Browser history state:
* Listen for popstate, if veaction is different, act on it
(by calling activate or deactivate).
* When switching to edit mode, push veaction=edit.
When switching to view mode, push non-veaction.
Except if the switch was made by the popstate listener in
which case we don't want to push again.
Clean up:
* Use document.location.href instead of odd location.toString
Don't pass it to mw.Uri from the original one since it
takes the current url by default.
Bug: 43844
Change-Id: I5c345c1526852a84b04436955845bf1b56d94402
Merge methods:
* transformPage: transformSkinTabs + hideSiteNotice
* restorePage: restoreSkinTabs + restoreSiteNotice
Callers now consistently do both (e.g. #tearDownSurface only
called #restoreSkinTabs). This is also in preparation for
bug 43844.
Removed call from #tearDownSurface as that method is only
called from #deactivate which already calls #restorePage.
Clean up support check:
* Rename supportsStrictMode to supportsES5. Though the feature
test asserts strict mode, we use it to check support for
ES5. VisualEditor doesn't particularily care about strict
mode itself.
* Reverse support if-statemement to return early instead of
wrapping everything that follows. This makes it easier to
see that we intent to abort if the current environment is
known to be problematic. Also easier for code later on
by not accidentally falling outside this block
* Follows-up aaa5ad254b.
Change-Id: Ia4b949d9c066a3f7b07217aa3d51de9908734e85
This makes the 'category' section of the meta-data panel less lonely, and
prompts us to actually do this at some point quite soon (or encourage others
so to do).
Bug: 48814
Change-Id: I5b8fdfb78a2117839277a683db47fe97107d87b0
The update() method wiped out the entire contents of the node, including
the shield that makes ce.ProtectedNode work. Fixed by only wiping out and
reconstructing the contents of the <ol>
Change-Id: Ib2978a72939884be67964ce8a3d89a570f70bfa3
The previous fix didn't really work, because the notices are expected to
be an array elsewhere too. Better to just convert it to an array on the
spot. getObjectValues works with any kind of object (including an array)
so it's safe to use with either data type.
Change-Id: I03237b8624a0b980e5f70d54d55c662ffa460373
The easy part is getting the correct numbers from the InternalList
and generating the ordered list HTML. The tricky part is connecting
up the events to make sure the renumberings/list generations are
triggered when required.
InternalList can emit an update event on document transaction, which
triggers the renumbering/relisting if any references have been
added or deleted during that transaction.
ve.ce.MWReferenceListNode also listens to changes on the
InternalListNode (i.e. changes to the contents of the references)
and always triggers a rebuild.
Change-Id: I1b48ef5240e433c3b314259aa68cde13841ea98b
We now have three stages:
1. Browser feature tests. Dies silently if any fail.
2. Browser blacklist. Dies silently if match found.
3. Browser whitelist. Shows warning if no match found.
Previously we were treating the remotely generated
edit notices as if they were in an object when
in fact they were in an array - the code has been
fixed to reflect that fact.
As locally generated notices will typically require
parsed messages, we've also moved the notice rendering
to after onReady is fired.
Updated jquery.client to latest master from MediaWiki core
(needed for proper detection of Iceweasel, Android and Safari)
Bug: 38128
Change-Id: Idc5f4a23a2709264d869a91d00873c4e187bc470
Follows-up 2e76271 and 231a50f which made manual changes to
the static-loading files without updating makeStaticLoader
(thus causing the load order and if-statement to be out of
sync between different index.php files).
Updating makeStaticLoader to include those changes and applying
it to the other index.php file.
Change-Id: I9bbe97d85f663b1cffeb384d52b5cc54e2f6601b
This has no influence on Jenkins but can be used locally to
easily run certain tools. Since we already had `.jshintrc` in
our repo it was already possible to easily run JSHint from
the command-line locally. Taking that as a base the following
are new features:
* `grunt csslint`: Runs CSSLint on all css files
* `grunt qunit`: Runs QUnit (standalone) tests in PhantomJS
* `grunt test`: Runs jshint/csslint/qunit
* `grunt watch`: Runs the "test" command automatically whenever
a file is changed. You can keep this in the background so
whenever you save a file in your editor (e.g. Sublime Text)
it'll run the tests and if there is a failure, it'll throw a
bash error code causing your Terminal application to beep you
in whatever way your operating system does so (e.g. for
Mac OS X a red badge + jumping icon in the Dock). It will
continue to run in the background even after a failure so no
need to re-start watch after a failure.
