Index: pkg/polymer/lib/src/build/generated/messages.html |
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+++ b/pkg/polymer/lib/src/build/generated/messages.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,566 @@ |
+<!doctype html> |
+<!-- |
+ This file is autogenerated with polymer/tool/create_message_details_page.dart |
+--> |
+<html> |
+<style> |
+@font-face { |
+ font-family: 'Montserrat'; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-weight: 400; |
+ src: url(https://themes.googleusercontent.com/static/fonts/montserrat/v4/zhcz-_WihjSQC0oHJ9TCYL3hpw3pgy2gAi-Ip7WPMi0.woff) format('woff'); |
+} |
+@font-face { |
+ font-family: 'Montserrat'; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-weight: 700; |
+ src: url(https://themes.googleusercontent.com/static/fonts/montserrat/v4/IQHow_FEYlDC4Gzy_m8fcnbFhgvWbfSbdVg11QabG8w.woff) format('woff'); |
+} |
+@font-face { |
+ font-family: 'Roboto'; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-weight: 300; |
+ src: url(https://themes.googleusercontent.com/static/fonts/roboto/v10/Hgo13k-tfSpn0qi1SFdUfbO3LdcAZYWl9Si6vvxL-qU.woff) format('woff'); |
+} |
+@font-face { |
+ font-family: 'Roboto'; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-weight: 400; |
+ src: url(https://themes.googleusercontent.com/static/fonts/roboto/v10/CrYjSnGjrRCn0pd9VQsnFOvvDin1pK8aKteLpeZ5c0A.woff) format('woff'); |
+} |
+ |
+body { |
+ width: 80vw; |
+ margin: 20px; |
+ font-family: Roboto, sans-serif; |
+} |
+ |
+h1 { |
+ font-family: Montserrat, sans-serif; |
+ box-sizing: border-box; |
+ color: rgb(72, 72, 72); |
+ display: block; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-variant: normal; |
+ font-weight: normal; |
+} |
+ |
+h2 { |
+ font-family: Montserrat, sans-serif; |
+ box-sizing: border-box; |
+ color: rgb(72, 72, 72); |
+ display: block; |
+ font-style: normal; |
+ font-variant: normal; |
+ font-weight: normal; |
+} |
+ |
+pre { |
+ display: block; |
+ padding: 9.5px; |
+ margin: 0 0 10px; |
+ line-height: 1.42857143; |
+ color: #333; |
+ word-break: break-all; |
+ word-wrap: break-word; |
+ background-color: #f5f5f5; |
+ border: 1px solid #ccc; |
+ border-radius: 4px; |
+} |
+ |
+code { |
+ font-family: Menlo,Monaco,Consolas,"Courier New",monospace; |
+ box-sizing: border-box; |
+ padding: 0; |
+ font-size: 90%; |
+ color: #0084c5; |
+ white-space: nowrap; |
+ border-radius: 4px; |
+ background-color: #f9f2f4; |
+} |
+ |
+pre > code { |
+ white-space: inherit; |
+} |
+ |
+a { |
+ color: rgb(42, 100, 150); |
+} |
+ |
+h2 > a { |
+ display: none; |
+ font-size: 0.8em; |
+} |
+ |
+h2:hover > a { |
+ display: inline; |
+} |
+</style> |
+<body> |
+<h1>Messages from package <code>code_transformers</code></h1> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_code_transformers_1">Absolute paths not allowed <a href="#msg_code_transformers_1">#1</a></h2> |
+<p>The transformers processing your code were trying to resolve a URL and identify |
+a file that they correspond to. Currently only relative paths can be resolved.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_code_transformers_2">Invalid URL to reach another package <a href="#msg_code_transformers_2">#2</a></h2> |
+<p>To reach an asset that belongs to another package, use <code>package:</code> URLs in |
+Dart code, but in any other language (like HTML or CSS) use relative URLs.</p> |
+<p>These are the rules you must follow to write URLs that refer to files in other |
+packages:</p><ul><li> |
+<p>If the file containing the relative URL is an entrypoint under <code>web</code>, use |
+<code>packages/package_name/path_to_file</code></p></li><li> |
+<p>If the file containing the URL is under <code>web</code>, but in a different directory |
+than your entrypoint, walk out to the same level as the entrypoint first, |
+then enter the <code>packages</code> directory.</p> |
+<p><strong>Note</strong>: If two entrypoints include the file under <code>web</code> containing the |
+URL, either both entrypoints have to live in the same directory, or you need |
+to move the file to the <code>lib</code> directory.</p></li><li> |
+<p>If the file containing the URL lives under <code>lib</code>, walk up as many levels as |
+directories you have + 1. This is because code in <code>lib/a/b</code> is loaded from |
+<code>packages/package_name/a/b</code>.</p></li></ul> |
+<p>The rules are easier to follow if you know how the code is laid out for |
+Dartium before you build, and how it is laid out after you build it with <code>pub |
+build</code>. Consider the following example:</p> |
+<p> package a</p> |
+<pre><code> lib/ |
+ |- a1.html |
+ |
+ web/ |
+ |- a2.html |
+</code></pre> |
+<p> package b</p> |
+<pre><code> lib/ |
+ |- b1.html |
+ |- b2/ |
+ |- b3.html |
+</code></pre> |
+<p> package c</p> |
+<pre><code> lib/ |
+ |- c3.html |
+ |
+ web/ |
+ |- index.html |
+ |- index.dart |
+ |- c1/ |
