commit | 9837afa5091b3f40c8fca63557948df2a25f694f | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Sigmund Cherem <sigmund@google.com> | Fri Jan 15 02:16:42 2021 +0000 |
committer | commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org> | Fri Jan 15 02:16:42 2021 +0000 |
tree | bab93baed1d66ec22a6c1dc3e6457e133c7a8869 | |
parent | 90e6fd47340083cb78749bee760b8b176dddeb71 [diff] |
[web] partial migration of native tests to support dartdevc Most files are changed in two ways: * add `self.` so that the code can run with "use strict" (which ddc does by default when generating code) * call the js-helper that installs the interceptor/type-extensions in DDC on each test. This was mostly done mechanically and gets about 50% of the tests under dart2js/native running and passing in dartdevc. There are, however, many tests here that are dart2js-specific or for features we don't want to prioritize at this time (like custom elements), so after this the next step should probably be to reoarganize the tests and split them in general native support vs dart2js-specific. Change-Id: I37759d854f9f51c185789471454d37b6bc78af90 Reviewed-on: https://dart-review.googlesource.com/c/sdk/+/177821 Reviewed-by: Stephen Adams <sra@google.com> Reviewed-by: Nicholas Shahan <nshahan@google.com>
Dart is:
Optimized for UI: Develop with a programming language specialized around the needs of user interface creation.
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Dart's flexible compiler technology lets you run Dart code in different ways, depending on your target platform and goals:
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