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.
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.
Commit d84727ce7f (#17970) slightly
decreased the apparent size on some platforms depending on which font
was in use before, and some users complained that it was a bit hard to
read. Based on experiments with multiple platforms and monitors and
resolutions, this appears to be a good compromise that increases the
rendered height without increasing the width more than necessary.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
As demonstrated with the recent Zabbix integration, our line-wrapping
of numbered lists was busted in the presence of 2-digit numbers of steps.
Fixes#17634.
The code blocks and response blocks had small and unreadable font,
because they were using the bootstrap defaults without adjustment for
the size of content on the rest of the page. Fixes part of
zulip#15967.
On a high-DPI display or with a non-default zoom level, the browser
viewport may have a width strictly between md_max = 767px and md_min =
768px. Use only the *_min bounds for consistency.
This requires queries with strict inequalities to express upper
bounds (width < md_min). Fortunately, that functionality is provided
by range context queries. Unfortunately, those are not supported in
all browsers. Fortunately, we can compile them away using
postcss-media-minmax. Unfortunately, postcss-media-minmax currently
subtracts 1px for strict inequalities anyway to work around a Safari
rounding bug. Fortunately, 0.02px should be sufficient for that, so I
submitted a PR:
https://github.com/postcss/postcss-media-minmax/pull/28
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
css-loader@4 broke @import statements referencing files with
extensions other than .css, unless those @import statements are
compiled away by another loader. Upstream is more interested in
arguing that such @import statements are semantically incorrect than
applying the one line fix.
https://github.com/webpack-contrib/css-loader/issues/1164
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>