle(values: {
1901 [klass: string]: any;
1902 } | null);
1903 ngDoCheck(): void;
1904 private _setStyle;
1905 private _applyChanges;
1906}
1907
1908/**
1909 * @ngModule CommonModule
1910 *
1911 * @description
1912 * The `[ngSwitch]` directive on a container specifies an expression to match against.
1913 * The expressions to match are provided by `ngSwitchCase` directives on views within the container.
1914 * - Every view that matches is rendered.
1915 * - If there are no matches, a view with the `ngSwitchDefault` directive is rendered.
1916 * - Elements within the `[NgSwitch]` statement but outside of any `NgSwitchCase`
1917 * or `ngSwitchDefault` directive are preserved at the location.
1918 *
1919 * @usageNotes
1920 * Define a container element for the directive, and specify the switch expression
1921 * to match against as an attribute:
1922 *
1923 * ```
1924 * <container-element [ngSwitch]="switch_expression">
1925 * ```
1926 *
1927 * Within the container, `*ngSwitchCase` statements specify the match expressions
1928 * as attributes. Include `*ngSwitchDefault` as the final case.
1929 *
1930 * ```
1931 * <container-element [ngSwitch]="switch_expression">
1932 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_1">...</some-element>
1933 * ...
1934 * <some-element *ngSwitchDefault>...</some-element>
1935 * </container-element>
1936 * ```
1937 *
1938 * ### Usage Examples
1939 *
1940 * The following example shows how to use more than one case to display the same view:
1941 *
1942 * ```
1943 * <container-element [ngSwitch]="switch_expression">
1944 * <!-- the same view can be shown in more than one case -->
1945 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_1">...</some-element>
1946 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_2">...</some-element>
1947 * <some-other-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_3">...</some-other-element>
1948 * <!--default case when there are no matches -->
1949 * <some-element *ngSwitchDefault>...</some-element>
1950 * </container-element>
1951 * ```
1952 *
1953 * The following example shows how cases can be nested:
1954 * ```
1955 * <container-element [ngSwitch]="switch_expression">
1956 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_1">...</some-element>
1957 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_2">...</some-element>
1958 * <some-other-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_3">...</some-other-element>
1959 * <ng-container *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_3">
1960 * <!-- use a ng-container to group multiple root nodes -->
1961 * <inner-element></inner-element>
1962 * <inner-other-element></inner-other-element>
1963 * </ng-container>
1964 * <some-element *ngSwitchDefault>...</some-element>
1965 * </container-element>
1966 * ```
1967 *
1968 * @publicApi
1969 * @see `NgSwitchCase`
1970 * @see `NgSwitchDefault`
1971 * @see [Structural Directives](guide/structural-directives)
1972 *
1973 */
1974export declare class NgSwitch {
1975 private _defaultViews;
1976 private _defaultUsed;
1977 private _caseCount;
1978 private _lastCaseCheckIndex;
1979 private _lastCasesMatched;
1980 private _ngSwitch;
1981 set ngSwitch(newValue: any);
1982 private _updateDefaultCases;
1983}
1984
1985/**
1986 * @ngModule CommonModule
1987 *
1988 * @description
1989 * Provides a switch case expression to match against an enclosing `ngSwitch` expression.
1990 * When the expressions match, the given `NgSwitchCase` template is rendered.
1991 * If multiple match expressions match the switch expression value, all of them are displayed.
1992 *
1993 * @usageNotes
1994 *
1995 * Within a switch container, `*ngSwitchCase` statements specify the match expressions
1996 * as attributes. Include `*ngSwitchDefault` as the final case.
1997 *
1998 * ```
1999 * <container-element [ngSwitch]="switch_expression">
2000 * <some-element *ngSwitchCase="match_expression_1">...</some-element>
2001 * ...
2002 * <some-element *ngSwitchDefault>...</some-element>
2003 * </container-element>
2004 * ```
2005 *
2006 * Each switch-case statement contains an in-line HTML template or template reference
2007 * that defines the subtree to be selected if the value of the match expression
2008 * matches the value of the switch expression.