+ |- c2.html |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>If your app is package <code>c</code>, then <code>pub get</code> generates a packages directory under |
+the web directory, like this:</p> |
+<pre><code> web/ |
+ |- index.html |
+ |- index.dart |
+ |- c1/ |
+ | |- c2.html |
+ |- packages/ |
+ |- a/ |
+ | |- a1.html |
+ |- b/ |
+ | |- b1.html |
+ | |- b2/ |
+ | |- b3.html |
+ |- c/ |
+ |- c3.html |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>Note that no <code>lib</code> directory is under the <code>packages</code> directory. |
+When you launch <code>web/index.html</code> in Dartium, Dartium loads <code>package:</code> imports from |
+<code>web/packages/</code>.</p> |
+<p>If you need to refer to any file in other packages from <code>index.html</code>, you can |
+simply do <code>packages/package_name/path_to_file</code>. For example |
+<code>packages/b/b2/b3.html</code>. From <code>index.html</code> you can also refer to files under the |
+web directory of the same package using a simple relative URL, like |
+<code>c1/c2.html</code>.</p> |
+<p>However, if you want to load <code>a1.html</code> from <code>c2.html</code>, you need to reach out to |
+the packages directory that lives next to your entrypoint and then load the file |
+from there, for example <code>../packages/a/a1.html</code>. Because pub generates symlinks |
+to the packages directory also under c1, you may be tempted to write |
+<code>packages/a/a1.html</code>, but that is incorrect - it would yield a canonicalization |
+error (see more below).</p> |
+<p>If you want to load a file from the lib directory of your own package, you |
+should also use a package URL. For example, <code>packages/c/c3.html</code> and not |
+<code>../lib/c3.html</code>. This will allow you to write code in <code>lib</code> in a way that it |
+can be used within and outside your package without making any changes to it.</p> |
+<p>Because any time you reach inside a <code>lib/</code> directory you do so using a |
+<code>packages/</code> URL, the rules for reaching into other files in other packages are |
+always consistent: go up to exit the <code>packages</code> directory and go back inside to |
+the file you are looking for. For example, to reach <code>a1.html</code> from <code>b3.html</code> |
+you need to write <code>../../../packages/a/a1.html</code>.</p> |
+<p>The motivation behind all these rules is that URLs need to work under many |
+scenarios at once:</p><ul><li> |
+<p>They need to work in Dartium without any code transformation: resolving the |
+path in the context of a simple HTTP server, or using <code>file:///</code> URLs, |
+should yield a valid path to assets. The <code>packages</code> directory is safe to use |
+because pub already creates it next to entrypoints of your application.</p></li><li> |
+<p>They need to be canonical. To take advantage of caching, multiple URLs |
+reaching the same asset should resolve to the same absolute URL.</p> |
+<p>Also, in projects that use HTML imports (like polymer) tools support that |
+you reach a library with either Dart imports or HTML imports, and correctly |
+resolve them to be the same library. The rules are designed to allow tools |
+to support this.</p> |
+<p>For example, consider you have an import might like:</p> |
+<pre><code><link rel=import href=packages/a/a.html> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>where a.html has <code><script type="application/dart" src="a.dart"></code>. If your |
+Dart entrypoint also loads <code>"package:a/a.dart"</code>, then a tool need to make |
+sure that both versions of <code>a.dart</code> are loaded from the same URL. Otherwise, |
+you may see errors at runtime like: <code>A is not a subtype of A</code>, which can be |
+extremely confusing.</p> |
+<p>When you follow the rules above, our tools can detect the pattern in the |
+HTML-import URL containing <code>packages/</code> and canonicalize the import |
+by converting <code>packages/a/a.dart</code> into <code>package:a/a.dart</code> under the hood.</p></li><li> |
+<p>They need to continue to be valid after applications are built. |
+Technically this could be done automatically with pub transformers, but to |
+make sure that code works also in Dartium with a simple HTTP Server, |
+existing transformers do not fix URLs, they just detect inconsistencies and |
+produce an error message like this one, instead.</p></li></ul> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_code_transformers_3">Incomplete URL to asset in another package <a href="#msg_code_transformers_3">#3</a></h2> |
+<p>URLs that refer to assets in other packages need to explicitly mention the |
+<code>packages/</code> directory. In the future this requirement might be removed, but for |
+now you must use a canonical URL form for it.</p> |
+<p>For example, if <code>packages/a/a.html</code> needs to import <code>packages/b/b.html</code>, |
+you might expect a.html to import <code>../b/b.html</code>. Instead, it must import |
+<code>../../packages/b/b.html</code>. |
