Removes the `mac-cmd-style` CSS rule that was introduced in
d3e8348 when support for updating keyboard shortcuts with
the `Ctrl` key to the Mac cmd key, `⌘`, was added.
Removing the rule makes the font-size and font-family CSS more
consistent with other keyboard shortcuts in the documentation.
Also, removes the parameter in `adjust_mac_shortcuts` that added
the CSS class / rule to these specific keyboard shortcuts.
Removes CSS rule that added a left margin and padding to not
first-child paragraph elements and `codehilite` class div elements
in ordered list elements.
Rule was added in 2017 and likely was correcting the alignment of
these elements due to another CSS rule that has since been removed.
This is an unpredictable piece of css that shouldn't be part of
the code. It was introduced earlier in
04ece5e5c5
for `open-source` content which has been completely replaced.
Adds a line break before the descriptive text for return
values and events in the api documentation in order to
help with readability of descriptions with multiple
paragraphs of descriptive text.
Adjustments made to the CSS of list items in unordered
lists to visually group the first paragraph of text
to any following paragraphs or unordered lists.
Moves CSS rules that rely on list items in an ordered list being
wrapped in a `<p>` tag so that they apply to the list item itself.
Uses `position: absolute` to set the `::before` pseudo-element in
place and `position: relative` to adjust the list items so that they
do not overlap.
Ideally, when Safari supports the `content` property for `::marker`
pseudo-elements, this issue can be revisited.
Fixes#20440.
A page can have either `white` (from `landing_page.css`) or `gray`
(from `portico.css`) background color depending on
webpack chunking order. So, this fixes that bug.
Safari interprets transparent as rgba(255, 255, 255, 0)
`transparent black` instead of rgba(0, 0, 0, 0).
We explicitly define transparent to help safari understand the
gradients.
This fixes the bug where our gradients look black on safari
on narrow screens.
In small screens, the quote used as a standin for image used
to overflow from screen as it didn't had responsive size set.
This image has additional bound of `max-width: 100%` which
stops them from overflowing which the quote did not.
This made it impossible to e.g. use Font Awesome icons inside a `<ul>`
list item (they worked correctly inside `<ol>` list items).
This line was apparently added in
17ad591eb4. The original thinking
behind this line is not clear in the original PR, but is likely a
forgotten relic from experiments with a custom unordered list bullet
styling.
For users who are not logged in and for those who don't have
'prefers_web_public_view' set in session, we redirect them
to the default login page where they can choose to login
as spectator or authenticated user.
On our Markdown help docs, ordered lists that aren't encapsulated
in tabs don't have custom CSS that tells them how to display
themselves with proper indentation. An example of a doc that has
this issue is /help/saml-authentication. This commit adds some CSS
that targets such ordered lists.
When one resizes the window and tries to switch to the vertical
sidebar menu, the CSS transition flickers in and out. This is
less than ideal.
This commit implements a solution to this problem. The solution is
inspired by the following helpful article:
https://ishadeed.com/article/layout-flickering/
Right now, some of our horizontally spaced out top-level dropdowns
(such as "Solutions") get truncated on screen widths less than
1024 px. We switch to the vertical sidebar menu at widths less than
686px.
Looking at a lot of mainstream websites, a few of them switch to a
vertical sidebar menu on much wider widths than we do. Plus,
switching to a vertical orientation is a much cleaner way to fix
this issue than playing around with legacy Bootstrap code. Therefore,
we should toggle on the sidebar menu at width <= 1024px.