2009 *
2010 * Unlike JavaScript, which uses strict equality, Angular uses loose equality.
2011 * This means that the empty string, `""` matches 0.
2012 *
2013 * @publicApi
2014 * @see `NgSwitch`
2015 * @see `NgSwitchDefault`
2016 *
2017 */
2018export declare class NgSwitchCase implements DoCheck {
2019 private ngSwitch;
2020 private _view;
2021 /**
2022 * Stores the HTML template to be selected on match.
2023 */
2024 ngSwitchCase: any;
2025 constructor(viewContainer: ViewContainerRef, templateRef: TemplateRef<Object>, ngSwitch: NgSwitch);
2026 /**
2027 * Performs case matching. For internal use only.
2028 */
2029 ngDoCheck(): void;
2030}
2031
2032/**
2033 * @ngModule CommonModule
2034 *
2035 * @description
2036 *
2037 * Creates a view that is rendered when no `NgSwitchCase` expressions
2038 * match the `NgSwitch` expression.
2039 * This statement should be the final case in an `NgSwitch`.
2040 *
2041 * @publicApi
2042 * @see `NgSwitch`
2043 * @see `NgSwitchCase`
2044 *
2045 */
2046export declare class NgSwitchDefault {
2047 constructor(viewContainer: ViewContainerRef, templateRef: TemplateRef<Object>, ngSwitch: NgSwitch);
2048}
2049
2050/**
2051 * @ngModule CommonModule
2052 *
2053 * @description
2054 *
2055 * Inserts an embedded view from a prepared `TemplateRef`.
2056 *
2057 * You can attach a context object to the `EmbeddedViewRef` by setting `[ngTemplateOutletContext]`.
2058 * `[ngTemplateOutletContext]` should be an object, the object's keys will be available for binding
2059 * by the local template `let` declarations.
2060 *
2061 * @usageNotes
2062 * ```
2063 * <ng-container *ngTemplateOutlet="templateRefExp; context: contextExp"></ng-container>
2064 * ```
2065 *
2066 * Using the key `$implicit` in the context object will set its value as default.
2067 *
2068 * ### Example
2069 *
2070 * {@example common/ngTemplateOutlet/ts/module.ts region='NgTemplateOutlet'}
2071 *
2072 * @publicApi
2073 */
2074export declare class NgTemplateOutlet implements OnChanges {
2075 private _viewContainerRef;
2076 private _viewRef;
2077 /**
2078 * A context object to attach to the {@link EmbeddedViewRef}. This should be an
2079 * object, the object's keys will be available for binding by the local template `let`
2080 * declarations.
2081 * Using the key `$implicit` in the context object will set its value as default.
2082 */
2083 ngTemplateOutletContext: Object | null;
2084 /**
2085 * A string defining the template reference and optionally the context object for the template.
2086 */
2087 ngTemplateOutlet: TemplateRef<any> | null;
2088 constructor(_viewContainerRef: ViewContainerRef);
2089 ngOnChanges(changes: SimpleChanges): void;
2090}
2091
2092
2093/**
2094 * Format styles that can be used to represent numbers.
2095 * @see `getLocaleNumberFormat()`.
2096 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
2097 *
2098 * @publicApi
2099 */
2100export declare enum NumberFormatStyle {
2101 Decimal = 0,
2102 Percent = 1,
2103 Currency = 2,
2104 Scientific = 3
2105}
2106
2107/**
2108 * Symbols that can be used to replace placeholders in number patterns.
2109 * Examples are based on `en-US` values.
2110 *
2111 * @see `getLocaleNumberSymbol()`
2112 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
2113 *
2114 * @publicApi
2115 */
2116export declare enum NumberSymbol {
2117 /**
2118 * Decimal separator.
2119 * For `en-US`, the dot character.
2120 * Example: 2,345`.`67
2121 */
2122 Decimal = 0,
2123 /**
2124 * Grouping separator, typically for thousands.
