This PR ensure that all elements targeted by URL fragments will
remain visible below the portico's menu bar at all viewport
sizes and also when a user zooms in, provided the target is on a
page with the menu bar, which will have the `portico-landing`
class.
Whether a quirk or a bug, Chrome appears to ignore the padding on
ancestral containing elements when calculating the offset for
`scroll-margin-top`, which is why padding has been moved to
`.inner-content` for `.why-page` and `.case-studies-page`, which
are the two unique class names for portico pages where the targeted-
element scrolling behavior is used.
This commit ensures that the Attribution, Jobs, and Team pages all
share a uniform structure to match those of other pages. This will
simplify styling and should ensure greater confidence when modifying
portico landing-page styles.
The one CSS modification here, for the jobs page, maintains the space
at the top of the "How we work" section.
postcss-preset-env transpiles this back as necessary. (It does a
better job than we did, in fact: we had several four-argument hsl()
calls that should have been hsla().)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Ever since we started bundling the app with webpack, there’s been less
and less overlap between our ‘static’ directory (files belonging to
the frontend app) and Django’s interpretation of the ‘static’
directory (files served directly to the web).
Split the app out to its own ‘web’ directory outside of ‘static’, and
remove all the custom collectstatic --ignore rules. This makes it
much clearer what’s actually being served to the web, and what’s being
bundled by webpack. It also shrinks the release tarball by 3%.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>