We got lucky - the fact that our alien styling choice required phantom overlays had the nice side-effect of preventing the ability to focus the aliens. Therefore, as soon as we started ignoring IE to deliver nice alien handling for standards-compliant browsers, we inadvertently solved(?) the IE alien problem. I've touched up the styling to look nice in IE 9 (solid green phantoms) and IE 10 (stripes). Shield GIF switched to PNG because IE 10 renders the transparent GIF as solid red. Yeah, red.
Change-Id: I3bc69acba9ed883a823cdf722117b90966bc332b
This changeset adds a visual treatment to uneditable AlienBlockNodes to indicate to the editor that the elements are uneditable. To deal with odd shapes, the alien's shields are cloned and added to a phantom container. The phantom container and the phantoms themselves may be styled appropriately.
Change-Id: I7ad52707966bc18be627aa4269725004edba86cd
* Classicifation (JS)
Use addClass instead of attr( 'class' ) whenever possible.
addClass will manipulate the properties directly instead of
(re-)setting an attribute which (most) browsers then sync
with the properties.
Difference between:
elem.className
and
elem.setAttribute( 'class', .. );
Just like .checked, .value, .disabled and other interactive
properties, the HTML attributes should only be used for initial
values from the html document. When in javascript, only set
properties. Attributes are either ignored or slow.
* Styling (JS)
Use .css() instead of attr( 'style' ).
Again, setting properties instead of attributes is much faster,
easier and safer. And this way it takes care of cross-browser
issues where applicable, and less prone to error due to dealing
with key-value pairs instead of css strings.
Difference between:
elem.style.foo = 'bar';
and
elem.setAttribute( 'style', 'foo: bar;' );
* Finding (JS)
Use .find( 'foo bar' ) instead of .find( 'foo' ).find( 'bar' ).
It is CSS!
* Vendor prefixes (CSS)
It is important to always list newer (standards-compliant) versions
*after* the older/prefixed variants.
See also http://css-tricks.com/ordering-css3-properties/
So the following three:
-webkit-gradient (Chrome, Safari 4)
-webkit-linear-gradient (Chrome 10, Safari 5+)
linear-gradient (CSS3 standard)
... must be in that order.
Notes:
- "-moz-opacity" is from before Mozilla 1.7 (Firefox < 0.8)
Has not been renamed to "opacity" since Firefox 0.9.
- Removed redundant "-moz-opacity"
- Added "filter: alpha(opacity=**);" where missing
- Fixed order of css3 properties (old to new)
- Add standardized css3 versions where missing
(some 'border-radius' groups didn't have the non-prefixed version)
- Spacing
- @embed
- Shorten hex colors where possible (#dddddd -> #ddd)
$ ack '#([0-9a-f])\1{5}' --css
$ ack '#([0-9a-f])\1{2};' --css
Change-Id: I386fedb9058c2567fd0af5f55291e9859a53329d
This license change is aimed at maximizing the reusability of this code
in other projects. VisualEditor is more than just an awesome editor for
MediaWiki, it's the new editor for the entire internet.
Added license and author files, plus mentions of the license to all
VisualEditor PHP, JavaScript and CSS files. Parser files have not been
modified but are effectively re-licensed since there's no overriding
license information. 3rd party libraries are not changed, but are all
already MIT licensed.
Change-Id: I895b256325db7c8689756edab34523de4418b0f2
Also:
* Simplified ve.ce.Surface.getLeafNode, which may be better to just be removed and be used inline in the few places it's being used.
* Removed method wrapper for static function ve.ce.Surface.getLeafNode
Change-Id: I1d4cf0bb7ecc8f07f030753e40a13ebef7d02daa