2125 * For `en-US`, the comma character.
2126 * Example: 2`,`345.67
2127 */
2128 Group = 1,
2129 /**
2130 * List-item separator.
2131 * Example: "one, two, and three"
2132 */
2133 List = 2,
2134 /**
2135 * Sign for percentage (out of 100).
2136 * Example: 23.4%
2137 */
2138 PercentSign = 3,
2139 /**
2140 * Sign for positive numbers.
2141 * Example: +23
2142 */
2143 PlusSign = 4,
2144 /**
2145 * Sign for negative numbers.
2146 * Example: -23
2147 */
2148 MinusSign = 5,
2149 /**
2150 * Computer notation for exponential value (n times a power of 10).
2151 * Example: 1.2E3
2152 */
2153 Exponential = 6,
2154 /**
2155 * Human-readable format of exponential.
2156 * Example: 1.2x103
2157 */
2158 SuperscriptingExponent = 7,
2159 /**
2160 * Sign for permille (out of 1000).
2161 * Example: 23.4‰
2162 */
2163 PerMille = 8,
2164 /**
2165 * Infinity, can be used with plus and minus.
2166 * Example: ∞, +∞, -∞
2167 */
2168 Infinity = 9,
2169 /**
2170 * Not a number.
2171 * Example: NaN
2172 */
2173 NaN = 10,
2174 /**
2175 * Symbol used between time units.
2176 * Example: 10:52
2177 */
2178 TimeSeparator = 11,
2179 /**
2180 * Decimal separator for currency values (fallback to `Decimal`).
2181 * Example: $2,345.67
2182 */
2183 CurrencyDecimal = 12,
2184 /**
2185 * Group separator for currency values (fallback to `Group`).
2186 * Example: $2,345.67
2187 */
2188 CurrencyGroup = 13
2189}
2190
2191/**
2192 * @description
2193 * A {@link LocationStrategy} used to configure the {@link Location} service to
2194 * represent its state in the
2195 * [path](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Locator#Syntax) of the
2196 * browser's URL.
2197 *
2198 * If you're using `PathLocationStrategy`, you must provide a {@link APP_BASE_HREF}
2199 * or add a `<base href>` element to the document.
2200 *
2201 * For instance, if you provide an `APP_BASE_HREF` of `'/my/app/'` and call
2202 * `location.go('/foo')`, the browser's URL will become
2203 * `example.com/my/app/foo`. To ensure all relative URIs resolve correctly,
2204 * the `<base href>` and/or `APP_BASE_HREF` should end with a `/`.
2205 *
2206 * Similarly, if you add `<base href='/my/app/'/>` to the document and call
2207 * `location.go('/foo')`, the browser's URL will become
2208 * `example.com/my/app/foo`.
2209 *
2210 * Note that when using `PathLocationStrategy`, neither the query nor
2211 * the fragment in the `<base href>` will be preserved, as outlined
2212 * by the [RFC](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-5.2.2).
2213 *
2214 * @usageNotes
2215 *
2216 * ### Example
2217 *
2218 * {@example common/location/ts/path_location_component.ts region='LocationComponent'}
2219 *
2220 * @publicApi
2221 */
2222export declare class PathLocationStrategy extends LocationStrategy implements OnDestroy {
2223 private _platformLocation;
2224 private _baseHref;
2225 private _removeListenerFns;
2226 constructor(_platformLocation: PlatformLocation, href?: string);
2227 ngOnDestroy(): void;
2228 onPopState(fn: LocationChangeListener): void;
2229 getBaseHref(): string;
2230 prepareExternalUrl(internal: string): string;
2231 path(includeHash?: boolean): string;
2232 pushState(state: any, title: string, url: string, queryParams: string): void;
2233 replaceState(state: any, title: string, url: string, queryParams: string): void;
2234 forward(): void;
2235 back(): void;
2236 historyGo(relativePosition?: number): void;
2237}
2238
2239/**
2240 * @ngModule CommonModule
2241 * @description
2242 *
2243 * Transforms a number to a percentage
2244 * string, formatted according to locale rules that determine group sizing and
2245 * separator, decimal-point character, and other locale-specific
2246 * configurations.
