- Improves styleguide support
- Adds toggle color scheme to styleguide
- Adds properties mutators to styleguide
- Attempts to quit a session as soon as done with it in system specs, this should at least free resources faster
- Refactors fabricators to simplify them
- Adds more fabricators (uploads for example)
- Starts implementing components pattern in system specs
- Uses Chat::Message creator to create messages in system specs, this should help to have more real specs as the side effects should now happen
* UX: replace highlight vars in popup menu
* UX: replace highlight vars in autcomplete
* UX: replace highlight vars in menu-panel
* UX: update style guide
* UX: bulk replace highlight vars in various small appearances
**This PR creates a new core reusable component wraps a character counter around any input.**
The component accepts the arguments: `max` (the maximum character limit), `value` (the value of text to be monitored).
It can be used for example, like so:
```hbs
<CharCounter @max="50" @value={{this.charCounterContent}}>
<textarea
placeholder={{i18n "styleguide.sections.char_counter.placeholder"}}
{{on "input" (action (mut this.charCounterContent) value="target.value")}}
class="styleguide--char-counter"></textarea>
</CharCounter>
```
**This PR also:**
1. Applies this component to the chat plugins edit channel's *Edit Description** modal, thereby replacing the simple text area which provided no visual indication when text exceeded the max allowed characters.
2. Adds an example to the `/styleguide` route
In the past, the result of template compilation would be stored directly in `Ember.TEMPLATES`. Following the move to more modern ember-cli-based compilation, templates are now compiled to es6 modules. To handle forward/backwards compatibility during these changes we had logic in `discourse-boot` which would extract templates from the es6 modules and store them into the legacy-style `Ember.TEMPLATES` object.
This commit removes that shim, and updates our resolver to fetch templates directly from es6 modules. This is closer to how 'vanilla' Ember handles template resolution. We still have a lot of discourse-specific logic, but now it is centralised in one location and should be easier to understand and normalize in future.
This commit should not introduce any behaviour change.