* Made vector specific styles only active in the vector skin
* Added apex specific styles
* Removed override of text size for document node
* Added stylesheet for stand-alone to specify text size for document node
Change-Id: I8a57918912499f9453a5692ff45a04a16ed34cde
Stack traces, line numbers, etc. All the approaches I've seen are bad hacks. This is the best way to go.
Change-Id: Ib12e9d2ecfe610bcc89d046005e35cc13efa3d99
Throwing strings is bad because it doesn't include a lot of important
information that an error object does, such as a stack trace or where
the error was actually thrown from.
ve.Error inherits directly from Error. In the future we may create
more specific subclasses and/or do custom stuff.
Some interesting reading on the subject:
* http://www.devthought.com/2011/12/22/a-string-is-not-an-error/
Change-Id: Ib7c568a1dcb98abac44c6c146e84dde5315b2826
* 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 should make it much simpler to keep MediaWiki specifics out of VisualEditor, which will in turn make it easier to integrate VisualEditor into another platform.
Change-Id: I073e9737b37c28af889f2457d10b082cefd0d63b
* Added converters to all relevant node implementations
* Added new annotation objects with their own factory
Change-Id: I9870d6d5eac45083929d74d2e58917d0939ca917
Removed hard-coding of alien nodes, now aliens are automatically used for anything unknown, and block or inline aliens are selected based on whether the parent element can contain content or not.
Change-Id: I5d2a521ead4f4c96cb44d084a5c160cc20d8048e
Switch sandbox demo to use new ui modules
Update VisualEditor.php to use ve2 modules
SpecialPageSandbox working
Change-Id: I8261d6bf6ceb6ae7b7bfa5f61aec6a0121906765
* Makes it simpler in the linear model because we don't have to use style: "item" for regular list items and style: "definition" for definition lists
* Enforces correct nesting through existing node rules systems
* Updates tests accordingly
Change-Id: I64d80af938e325f1961226505bdc386bb35ccdda