2247 *
2248 * @see `formatPercent()`
2249 *
2250 * @usageNotes
2251 * The following code shows how the pipe transforms numbers
2252 * into text strings, according to various format specifications,
2253 * where the caller's default locale is `en-US`.
2254 *
2255 * <code-example path="common/pipes/ts/percent_pipe.ts" region='PercentPipe'></code-example>
2256 *
2257 * @publicApi
2258 */
2259export declare class PercentPipe implements PipeTransform {
2260 private _locale;
2261 constructor(_locale: string);
2262 transform(value: number | string, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
2263 transform(value: null | undefined, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): null;
2264 transform(value: number | string | null | undefined, digitsInfo?: string, locale?: string): string | null;
2265}
2266
2267/**
2268 * This class should not be used directly by an application developer. Instead, use
2269 * {@link Location}.
2270 *
2271 * `PlatformLocation` encapsulates all calls to DOM APIs, which allows the Router to be
2272 * platform-agnostic.
2273 * This means that we can have different implementation of `PlatformLocation` for the different
2274 * platforms that Angular supports. For example, `@angular/platform-browser` provides an
2275 * implementation specific to the browser environment, while `@angular/platform-server` provides
2276 * one suitable for use with server-side rendering.
2277 *
2278 * The `PlatformLocation` class is used directly by all implementations of {@link LocationStrategy}
2279 * when they need to interact with the DOM APIs like pushState, popState, etc.
2280 *
2281 * {@link LocationStrategy} in turn is used by the {@link Location} service which is used directly
2282 * by the {@link Router} in order to navigate between routes. Since all interactions between {@link
2283 * Router} /
2284 * {@link Location} / {@link LocationStrategy} and DOM APIs flow through the `PlatformLocation`
2285 * class, they are all platform-agnostic.
2286 *
2287 * @publicApi
2288 */
2289export declare abstract class PlatformLocation {
2290 abstract getBaseHrefFromDOM(): string;
2291 abstract getState(): unknown;
2292 /**
2293 * Returns a function that, when executed, removes the `popstate` event handler.
2294 */
2295 abstract onPopState(fn: LocationChangeListener): VoidFunction;
2296 /**
2297 * Returns a function that, when executed, removes the `hashchange` event handler.
2298 */
2299 abstract onHashChange(fn: LocationChangeListener): VoidFunction;
2300 abstract get href(): string;
2301 abstract get protocol(): string;
2302 abstract get hostname(): string;
2303 abstract get port(): string;
2304 abstract get pathname(): string;
2305 abstract get search(): string;
2306 abstract get hash(): string;
2307 abstract replaceState(state: any, title: string, url: string): void;
2308 abstract pushState(state: any, title: string, url: string): void;
2309 abstract forward(): void;
2310 abstract back(): void;
2311 historyGo?(relativePosition: number): void;
2312}
2313
2314/**
2315 * Plurality cases used for translating plurals to different languages.
2316 *
2317 * @see `NgPlural`
2318 * @see `NgPluralCase`
2319 * @see [Internationalization (i18n) Guide](https://angular.io/guide/i18n-overview)
2320 *
2321 * @publicApi
2322 */
2323export declare enum Plural {
2324 Zero = 0,
2325 One = 1,
2326 Two = 2,
2327 Few = 3,
2328 Many = 4,
2329 Other = 5
2330}
2331
2332/** @publicApi */
2333declare interface PopStateEvent_2 {
2334 pop?: boolean;
2335 state?: any;
2336 type?: string;
2337 url?: string;
2338}
2339export { PopStateEvent_2 as PopStateEvent }
2340
2341
2342/**
2343 * Register global data to be used internally by Angular. See the
2344 * ["I18n guide"](guide/i18n-common-format-data-locale) to know how to import additional locale
2345 * data.
