The Digital Services Act requires a checkbox for any user who's flagging a post as illegal to confirm that they are flagging in good faith. This PR adds that.
* Remove unnecessary properties
* Use rem unit
* Add a drop shadow
* Make the "box shadow" slightly more subtle
* Use --d-border-radius
* Don't scale the "box shadow" on hover
* Scale down the on-hover size
* Make the button slightly larger
* Respect prefers-reduced-motion
* Use white rather than --secondary-or-primary
* Don't animate on-hover on mobile
If you upload a portrait video or just a video that doesn't fit in the
normal video dimensions we want it to have a black background instead of
trying to render parts of the placeholder image as the video background.
This change removes the placeholder image for the video background when
the play button is clicked and replaces it with an all black background.
The video placeholder play button is white, so on a video placeholder
that is also white it is very hard to see where the play button is, so
this change adds a dark grey transparent background to the play button
so that it stands out. This is similar to how we have done the
play/pause button on animated gifs.
This commit includes several changes to make hashtags work when "lazy
load categories" is enabled. The previous hashtag implementation use the
category colors CSS variables, but these are not defined when the site
setting is enabled because categories are no longer preloaded.
This commit implements two fundamental changes:
1. load colors together with the other hashtag information
2. load cooked hashtag data asynchronously
The first change is implemented by adding "colors" to the HashtagItem
model. It is a list because two colors are returned for subcategories:
the color of the parent category and subcategory.
The second change is implemented on the server-side in a new route
/hashtags/by-ids and on the client side by loading previously unseen
hashtags, generating the CSS on the fly and injecting it into the page.
There have been minimal changes outside of these two fundamental ones,
but a refactoring will be coming soon to reuse as much of the code
and maybe favor use of `style` rather than injecting CSS into the page,
which can lead to page rerenders and indefinite grow of the styles.
We had two issues which were present for a long time I think:
- one that impacts both core discourse and chat. We were not setting top on the header when `footer-nav-ipad` was present, meaning that you could make it scroll under if you try to scroll up by putting your finger on the discourse header
- one that impacted only chat. It's also present in core, but in core it's not a probem because we don't have a fixed height div. The body height was higher than the screen which would cause a second scrollbar to appear and would slightly break layout, if you scroll on this scrollbar (body).
Since https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/25501 this behavior was broken. This PR attempts to fix it by being more fine grain.
Also note that this PR is moving `footer-nav-ipad` and `footer-nav-visible` to the `html` element and not the `body`. It makes more sense as we are already adding most of other global state class like `keyboard-visible` to the `html` element.
Tested on:
- chrome desktop
- safari ios - iphone
- PWA ios - iphone
- PWA ios - ipad
- DiscourseHub iphone
This commit sets a default of 0px for `--footer-nav-height` and set it only when `body.footer-nav-visible` allowing us to safely use `--footer-nav-height` wherever it will be needed if set.
Float-kit elements (menus/tooltips) are positioned where they should be by setting an inline `left` property in JavaScript when they're rendered. For some reasons, we also set `left: 0` on float-kit elements here:
25d9927785/app/assets/stylesheets/common/float-kit/d-menu.scss (L11-L15)
This property is overridden by the inline property that the library sets in JavaScript. However, in RTL mode, all of our scss files are flipped where everything left becomes right and vice versa. In this case, the `left: 0` property in the scss file above becomes `right: 0`.
This results in a conflict specific to RTL mode where both the `left` and `right` properties are defined on the same absolute-positioned element; the `right` property will always be set to 0 because it comes from the (flipped) scss file above, and the inline `left` property will be set to some px amount determined in JavaScript.
The `right` property will take precedence over the inline `left` property due to the page being right-to-left (source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/right#description) and this causes float-kit elements to incorrectly always stick to the right.
This commit removes the `left: 0` property altogether for float-kit elements from our scss files. It's not clear from git history why the property was added, and removing it doesn't seem to cause any issues.
Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/positioning-issues-with-rtl-locales-after-recent-updates/280220?u=osama
In modern hljs, languages should be targetted with `lang-` prefixes. These selectors haven't worked in Discourse for a long time, so let's drop them to reduce confusion
Why this change?
The tags modal loads more tags via infinite loading based on when the last tag in the
given page appears in the viewport for the user. When it comes in to
view, a request is then triggered to fetch additional tags. To ensure
that we are only loading a single page of tags each time the modal is
opened, we previously set a max height on the modal's body to ensure
that the last tag which appears in the modal will be outside of the view
port in the initial load. However, this has regressed recently due to
unknown reasons and resulted in multiple pages of tags being loaded
immediately from the server as the modal's height was not restricted.
This regression was caught by an existing test but was unfortunately
determined as flaky.
What does this change do?
This change restores the max height on the edit navigation menu tags
modal on dekstop.