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Angular Roadmap
Last updated: 2022-11-05
Angular receives a large number of feature requests, both from inside Google and from the broader open-source community. At the same time, our list of projects contains plenty of maintenance tasks, code refactorings, and potential performance improvements. We bring together representatives from developer relations, product management, and engineering to prioritize this list. As new projects come into the queue, we regularly position them based on relative priority to other projects. As work gets done, projects move up in the queue.
The following projects are not associated with a particular Angular version. We will release them on completion, and they will be part of a specific version based on our release schedule, following semantic versioning. For example, features are released in the next minor after they are complete, or the next major if they include breaking changes.
In progress
Explore hydration and server-side rendering usability improvements
As the first step of this project we will implement non-destructive hydration. This technique will allow us to reuse the server-side rendered DOM and rather than rerendering it only attach event listeners and create data structures required by the Angular runtime. As the next step, we are going to further explore the dynamically evolving space of partial hydration and resumability. Each of the approaches has their trade-offs and we'd like to make an informed decision what's the most optimal long-term solution for Angular.
Improve runtime performance and make Zone.js optional
As part of this effort we are revisiting Angular's reactivity model to make Zone.js optional and improve runtime performance. By default Angular runs change detection globally, traversing the entire component tree. We're exploring options to run change detection only in affected components. This way, we simplify the framework, improve debugging, and reduce application bundle size. Additionally, this lets us take advantage of built-in async/await syntax, which currently Zone.js does not support.
Improve documentation and schematics for standalone components
We are working on developing an ng new
collection for applications bootstrapped with a standalone component. Additionally, we are filling the documentation gaps of the simplified standalone component APIs.
Introduce dependency injection debugging APIs
To improve the debugging utilities of Angular and Angular DevTools, we'll work on APIs that provide access the dependency injection runtime. As part of the project we'll expose debugging methods that allow us to explore the injector hierarchy and the dependencies across their associated providers.
Streamline standalone imports with Language Service
As part of this initiative we are going to implement automatic import of template dependencies for standalone components. Additionally, to enable smaller application bundles the language service will propose automatic removal of unused imports.
Investigate modern bundles
To improve development experience by speeding up build times, we plan to explore options to improve JavaScript bundles created by Angular CLI. As part of the project experiment with esbuild and other open source solutions, compare them with the state-of-the-art tooling in Angular CLI, and report the findings. In Angular v15 we have experimental esbuild support in ng build
and ng build --watch
. We'll continue iterating on the solution until we're confident to release it as stable.
New CDK primitives
We are working on new CDK primitives to facilitate creating custom components based on the WAI-ARIA design patterns for Combobox. Angular v14 introduced stable menu and dialog primitives as part of this project and in v15 Listbox.
Angular component accessibility
We are evaluating components in Angular Material against accessibility standards such as WCAG and working to fix any issues that arise from this process.
Documentation refactoring
Ensure all existing documentation fits into a consistent set of content types. Update excessive use of tutorial-style documentation into independent topics. We want to ensure the content outside the main tutorials is self-sufficient without being tightly coupled to a series of guides. In Q2 2022, we refactored the template content. The next steps are to introduce better structure for components and dependency injection.
Investigate micro frontend architecture for scalable development processes
For the past couple of quarters we understood and defined the problem space. We are going to follow up with a series of blog posts on best practices when developing applications at scale.
Update getting started tutorial
We're working on updating the Angular getting started experience with standalone components. As part of this initiative, we'd like to create a new textual and video tutorials.
Improvements in the image directive
We released the Angular image directive as stable in v15. We introduced a new fill mode feature that enables images to fit within their parent container rather than having explicit dimensions. Currently, this feature is in developer preview. Next we'll be working on collecting feedback from developers before we promote fill mode as stable.
Future
Token-based theming APIs
To provide better customization of our Angular material components and enable Material 3 capabilities, we'll be collaborating with Google's Material Design team on defining token-based theming APIs.
Modernize Angular's unit testing experience
In v12 we revisited the Angular end-to-end testing experience by replacing Protractor with modern alternatives such as Cypress, Nightwatch, and Webdriver.io. Next we'd like to tackle ng test
to modernize Angular's unit testing experience.
Revamp performance dashboards to detect regressions
We have a set of benchmarks that we run against every code change to ensure Angular aligns with our performance standards. To ensure the runtime of the framework does not regress after a code change, we need to refine some of the existing infrastructure the dashboards step on.
Improved build performance with ngc as a tsc plugin distribution
Distributing the Angular compiler as a plugin of the TypeScript compiler will substantially improve build performance for developers and reduce maintenance costs.
Ergonomic component level code-splitting APIs
A common problem with web applications is their slow initial load time. A way to improve it is to apply more granular code-splitting on a component level. To encourage this practice, we will be working on more ergonomic code-splitting APIs.