2346 *
2347 * The signature registerLocaleData(data: any, extraData?: any) is deprecated since v5.1
2348 *
2349 * @publicApi
2350 */
2351export declare function registerLocaleData(data: any, localeId?: string | any, extraData?: any): void;
2352
2353/**
2354 * @ngModule CommonModule
2355 * @description
2356 *
2357 * Creates a new `Array` or `String` containing a subset (slice) of the elements.
2358 *
2359 * @usageNotes
2360 *
2361 * All behavior is based on the expected behavior of the JavaScript API `Array.prototype.slice()`
2362 * and `String.prototype.slice()`.
2363 *
2364 * When operating on an `Array`, the returned `Array` is always a copy even when all
2365 * the elements are being returned.
2366 *
2367 * When operating on a blank value, the pipe returns the blank value.
2368 *
2369 * ### List Example
2370 *
2371 * This `ngFor` example:
2372 *
2373 * {@example common/pipes/ts/slice_pipe.ts region='SlicePipe_list'}
2374 *
2375 * produces the following:
2376 *
2377 * ```html
2378 * <li>b</li>
2379 * <li>c</li>
2380 * ```
2381 *
2382 * ### String Examples
2383 *
2384 * {@example common/pipes/ts/slice_pipe.ts region='SlicePipe_string'}
2385 *
2386 * @publicApi
2387 */
2388export declare class SlicePipe implements PipeTransform {
2389 /**
2390 * @param value a list or a string to be sliced.
2391 * @param start the starting index of the subset to return:
2392 * - **a positive integer**: return the item at `start` index and all items after
2393 * in the list or string expression.
2394 * - **a negative integer**: return the item at `start` index from the end and all items after
2395 * in the list or string expression.
2396 * - **if positive and greater than the size of the expression**: return an empty list or
2397 * string.
2398 * - **if negative and greater than the size of the expression**: return entire list or string.
2399 * @param end the ending index of the subset to return:
2400 * - **omitted**: return all items until the end.
2401 * - **if positive**: return all items before `end` index of the list or string.
2402 * - **if negative**: return all items before `end` index from the end of the list or string.
2403 */
2404 transform<T>(value: ReadonlyArray<T>, start: number, end?: number): Array<T>;
2405 transform(value: null | undefined, start: number, end?: number): null;
2406 transform<T>(value: ReadonlyArray<T> | null | undefined, start: number, end?: number): Array<T> | null;
2407 transform(value: string, start: number, end?: number): string;
2408 transform(value: string | null | undefined, start: number, end?: number): string | null;
2409 private supports;
2410}
2411
2412declare class SwitchView {
2413 private _viewContainerRef;
2414 private _templateRef;
2415 private _created;
2416 constructor(_viewContainerRef: ViewContainerRef, _templateRef: TemplateRef<Object>);
2417 create(): void;
2418 destroy(): void;
2419 enforceState(created: boolean): void;
2420}
2421
2422/**
2423 * Represents a time value with hours and minutes.
2424 *
2425 * @publicApi
2426 */
2427export declare type Time = {
2428 hours: number;
2429 minutes: number;
2430};
2431
2432/**
2433 * Transforms text to title case.
2434 * Capitalizes the first letter of each word and transforms the
2435 * rest of the word to lower case.
2436 * Words are delimited by any whitespace character, such as a space, tab, or line-feed character.
2437 *
2438 * @see `LowerCasePipe`
2439 * @see `UpperCasePipe`
2440 *
2441 * @usageNotes
2442 * The following example shows the result of transforming various strings into title case.
2443 *
2444 * <code-example path="common/pipes/ts/titlecase_pipe.ts" region='TitleCasePipe'></code-example>
2445 *
2446 * @ngModule CommonModule
2447 * @publicApi
2448 */
2449export declare class TitleCasePipe implements PipeTransform {
2450 /**
2451 * @param value The string to transform to title case.
2452 */
2453 transform(value: string): string;
2454 transform(value: null | undefined): null;
2455 transform(value: string | null | undefined): string | null;
2456}
2457
2458/**
2459 * String widths available for translations.