+See <a href="http://dartbug.com/15797">issue 15797</a>.</p> |
+<hr /><h1>Messages from package <code>observe</code></h1> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_observe_1"><code>@observable</code> not supported on libraries <a href="#msg_observe_1">#1</a></h2> |
+<p>Only instance fields on <code>Observable</code> classes can be observable, |
+and you must explicitly annotate each observable field as <code>@observable</code>.</p> |
+<p>Support for using the <code>@observable</code> annotation in libraries, classes, and |
+elsewhere is deprecated.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_observe_2"><code>@observable</code> not supported on top-level fields <a href="#msg_observe_2">#2</a></h2> |
+<p>Only instance fields on <code>Observable</code> classes can be observable, |
+and you must explicitly annotate each observable field as <code>@observable</code>.</p> |
+<p>Support for using the <code>@observable</code> annotation in libraries, classes, and |
+elsewhere is deprecated.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_observe_3"><code>@observable</code> not supported on classes <a href="#msg_observe_3">#3</a></h2> |
+<p>Only instance fields on <code>Observable</code> classes can be observable, |
+and you must explicitly annotate each observable field as <code>@observable</code>.</p> |
+<p>Support for using the <code>@observable</code> annotation in libraries, classes, and |
+elsewhere is deprecated.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_observe_4"><code>@observable</code> not supported on static fields <a href="#msg_observe_4">#4</a></h2> |
+<p>Only instance fields on <code>Observable</code> classes can be observable, |
+and you must explicitly annotate each observable field as <code>@observable</code>.</p> |
+<p>Support for using the <code>@observable</code> annotation in libraries, classes, and |
+elsewhere is deprecated.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_observe_5"><code>@observable</code> field not in an <code>Observable</code> class <a href="#msg_observe_5">#5</a></h2> |
+<p>Only instance fields on <code>Observable</code> classes can be observable, |
+and you must explicitly annotate each observable field as <code>@observable</code>.</p> |
+<p>Support for using the <code>@observable</code> annotation in libraries, classes, and |
+elsewhere is deprecated.</p> |
+<hr /><h1>Messages from package <code>polymer</code></h1> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_1">Import not found <a href="#msg_polymer_1">#1</a></h2> |
+<p>An HTML import seems to be broken. This could be because the file doesn't exist |
+or because the link URL is incorrect.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_2">Duplicate definition <a href="#msg_polymer_2">#2</a></h2> |
+<p>Custom element names are global and can only be defined once. Some common |
+reasons why you might get two definitions:</p><ul><li>Two different elements are declared with the same name.</li><li> |
+<p>A single HTML file defining an element, has been imported using two different |
+URLs.</p></li></ul> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_3">Missing import to polymer.html <a href="#msg_polymer_3">#3</a></h2> |
+<p>Starting with polymer 0.11.0, each file that uses the definition |
+of polymer-element must import it either directly or transitively.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_4">Invalid import inside <polymer-element> <a href="#msg_polymer_4">#4</a></h2> |
+<p>HTML imports are expected at the top of each document, outside of any |
+polymer-element definitions. The polymer build process combines all your HTML |
+files together so you can deploy a single HTML file with your application. This |
+build process ignores imports that appear to be in the wrong location.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_5">Missing call to <code>initPolymer()</code> <a href="#msg_polymer_5">#5</a></h2> |
+<p>Your application entry point didn't have any Dart script tags, so it's missing |
+some initialization needed for polymer.dart.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_6">Script tags with experimental bootstrap <a href="#msg_polymer_6">#6</a></h2> |
+<p>This experimental feature is no longer supported.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_7">Multiple Dart script tags per document <a href="#msg_polymer_7">#7</a></h2> |
+<p>Dartium currently allows only one script tag per document. Any |
+additional script tags might be ignored or result in an error. This will |
+likely change in the future, but for now, combine the script tags together into |
+a single Dart library.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_8">Imports before script tags <a href="#msg_polymer_8">#8</a></h2> |
+<p>It is good practice to put all your HTML imports at the beginning of the |
+document, above any Dart script tags. Today, the execution of Dart script tags |
+is not synchronous in Dartium, so the difference is not noticeable. However, |