Ensure smooth adoption for future RxJS changes (version 8 and beyond)
We want to ensure Angular developers are taking advantage of the latest capabilities of RxJS and have a smooth transition to the next major releases of the framework. For this purpose, we will explore and document the scope of the changes in v7 and beyond RxJS, and plan an update strategy.
Support two-dimensional drag-and-drop
As part of this project we'd like to implement mixed orientation support for the Angular CDK drag and drop. This is one of the most highly requested features in the repository.
Completed
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Improve image performance
Completed Q4 2022
The Aurora and the Angular teams are working on the implementation of an image directive that aims to improve Core Web Vitals. We shipped a stable version of the image directive in v15.
Modern CSS
Completed Q4 2022
The Web ecosystem evolves constantly and we want to reflect the latest modern standards in Angular. In this project we aim to provide guidelines on using modern CSS features in Angular to ensure developers follow best practices for layout, styling, etc. We shared official guidelines for layout and as part of the initiative stopped publishing flex layout. Learn more on our blog.
Support adding directives to host elements
Completed Q4 2022
A long-standing feature request is to add the ability to add directives to host elements. The feature lets developers augment their own components with additional behaviors without using inheritance. In v15 we shipped our directive composition API, which enables enhancing host elements with directives.
Better stack traces
Completed Q4 2022
The Angular and the Chrome DevTools are working together to enable more readable stack traces for error messages. In v15 we released improved relevant and linked stack traces. As a lower priority initiative, we'll be exploring how to make the stack traces friendlier by providing more accurate call frame names for templates.
Enhanced Angular Material components by integrating MDC Web
Completed Q4 2022
MDC Web is a library created by the Google Material Design team that provides reusable primitives for building Material Design components. The Angular team is incorporating these primitives into Angular Material. Using MDC Web aligns Angular Material more closely with the Material Design specification, expand accessibility, improve component quality, and improve the velocity of our team.
Implement APIs for optional NgModules
Completed Q4 2022
In the process of making Angular simpler, we are working on introducing APIs that allow developers to initialize applications, instantiate components, and use the router without NgModules. Angular v14 introduces developer preview of the APIs for standalone components, directives, and pipes. In the next few quarters we'll collect feedback from developers and finalize the project making the APIs stable. As the next step we will work on improving use cases such as TestBed
, Angular elements, etc.
Allow binding to protected fields in templates
Completed Q2 2022
To improve the encapsulation of Angular components we enabled binding to protected members of the component instance. This way you'll no longer have to expose a field or a method as public to use it inside your templates.
Publish guides on advanced concepts
Completed Q2 2022
Develop and publish an in-depth guide on change detection. Develop content for performance profiling of Angular applications. Cover how change detection interacts with Zone.js and explain when it gets triggered, how to profile its duration, as well as common practices for performance optimization.
Rollout strict typings for @angular/forms
Completed Q2 2022
In Q4 2021 we designed a solution for introducing strict typings for forms and in Q1 2022 we concluded the corresponding request for comments. Currently, we are implementing a rollout strategy with an automated migration step that will enable the improvements for existing projects. We are first testing the solution with more than 2,500 projects at Google to ensure a smooth migration path for the external community.
Remove legacy View Engine
Completed Q1 2022
After the transition of all our internal tooling to Ivy is completed, we will remove the legacy View Engine for reduced Angular conceptual overhead, smaller package size, lower maintenance cost, and lower codebase complexity.
Simplified Angular mental model with optional NgModules
Completed Q1 2022
To simplify the Angular mental model and learning journey, we will be working on making NgModules optional. This work lets developers develop standalone components and implement an alternative API for declaring the compilation scope of the component. We kicked this project off with high-level design discussions that we captured in an RFC.
Design strict typing for @angular/forms
Completed Q1 2022
We will work on finding a way to implement stricter type checking for reactive forms with minimal backward incompatible implications. This way, we let developers catch more issues during development time, enable better text editor and IDE support, and improve the type checking for reactive forms.
Improve integration of Angular DevTools with framework
Completed Q1 2022
To improve the integration of Angular DevTools with the framework, we are working on moving the codebase to the angular/angular monorepository. This includes transitioning Angular DevTools to Bazel and integrating it into the existing processes and CI pipeline.
Launch advanced compiler diagnostics
Completed Q1 2022
Extend the diagnostics of the Angular compiler outside type checking. Introduce other correctness and conformance checks to further guarantee correctness and best practices.
Update our e2e testing strategy
Completed Q3 2021
To ensure we provide a future-proof e2e testing strategy, we want to evaluate the state of Protractor, community innovations, e2e best practices, and explore novel opportunities. As first steps of the effort, we shared an RFC and worked with partners to ensure smooth integration between the Angular CLI and state-of-the-art tooling for e2e testing. As the next step, we need to finalize the recommendations and compile a list of resources for the transition.