2460 * The specific character widths are locale-specific.
2461 * Examples are given for the word "Sunday" in English.
2462 *
2463 * @publicApi
2464 */
2465export declare enum TranslationWidth {
2466 /** 1 character for `en-US`. For example: 'S' */
2467 Narrow = 0,
2468 /** 3 characters for `en-US`. For example: 'Sun' */
2469 Abbreviated = 1,
2470 /** Full length for `en-US`. For example: "Sunday" */
2471 Wide = 2,
2472 /** 2 characters for `en-US`, For example: "Su" */
2473 Short = 3
2474}
2475
2476/**
2477 * Transforms text to all upper case.
2478 * @see `LowerCasePipe`
2479 * @see `TitleCasePipe`
2480 *
2481 * @ngModule CommonModule
2482 * @publicApi
2483 */
2484export declare class UpperCasePipe implements PipeTransform {
2485 /**
2486 * @param value The string to transform to upper case.
2487 */
2488 transform(value: string): string;
2489 transform(value: null | undefined): null;
2490 transform(value: string | null | undefined): string | null;
2491}
2492
2493/**
2494 * @publicApi
2495 */
2496export declare const VERSION: Version;
2497
2498
2499/**
2500 * Defines a scroll position manager. Implemented by `BrowserViewportScroller`.
2501 *
2502 * @publicApi
2503 */
2504export declare abstract class ViewportScroller {
2505 /** @nocollapse */
2506 static ɵprov: unknown;
2507 /**
2508 * Configures the top offset used when scrolling to an anchor.
2509 * @param offset A position in screen coordinates (a tuple with x and y values)
2510 * or a function that returns the top offset position.
2511 *
2512 */
2513 abstract setOffset(offset: [number, number] | (() => [number, number])): void;
2514 /**
2515 * Retrieves the current scroll position.
2516 * @returns A position in screen coordinates (a tuple with x and y values).
2517 */
2518 abstract getScrollPosition(): [number, number];
2519 /**
2520 * Scrolls to a specified position.
2521 * @param position A position in screen coordinates (a tuple with x and y values).
2522 */
2523 abstract scrollToPosition(position: [number, number]): void;
2524 /**
2525 * Scrolls to an anchor element.
2526 * @param anchor The ID of the anchor element.
2527 */
2528 abstract scrollToAnchor(anchor: string): void;
2529 /**
2530 * Disables automatic scroll restoration provided by the browser.
2531 * See also [window.history.scrollRestoration
2532 * info](https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/history-api-scroll-restoration).
2533 */
2534 abstract setHistoryScrollRestoration(scrollRestoration: 'auto' | 'manual'): void;
2535}
2536
2537/**
2538 * The value for each day of the week, based on the `en-US` locale
2539 *
2540 * @publicApi
2541 */
2542export declare enum WeekDay {
2543 Sunday = 0,
2544 Monday = 1,
2545 Tuesday = 2,
2546 Wednesday = 3,
2547 Thursday = 4,
2548 Friday = 5,
2549 Saturday = 6
2550}
2551
2552
2553/**
2554 * A wrapper around the `XMLHttpRequest` constructor.
2555 *
2556 * @publicApi
2557 */
2558export declare abstract class XhrFactory {
2559 abstract build(): XMLHttpRequest;
2560}
2561
2562export declare function ɵangular_packages_common_common_a(): ɵBrowserPlatformLocation;
2563
2564export declare function ɵangular_packages_common_common_b(): ɵBrowserPlatformLocation;
2565
2566export declare function ɵangular_packages_common_common_c(): Location_2;
2567
2568export declare function ɵangular_packages_common_common_d(platformLocation: PlatformLocation): PathLocationStrategy;
2569
2570/**
2571 * A collection of Angular directives that are likely to be used in each and every Angular
2572 * application.
2573 */
2574export declare const ɵangular_packages_common_common_e: Provider[];
2575
2576/**
2577 * A collection of Angular pipes that are likely to be used in each and every application.