+Dartium that will eventually change and make the timing of script tags execution |
+match how they are in JavaScript. At that point the order of your imports with |
+respect to script tags will be important. Following the practice of putting |
+imports first protects your app from a future breaking change in this respect.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_9">Missing href on a <code><link></code> tag <a href="#msg_polymer_9">#9</a></h2> |
+<p>All <code><link></code> tags should have a valid URL to a resource.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_10"><code><element></code> is deprecated <a href="#msg_polymer_10">#10</a></h2> |
+<p>Long ago <code><polymer-element></code> used to be called <code><element></code>. You probably ran |
+into this error if you were migrating code that was written on a very early |
+version of polymer.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_11">Definition of a custom element not found <a href="#msg_polymer_11">#11</a></h2> |
+<p>The polymer build was not able to find the definition of a custom element. This |
+can happen if an element is defined with a <code><polymer-element></code> tag, but you are |
+missing an HTML import or the import link is incorrect.</p> |
+<p>This warning can also be a false alarm. For instance, when an element is defined |
+programatically using <code>document.registerElement</code>. In that case the polymer build |
+will not be able to see the definition and will produce this warning.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_12">Empty script tag <a href="#msg_polymer_12">#12</a></h2> |
+<p>Script tags should either have a <code>src</code> attribute or a non-empty body.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_13">Expected Dart mime-type <a href="#msg_polymer_13">#13</a></h2> |
+<p>You seem to have a <code>.dart</code> extension on a script tag, but the mime-type |
+doesn't match <code>application/dart</code>.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_14">Expected Dart file extension <a href="#msg_polymer_14">#14</a></h2> |
+<p>You are using the <code>application/dart</code> mime-type on a script tag, so |
+the URL to the script source URL should have a <code>.dart</code> extension.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_15">Script with both src and inline text <a href="#msg_polymer_15">#15</a></h2> |
+<p>You have a script tag that includes both a <code>src</code> attribute and inline script |
+text. You must choose one or the other.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_16">Incorrect instantiation: missing base tag in instantiation <a href="#msg_polymer_16">#16</a></h2> |
+<p>When you declare that a custom element extends from a base tag, for example:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example" extends="ul"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>or:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example2" extends="ul"> |
+<polymer-element name="my-example" extends="my-example2"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>You should instantiate <code>my-example</code> by using this syntax:</p> |
+<pre><code><ul is="my-example"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>And not:</p> |
+<pre><code><my-example> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>Only elements that don't extend from existing HTML elements are created using |
+the latter form.</p> |
+<p>This is because browsers first create the base element, and then upgrade it to |
+have the extra functionality of your custom element. In the example above, using |
+<code><ul></code> tells the browser which base type it must create before |
+doing the upgrade.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_17">Incorrect instantiation: extra <code>is</code> attribute or missing <code>extends</code> in declaration <a href="#msg_polymer_17">#17</a></h2> |
+<p>Creating a custom element using the syntax:</p> |
+<pre><code><ul is="my-example"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>means that the declaration of <code>my-example</code> extends transitively from <code>ul</code>. This |
+error message is shown if the definition of <code>my-example</code> doesn't declare this |
+extension. It might be that you no longer extend from the base element, in which |
+case the fix is to change the instantiation to:</p> |
+<pre><code><my-example> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>Another possibility is that the declaration needs to be fixed to include the |
+<code>extends</code> attribute, for example:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example" extends="ul"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_18">Incorrect instantiation: base tag seems wrong <a href="#msg_polymer_18">#18</a></h2> |
+<p>It seems you have a declaration like:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example" extends="div"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>but an instantiation like:</p> |