Angular libraries use Ivy
Completed Q3 2021
Earlier in 2020, we shared an RFC for Ivy library distribution. After invaluable feedback from the community, we developed a design of the project. We are now investing in the development of Ivy library distribution, including an update of the library package format to use Ivy compilation, unblock the deprecation of the View Engine library format, and ngcc.
Improve test times and debugging with automatic test environment tear down
Completed Q3 2021
To improve test time and create better isolation across tests, we want to change TestBed
to automatically clean up and tear down the test environment after each test run.
Deprecate and remove IE11 support
Completed Q3 2021
Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) has been preventing Angular from taking advantage of some of the modern features of the Web platform. As part of this project we are going to deprecate and remove IE11 support to open the path for modern features that evergreen browsers provide. We ran an RFC to collect feedback from the community and decide on next steps to move forward.
Leverage ES2017+ as the default output language
Completed Q3 2021
Supporting modern browsers lets us take advantage of the more compact, expressive, and performant new syntax of JavaScript. As part of this project we will investigate what the blockers are to moving forward with this effort, and take the steps to enable it.
Accelerated debugging and performance profiling with Angular DevTools
Completed Q2 2021
We are working on development tooling for Angular that provides utilities for debugging and performance profiling. This project aims to help developers understand the component structure and the change detection in an Angular application.
Streamline releases with consolidated Angular versioning & branching
Completed Q2 2021
We want to consolidate release management tooling between the multiple GitHub repositories for Angular (angular/angular, angular/angular-cli, and angular/components). This effort lets us reuse infrastructure, unify and simplify processes, and improve the reliability of our release process.
Higher developer consistency with commit message standardization
Completed Q2 2021
We want to unify commit message requirements and conformance across Angular repositories (angular/angular, angular/components, and angular/angular-cli) to bring consistency to our development process and reuse infrastructure tooling.
Transition the Angular language service to Ivy
Completed Q2 2021
The goal of this project is to improve the experience and remove legacy dependency by transitioning the language service to Ivy. Today the language service still uses the View Engine compiler and type checking, even for Ivy applications. We want to use the Ivy template parser and improved type checking for the Angular Language service to match application behavior. This migration is also a step towards unblocking the removal of View Engine, which will simplify Angular, reduce the npm package size, and improve the maintainability of the framework.
Increased security with native Trusted Types in Angular
Completed Q2 2021
In collaboration with the Google security team, we are adding support for the new Trusted Types API. This web platform API helps developers build more secure web applications.
Optimized build speed and bundle sizes with Angular CLI webpack 5
Completed Q2 2021
As part of the v11 release, we introduced an opt-in preview of webpack 5 in the Angular CLI. To ensure stability, we will continue iterating on the implementation to enable build speed and bundle size improvements.
Faster apps by inlining critical styles in Universal applications
Completed Q1 2021
Loading external stylesheets is a blocking operation, which means that the browser cannot start rendering your application until it loads all the referenced CSS. Having render-blocking resources in the header of a page can significantly impact its load performance, for example, its first contentful paint. To make apps faster, we have been collaborating with the Google Chrome team on inlining critical CSS and loading the rest of the styles asynchronously.
Improve debugging with better Angular error messages
Completed Q1 2021
Error messages often bring limited actionable information to help developers resolve them. We have been working on making error messages more discoverable by adding associated codes, developing guides, and other materials to ensure a smoother debugging experience.
Improved developer onboarding with refreshed introductory documentation
Completed Q1 2021
We will redefine the user learning journeys and refresh the introductory documentation. We will clearly state the benefits of Angular, how to explore its capabilities and provide guidance so developers can become proficient with the framework in as little time as possible.
Expand component harnesses best practices
Completed Q1 2021
Angular CDK introduced the concept of component test harnesses to Angular in version 9. Test harnesses let component authors create supported APIs for testing component interactions. We are continuing to improve this harness infrastructure and clarifying the best practices around using harnesses. We are also working to drive more harness adoption inside of Google.
Author a guide for content projection
Completed Q2 2021
Content projection is a core Angular concept that does not have the presence it deserves in the documentation. As part of this project we want to identify the core use cases and concepts for content projection and document them.
Migrate to ESLint
Completed Q4 2020
With the deprecation of TSLint we will be moving to ESLint. As part of the process, we will work on ensuring backward compatibility with our current recommended TSLint configuration, implement a migration strategy for existing Angular applications and introduce new tooling to the Angular CLI toolchain.
Operation Bye Bye Backlog (also known as Operation Byelog)
Completed Q4 2020
We are actively investing up to 50% of our engineering capacity on triaging issues and PRs until we have a clear understanding of broader community needs. After that, we will commit up to 20% of our engineering capacity to keep up with new submissions promptly.
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https://v14.angular.io/guide/roadmap