Using a wildcard would load in a different order on some installs
resulting in unpredictable behavior (for example, `is-hidden` being
displayed due to a `display: flex` in a different file.)
* renames `select-box-kit` into `select-kit`
* introduces `single-select` and `multi-select` as base components
* introduces {{search-advanced-category-chooser}} as a better component for selecting category in advanced search
* improves events handling in select-kit
* recreates color selection inputs using {{multi-select}} and a custom {{selected-color}} component
* replaces category-selector by a component using select-kit and based on multi-select
* improves positioning of wrapper
* removes the need for offscreen, and instead use `select-kit-header` as a base focus point for all select-kit based components
* introduces a formal plugin api for select-kit based components
* introduces a formal pattern for loading and updating select-kit based components:
```
computeValue()
computeContent()
mutateValue()
```
- Show fullscreen timeline with title of topic in mobile
- Go to post # kb shortcut now unconditionally uses a modal
- Always show wrench on topics (was missing if progress bar was showing)
- Be smarter about rendering timeline even if composer is open (provided there is room)
Note this commit leaves out the biggest occurrence of the editor
which is the post/topic composer.
To avoid major breakage, this replaces it everywhere else it was
used:
* User preferences (About Me)
* Admin Customizations > Text Content
* Category Templates
* Editing Queued Posts
A future commit will replace the main composer with this editor
and will remove the unused pagedown code.
- Moves the import of plugins for both mobile and desktop from common after discourse loading, allowing plugins to overwrite
- Make desktop-option behave like the mobile-option: SCSS/CSS marked with that option will only be loaded for desktop from now on and ignored in mobile
- Add variables-keyword, allowing plugins to ship and overwrite variables before they get imported by discourse (great for theming)