+<pre><code><span is="my-example"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>Both the declaration and the instantiation need to match on the base type. So |
+either the instantiation needs to be fixed to be more like:</p> |
+<pre><code><span is="my-example"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>or the declaration should be fixed to be like:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example" extends="span"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_19">No dashes allowed in custom attributes <a href="#msg_polymer_19">#19</a></h2> |
+<p>Polymer used to recognize attributes with dashes like <code>my-name</code> and convert them |
+to match properties where dashes were removed, and words follow the camelCase |
+style (for example <code>myName</code>). This feature is no longer available. Now simply |
+use the same name as the property.</p> |
+<p>Because HTML attributes are case-insensitive, you can also write the name of |
+your property entirely in lowercase. Just be sure that your custom-elements |
+don't declare two properties with the same name but different capitalization.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_20">Event handlers not supported here <a href="#msg_polymer_20">#20</a></h2> |
+<p>Bindings of the form <code>{{ }}</code> are supported inside <code><template></code> nodes, even outside |
+of <code><polymer-element></code> declarations. However, those bindings only support binding |
+values into the content of a node or an attribute.</p> |
+<p>Inline event handlers of the form <code>on-click="{{method}}"</code> are a special feature |
+of polymer elements, so they are only supported inside <code><polymer-element></code> |
+definitions.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_21">No expressions allowed in event handler bindings <a href="#msg_polymer_21">#21</a></h2> |
+<p>Unlike data bindings, event handler bindings of the form <code>on-click="{{method}}"</code> |
+are not evaluated as expressions. They are meant to just contain a simple name |
+that resolves to a method in your polymer element's class definition.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_22">Nested polymer element definitions not allowed <a href="#msg_polymer_22">#22</a></h2> |
+<p>Because custom element names are global, there is no need to have a |
+<code><polymer-element></code> definition nested within a <code><polymer-element></code>. If you have |
+a definition inside another, move the second definition out.</p> |
+<p>You might see this error if you have an HTML import within a polymer element. |
+You should be able to move the import out of the element definition.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_23">Polymer element definitions without a name <a href="#msg_polymer_23">#23</a></h2> |
+<p>Polymer element definitions must have a name. You can include a name by using |
+the <code>name</code> attribute in <code><polymer-element></code> for example:</p> |
+<pre><code><polymer-element name="my-example"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_24">Custom element name missing a dash <a href="#msg_polymer_24">#24</a></h2> |
+<p>Custom element names must have a dash (<code>-</code>) and can't be any of the following |
+reserved names:</p><ul><li><code>annotation-xml</code></li><li><code>color-profile</code></li><li><code>font-face</code></li><li><code>font-face-src</code></li><li><code>font-face-uri</code></li><li><code>font-face-format</code></li><li><code>font-face-name</code></li><li><code>missing-glyph</code></li></ul> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_25">Error while inlining an import <a href="#msg_polymer_25">#25</a></h2> |
+<p>An error occurred while inlining an import in the polymer build. This is often |
+the result of a broken HTML import.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_26">Error while inlining a stylesheet <a href="#msg_polymer_26">#26</a></h2> |
+<p>An error occurred while inlining a stylesheet in the polymer build. This is |
+often the result of a broken URL in a <code><link rel="stylesheet" href="..."></code>.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_27">URL to a script file might be incorrect <a href="#msg_polymer_27">#27</a></h2> |
+<p>An error occurred trying to read a script tag on a given URL. This is often the |
+result of a broken URL in a <code><script src="..."></code>.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_28">Attribute missing "_" prefix <a href="#msg_polymer_28">#28</a></h2> |
+<p>Not all browsers support bindings to certain attributes, especially URL |
+attributes. Some browsers might sanitize attributes and result in an |
+incorrect value. For this reason polymer provides a special set of attributes |
+that let you bypass any browser internal attribute validation. The name of the |
