Docking is a leftover from older header code, it looks like it is no
longer used in the app. This helper was registering a scroll event
listener to check if the header should be docked or not. Initially, a
"docked" class was added to the body element. This class persisted
through the lifecycle of the app and the scroll event was doing no
useful work.
Some older themes may still use it in CSS, that will cause a regression,
from a quick look at existing code, the surface area should be small
(2-3 themes). It's worth removing the event listener for performance
reasons. We could possibly add the class "docked" statically to the body
element, but it's redundant. It's best to clean up the relevant CSS in
themes, where applicable.
- Ensure main title is set as 'not visible' when removed from DOM
- `deactivate` -> `willTransition` to ensure proper behavior when navigating between multiple topics
Followup to bdec564d14
- Move topic-title on-screen detection to intersection-observer (via new modifier), and add a boolean to header service which indicates whether it's on-screen
- Move scroll-direction from Mixin to dedicated service. Teach it to pause scroll monitoring while transitions are in progress, to avoid reporting false changes in scroll direction. Also resets to a 'neutral' state after each navigation, which indicates the the user has not yet scrolled
- When entering a topic view, notify the header service which post is being targeted. It can then make an educated guess about whether the topic title is likely to be in-view
- Update header service `topicInfoVisible` to be a declarative getter, based on the three refactored sources of truth mentioned above
- Update legacy widget header to use the header service for topic info
All of these changes mean that the header no longer 'flickers' when navigating into topics on mobile. As well as the improved UX, this should also improve our Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) web vital metrics.
This commit includes various UX improvements to the reset
password page:
* Introduce a `hide-application-header-buttons` helper to do the following:
* Hide Sign Up and Log In buttons, they are not necessary on this flow
* Hide the sidebar, it is a distraction on this flow
* Improve messaging when a 2FA confirmation is required first
* Improve display of server-side ActiveRecord model validation errors
in password form, e.g. instead of "is the same as your current password"
we do "The password is the same as your current password"
* Move password tip to next line below input and move caps lock hint
inline with Show/Hide password toggle
* Add system specs for 2FA flow on reset password page
* Fixes a computed property conflict issue on the password reset
page when toggling 2FA methods
This will automatically enable the glimmer header when all installed themes/plugins are ready. This replaces the old group-based site setting.
In 'auto' mode, we check for calls to deprecated APIs (e.g. decorateWidget) which affect the old header. If any are present, we stick to the old header implementation and print a message to the console alongside the normal deprecation messages.
To override this automatic behavior, a new `glimmer_header_mode` site setting can be set to 'disabled' or 'enabled'.
This change also means that our test suite is running with the glimmer header. This unveiled a couple of small issues (e.g. some incorrect `aria-*` and `alt` text) which are now fixed. A number of selectors had to be updated to ensure the tests were clicking the actual `<button>` elements rather than the surrounding `<li>` elements.