This is the patch described here:
https://github.com/twitter/bootstrap/issues/271592189b87ad
That commit has not been upstreamed to bootstrap due to bureaucracy issues.
(imported from commit 3c4a109b58f403569a41f5048ab347a800f029c2)
We now don't use these at all, and they are likely to confuse us later e.g.
when modifying third-party files.
(imported from commit 2034949111466b22b1830ec087f30fa34445fcbd)
We will provide our own copyright and license comments in the files
that need them
Also remove the byte-order mark from spectrum.css. It would appear in the
middle of the file, and there's no need in UTF-8 anyway.
(imported from commit dc32113e88bc6533f37f3378ffeac26f2050d0e7)
* Modify the narrow icon in FontAwesome to make it better align to the pixel grid and display well on Windows+Chrome.
* Move the message controls to the right
* Hide the message info icon until the message is hovered / selected
* Switch the star to a gray version
* Increase the size of the gravatar
* Adjust the spacing
* Add the right-side message pointer
* Fix private message background colors and mention colors
* Modify star count test to account for new stars
* Bug fixes for stream subscription messages and other miscellanea.
(imported from commit 3d3d9de7e03f3658c5c78b492051b2b7f795487d)
What changed:
* Vector icons swapped in for the left sidebar buttons and filters
* Lighter font weight in the stream filters list
* Round color swatches in the stream filters list, with an inner shadow
* Tighter line height in the individual messages in the message pane
* Fixed button widths in the left sidebar (so the buttons are equal in width)
(imported from commit 337dc4a3d8e29945cfc8cfb9524ac76a7b038ad8)
If the pasted content has strings, we don't upload included files and instead
allow the default behavior to take place. This deals with a quirky behavior of
pastes from MS Word, which in addition to the formatted string content also
includes a thumbnail of it. Images still paste as usual.
(imported from commit 60c4f8dd90ac2e8e38940fb302cc9d1ebeecfdf3)
Don't assume clipboardData.items since it doesn't exist on Safari
Make sure there are no files if using a clipboard drop. Safari includes a blank text/uri-list
data entry
Firefox fix for image pasting
(imported from commit ea0d56fe73ca45cf2e4d437df23a4023bb649445)
* renamed the 'icon-star' style to 'icon-vector-star' to keep backwards compatibility for icon-* classes
* changed relevant styles in zephyr.css; added FontAwesome assets
* changed relevant CSS classes in base.html, left-sidebar.html, ui.js, message.handlebars
* added new fonts.css to start consolidating all font-based assets
* added fonts.css to PIPELINE_CSS in settings.py under 'portico' and 'app'
* modified the stars test suite to reflect new star icon class name.
(imported from commit 3116fcfd4b5fb4edecd457da554fea616bb7081b)
Don't show an error if we can't handle the drop contents, since it may
just be empty rather than being a browser unsupported issue
(imported from commit 986495b4a94f4afacf75ffb35ea507d86c369b2f)
Not needed for any specific reason, but we will need the .runtime.js file
eventually, and we should use a version of the library that matches the
Handlebars compiler.
(imported from commit 5600bc8d44b681999e2e5bbf04b890e2bb8477a1)
This import strips other icons we aren't using from the CSS definitions and
fonts.
Licensed under MIT.
(imported from commit 02cc2681a1cf44107444b6fe70420afca6950ae2)
Longer-term this should be done in a more sustainable manner, i.e.
including Glyphicons like we currently include Halflings.
(imported from commit 3f405c969352481626614a0d61874bd77f0388b7)
Prior to this commit, at <979px, the .container in a .navbar has
`width: auto`, but a normal .container has width 724px, which causes
the two to drift out of sync.
This fixes that.
(Arguably, it's weird for us to waste ~200px scrunching
this down to 724px at this ratio, but we can solve that
as a separate issue later.)
(imported from commit 1f431ca1e2168db75821ea0be43941d29fd3e6b8)
We always want the navbar to stick at the top, no matter what
the screen size, and we want it to consistently look the same
height, etc. regardless of our page width.
This is possibly also accomplished via position: absolute !important
and other overrides in our own CSS, but this actually seems
slightly cleaner in a way.
(imported from commit 340fafb49bcbc1088a816897d320e252c4615d19)
Some time between the 2.0.4 and the 2.1.0 upgrade, Bootstrap broke in
a way such that clicking on a dropdown did not cause it to close.
Here's the bug thread about it:
https://github.com/twitter/bootstrap/issues/4497
I've implemented this workaround discussed there, though the bug is
fixed in 2.1.1, so when we upgrade this will go away (which is why I
only reluctantly tag it 'third', since the diff will not need to be
carried forward.)
(imported from commit f8d9cf65b33306a426d864c9b503bb3446614111)
...from 1200 to 1180 pixels.
The monitor I use for Humbug is exactly 1200px wide. With the scrollbar I come
in just under the original Bootstrap threshold, so I get a scrunched-up nav
sidebar next to a bunch of empty space.
It's annoying to do this in our own CSS because we basically have to duplicate
the whole @media block to make everything fit together.
I don't love editing third-party files like this, but if it gets reverted by a
later update, the consequences are minimal. If we have important hacks like
this (or just a lot of them), we should decide on a better way to manage them.
For now I have just tagged the commit subject with "[third]".
(imported from commit ef3022b7eb0fdfc8862083bdbb1fb805fbeba2c7)
The following things were changed
* The list of events it listens to by default was expanded
* It now supports canceling timers
* Calling .idle() on an element now returns a control object that can be used
to manipulate the timer
* Small tweaks to variable names, arguments, jQuery usage, etc.
The code probably still needs some cleanup, but I'm sick of looking at it
right now.
(imported from commit 6868cb6fd97ab994a871f5ed6951995b254e340e)