AngularJS ng-csp Directive
Example
Change the way AngularJS behaves regarding "eval" and inline styles:
  
    <body ng-app="" ng-csp>
...
  
Try it Yourself »
Definition and Usage
The ng-csp directive is used to change the security policy of AngularJS.
With the ng-csp directive set, AngularJS will not run any eval 
functions, and it will not inject any inline styles.
Setting the value of the ng-csp directive to no-unsafe-eval, 
will stop AngularJS from running any eval functions, but allow injecting inline 
styles.
Setting the value of the ng-csp directive to 
no-inline-style, will stop AngularJS from injecting any inline styles, 
but allow eval functions.
Using the ng-csp directive is necessary when developing apps for 
Google Chrome Extensions or Windows Apps.
Note: The ng-csp directive does not affect 
JavaScript, but it changes the way AngularJS works, meaning: you can still write 
eval functions, and they will be executed as you expect, but AngularJS will not 
run its own eval functions. It uses a compatability mode which can slow down the 
evaluation time up to 30%.
Syntax
	<element ng-csp="no-unsafe-eval | no-inline-style"></element>
Parameter Values
| Value | Description | 
|---|---|
| no-unsafe-eval no-inline-style | The value can be empty, meaning neither eval or inline styles are 
	allowed. The value can be one of the two values described. The value can be both values, separated by a semicolon, but that will have the same meaning as an empty value. | 