2578 */
2579export declare const ɵangular_packages_common_common_f: (typeof AsyncPipe | typeof SlicePipe | typeof DecimalPipe | typeof PercentPipe | typeof CurrencyPipe | typeof DatePipe | typeof I18nPluralPipe | typeof I18nSelectPipe | typeof KeyValuePipe)[];
2580
2581/**
2582 * `PlatformLocation` encapsulates all of the direct calls to platform APIs.
2583 * This class should not be used directly by an application developer. Instead, use
2584 * {@link Location}.
2585 */
2586export declare class ɵBrowserPlatformLocation extends PlatformLocation {
2587 private _doc;
2588 readonly location: Location;
2589 private _history;
2590 constructor(_doc: any);
2591 getBaseHrefFromDOM(): string;
2592 onPopState(fn: LocationChangeListener): VoidFunction;
2593 onHashChange(fn: LocationChangeListener): VoidFunction;
2594 get href(): string;
2595 get protocol(): string;
2596 get hostname(): string;
2597 get port(): string;
2598 get pathname(): string;
2599 get search(): string;
2600 get hash(): string;
2601 set pathname(newPath: string);
2602 pushState(state: any, title: string, url: string): void;
2603 replaceState(state: any, title: string, url: string): void;
2604 forward(): void;
2605 back(): void;
2606 historyGo(relativePosition?: number): void;
2607 getState(): unknown;
2608}
2609
2610/**
2611 * Provides DOM operations in an environment-agnostic way.
2612 *
2613 * @security Tread carefully! Interacting with the DOM directly is dangerous and
2614 * can introduce XSS risks.
2615 */
2616export declare abstract class ɵDomAdapter {
2617 abstract dispatchEvent(el: any, evt: any): any;
2618 abstract readonly supportsDOMEvents: boolean;
2619 abstract remove(el: any): void;
2620 abstract createElement(tagName: any, doc?: any): HTMLElement;
2621 abstract createHtmlDocument(): HTMLDocument;
2622 abstract getDefaultDocument(): Document;
2623 abstract isElementNode(node: any): boolean;
2624 abstract isShadowRoot(node: any): boolean;
2625 abstract onAndCancel(el: any, evt: any, listener: any): Function;
2626 abstract getGlobalEventTarget(doc: Document, target: string): any;
2627 abstract getBaseHref(doc: Document): string | null;
2628 abstract resetBaseElement(): void;
2629 abstract getUserAgent(): string;
2630 abstract getCookie(name: string): string | null;
2631}
2632
2633
2634export declare function ɵgetDOM(): ɵDomAdapter;
2635
2636/**
2637 * Provides an empty implementation of the viewport scroller.
2638 */
2639export declare class ɵNullViewportScroller implements ViewportScroller {
2640 /**
2641 * Empty implementation
2642 */
2643 setOffset(offset: [number, number] | (() => [number, number])): void;
2644 /**
2645 * Empty implementation
2646 */
2647 getScrollPosition(): [number, number];
2648 /**
2649 * Empty implementation
2650 */
2651 scrollToPosition(position: [number, number]): void;
2652 /**
2653 * Empty implementation
2654 */
2655 scrollToAnchor(anchor: string): void;
2656 /**
2657 * Empty implementation
2658 */
2659 setHistoryScrollRestoration(scrollRestoration: 'auto' | 'manual'): void;
2660}
2661
2662
2663export declare function ɵparseCookieValue(cookieStr: string, name: string): string | null;
2664
2665
2666export declare const ɵPLATFORM_BROWSER_ID = "browser";
2667
2668export declare const ɵPLATFORM_SERVER_ID = "server";
2669
2670export declare const ɵPLATFORM_WORKER_APP_ID = "browserWorkerApp";
2671
2672export declare const ɵPLATFORM_WORKER_UI_ID = "browserWorkerUi";
2673
2674export declare function ɵsetRootDomAdapter(adapter: ɵDomAdapter): void;
2675
2676export { }
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