+attribute is the same as the original attribute, but with a leading underscore. |
+For example, instead of writing:</p> |
+<pre><code><img src="{{binding}}"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>you can write:</p> |
+<pre><code><img _src="{{binding}}"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>For more information, see <a href="http://goo.gl/5av8cU">http://goo.gl/5av8cU</a>.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_29">Attribute with extra "_" prefix <a href="#msg_polymer_29">#29</a></h2> |
+<p>A special attribute exists to support bindings on URL attributes. For example, |
+this correctly binds the <code>src</code> attribute in an image:</p> |
+<pre><code><img _src="{{binding}}"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>However, this special <code>_src</code> attribute is only available for bindings. If you |
+just have a URL, use the normal <code>src</code> attribute instead.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_30">Internal error: don't know how to include a URL <a href="#msg_polymer_30">#30</a></h2> |
+<p>Sorry, you just ran into a bug in the polymer transformer code. Please file a |
+bug at <a href="http://dartbug.com/new">http://dartbug.com/new</a> including, if possible, some example code that |
+can help the team reproduce the issue.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_31">Internal error: phases run out of order <a href="#msg_polymer_31">#31</a></h2> |
+<p>Sorry, you just ran into a bug in the polymer transformer code. Please file a |
+bug at <a href="http://dartbug.com/new">http://dartbug.com/new</a> including, if possible, some example code that |
+can help the team reproduce the issue.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_32"><code>@CustomTag</code> used on a private class <a href="#msg_polymer_32">#32</a></h2> |
+<p>The <code>@CustomTag</code> annotation is currently only supported on public classes. If |
+you need to register a custom element whose implementation is a private class |
+(that is, a class whose name starts with <code>_</code>), you can still do so by invoking |
+<code>Polymer.register</code> within a public method marked with <code>@initMethod</code>.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_33"><code>@initMethod</code> is on a private function <a href="#msg_polymer_33">#33</a></h2> |
+<p>The <code>@initMethod</code> annotation is currently only supported on public top-level |
+functions.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_34">Missing argument in annotation <a href="#msg_polymer_34">#34</a></h2> |
+<p>The annotation expects one argument, but the argument was not provided.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_35">Invalid argument in annotation <a href="#msg_polymer_35">#35</a></h2> |
+<p>The polymer transformer was not able to extract a constant value for the |
+annotation argument. This can happen if your code is currently in a state that |
+can't be analyzed (for example, it has parse errors) or if the expression passed |
+as an argument is invalid (for example, it is not a compile-time constant).</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_36">No polymer initializers found <a href="#msg_polymer_36">#36</a></h2> |
+<p>No polymer initializers were found. Make sure to either |
+annotate your polymer elements with @CustomTag or include a |
+top level method annotated with @initMethod that registers your |
+elements. Both annotations are defined in the polymer library ( |
+package:polymer/polymer.dart).</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_37">Event bindings with @ are no longer supported <a href="#msg_polymer_37">#37</a></h2> |
+<p>For a while there was an undocumented feature that allowed users to include |
+expressions in event bindings using the <code>@</code> prefix, for example:</p> |
+<pre><code><div on-click="{{@a.b.c}}"> |
+ |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>This feature is no longer supported.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_38">Private symbol in event handler <a href="#msg_polymer_38">#38</a></h2> |
+<p>Currently private members can't be used in event handler bindings. So you can't |
+write:</p> |
+<pre><code><div on-click="{{_method}}"> |
+</code></pre> |
+<p>This restriction might be removed in the future, but for now, you need to make |
+your event handlers public.</p> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_39">Private symbol in binding expression <a href="#msg_polymer_39">#39</a></h2> |
+<p>Private members can't be used in binding expressions. For example, you can't |
+write:</p> |
+<pre><code><div>{{a.b._c}}</div> |
+</code></pre> |
+<hr /> |
+ |
+<h2 id="msg_polymer_40">A warning was found while parsing the HTML document <a href="#msg_polymer_40">#40</a></h2> |
+<p>The polymer transformer uses a parser that implements the HTML5 spec |
+(<code>html5lib</code>). This message reports a |
+warning that the parser detected.</p> |
+<hr /></body> |
+</html> |