(js/css) Update generated files

pull/206/head
InverseBot 2016-04-02 01:56:14 -04:00
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commit a6e883c43b
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/**
* @license AngularJS v1.4.9
* @license AngularJS v1.4.10
* (c) 2010-2015 Google, Inc. http://angularjs.org
* License: MIT
*/
@ -29,45 +29,66 @@ var jqLite = angular.element;
* `ngMessage` and `ngMessageExp` directives.
*
* # Usage
* The `ngMessages` directive listens on a key/value collection which is set on the ngMessages attribute.
* Since the {@link ngModel ngModel} directive exposes an `$error` object, this error object can be
* used with `ngMessages` to display control error messages in an easier way than with just regular angular
* template directives.
* The `ngMessages` directive allows keys in a key/value collection to be associated with a child element
* (or 'message') that will show or hide based on the truthiness of that key's value in the collection. A common use
* case for `ngMessages` is to display error messages for inputs using the `$error` object exposed by the
* {@link ngModel ngModel} directive.
*
* The child elements of the `ngMessages` directive are matched to the collection keys by a `ngMessage` or
* `ngMessageExp` directive. The value of these attributes must match a key in the collection that is provided by
* the `ngMessages` directive.
*
* Consider the following example, which illustrates a typical use case of `ngMessages`. Within the form `myForm` we
* have a text input named `myField` which is bound to the scope variable `field` using the {@link ngModel ngModel}
* directive.
*
* The `myField` field is a required input of type `email` with a maximum length of 15 characters.
*
* ```html
* <form name="myForm">
* <label>
* Enter text:
* <input type="text" ng-model="field" name="myField" required minlength="5" />
* <input type="email" ng-model="field" name="myField" required maxlength="15" />
* </label>
* <div ng-messages="myForm.myField.$error" role="alert">
* <div ng-message="required">You did not enter a field</div>
* <div ng-message="minlength, maxlength">
* Your email must be between 5 and 100 characters long
* </div>
* <div ng-message="required">Please enter a value for this field.</div>
* <div ng-message="email">This field must be a valid email address.</div>
* <div ng-message="maxlength">This field can be at most 15 characters long.</div>
* </div>
* </form>
* ```
*
* Now whatever key/value entries are present within the provided object (in this case `$error`) then
* the ngMessages directive will render the inner first ngMessage directive (depending if the key values
* match the attribute value present on each ngMessage directive). In other words, if your errors
* object contains the following data:
* In order to show error messages corresponding to `myField` we first create an element with an `ngMessages` attribute
* set to the `$error` object owned by the `myField` input in our `myForm` form.
*
* Within this element we then create separate elements for each of the possible errors that `myField` could have.
* The `ngMessage` attribute is used to declare which element(s) will appear for which error - for example,
* setting `ng-message="required"` specifies that this particular element should be displayed when there
* is no value present for the required field `myField` (because the key `required` will be `true` in the object
* `myForm.myField.$error`).
*
* ### Message order
*
* By default, `ngMessages` will only display one message for a particular key/value collection at any time. If more
* than one message (or error) key is currently true, then which message is shown is determined by the order of messages
* in the HTML template code (messages declared first are prioritised). This mechanism means the developer does not have
* to prioritise messages using custom JavaScript code.
*
* Given the following error object for our example (which informs us that the field `myField` currently has both the
* `required` and `email` errors):
*
* ```javascript
* <!-- keep in mind that ngModel automatically sets these error flags -->
* myField.$error = { minlength : true, required : true };
* myField.$error = { required : true, email: true, maxlength: false };
* ```
* The `required` message will be displayed to the user since it appears before the `email` message in the DOM.
* Once the user types a single character, the `required` message will disappear (since the field now has a value)
* but the `email` message will be visible because it is still applicable.
*
* Then the `required` message will be displayed first. When required is false then the `minlength` message
* will be displayed right after (since these messages are ordered this way in the template HTML code).
* The prioritization of each message is determined by what order they're present in the DOM.
* Therefore, instead of having custom JavaScript code determine the priority of what errors are
* present before others, the presentation of the errors are handled within the template.
* ### Displaying multiple messages at the same time
*
* By default, ngMessages will only display one error at a time. However, if you wish to display all
* messages then the `ng-messages-multiple` attribute flag can be used on the element containing the
* ngMessages directive to make this happen.
* While `ngMessages` will by default only display one error element at a time, the `ng-messages-multiple` attribute can
* be applied to the `ngMessages` container element to cause it to display all applicable error messages at once:
*
* ```html
* <!-- attribute-style usage -->

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/*
AngularJS v1.4.9
AngularJS v1.4.10
(c) 2010-2015 Google, Inc. http://angularjs.org
License: MIT
*/

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