* `grunt`: Runs the default task, which is 'test'.
Previously to use `jshint .` you had to:
* One-time install:
* install package -- nodejs npm
* npm install -g jshint
* Usage:
* cd VisualEditor; jshint .
Now, for grunt:
* One-time install:
* install package -- nodejs npm
* npm install -g grunt-cli
* cd VisualEditor; npm install
* Usage:
* cd VisualEditor; grunt
Change-Id: I7a4fdf4b6bf3f00cef15dc3e2c81eceb595aec7c
Adding a fairly loose .csslintrc file so that our code
passes it.
The following options cause warnings in our code and have been
disabled for now:
* adjoining-classes
> Don't use adjoining classes.
> .ve-ui-widget-disabled.ve-ui-textInputWidget textarea:focus {
* box-sizing
> The box-sizing property isn't supported in IE6 and IE7.
> box-sizing: border-box;
* box-model
> Using width with border can sometimes make elements larger than you expect.
> border: solid 1px #ccc;
> Using width with padding can sometimes make elements larger than you expect.
> padding: 0 0.75em 0 0.75em;
> Using width with border-right can sometimes make elements larger than you expect.
> border-right: 1px solid #eee;
* fallback-colors
> Fallback background-color (hex or RGB) should precede RGBA background-color.
> background-color: rgba(104,171,255,0.1);
* important
> Use of !important
> position: relative !important;
* outline-none
> Outlines shouldn't be hidden unless other visual changes are made.
> .ve-ce-documentNode[contenteditable="true"]:focus {
* qualified-headings
> Heading (h1) should not be qualified.
> .ve-ce-branchNode h1:empty:before,
* universal-selector
> The universal selector (*) is known to be slow.
> .ve-ce-protectedNode * {
* unqualified-attributes
> Unqualified attribute selectors are known to be slow.
> .ve-ce-documentNode[contenteditable="true"]:focus {
Fixes made:
* modules/ve/ce/styles/ve.ce.Surface.css:
[L66:C2] margin can't be used with display: inline.
* modules/ve/ui/styles/ve.ui.css: Unknown @ rule: @-ms-keyframes
Internet Explorer < 10 doesn't support keyframes. IE10+ supports
the standard property. I don't think ms-keyframes ever existed
http://caniuse.com/css-animation. ms-transform did exist
http://caniuse.com/transform.
Change-Id: I728a48e489c079e1c94a506bb00c245de9551eb6
Due to the "es5: true" jshint option we enabled, these
warnings were surpressed. I've disabled the option since
we no longer require it. It was enabled in 07c86fc to fix
a bug with jshint. This bug has now been fixed.
Change-Id: I55b7d031eb5581af5f733f050cf2ea98dacb2af6
Also keep items in the order they appear in the document
and grouped by group and key.
Additions and removals are triggered by the new root/unroot events.
Change-Id: Ia3e90ccfdab88f352b89992b90554e5f03ff9952
Clean up of logic implemented during the template-sprint:
* Store spec inside the content model, directly associated
with the content-part. This allowed fixing the bug where
two spec-less template invocations overwrote each other's
made-up template data due to it using "target.wt" as key.
The opener now provides the fetcher with a "specId" which
is set to "part/<id>" for wt-generated template targets.
* Batching is now implemented inside the fetcher instead
of outside. This allows calling "getTemplateSpecs" inside
the loop with a dedicated callback for each spec to store
it in the content.parts[i] object passed by reference.
It also makes it easier to use by different code paths.
You call it as much as you like and it will queue up
naturally through javascript yielding and then make a batch
request. This is based on the pattern I used in MediaWiki core
for mw.loader#addEmbeddedCSS.
Follows-up e7af635, da679b7.
Change-Id: I4d7121229d060a96d927585c987a1a81a474b922