<script charset=…>, <script type=…>, and <style type=…> are “obsolete
but conforming” in HTML5. They make the validator.nu output noisier
and real problems a little harder to find.
(type was required in HTML 4, which is not relevant to us.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
We make some specific cases of tags use 2 space indents.
The case description:
* A tag with opening tag spread over multiple lines and closing tag
on the same line as of the closing angle bracket of the opening tag.
* A tag with opening tag spread over multiple lines and closing tag
not on the same line as of the closing angle bracket of the opening
tag.
Example:
Case 1:
Not linted:
<button type="button"
class="btn btn-primary btn-small">{{t "Yes" }}</button>
After linting:
<button type="button"
class="btn btn-primary btn-small">{{t "Yes" }}</button>
Case 2:
Before linting:
<div class = "foo"
id = "bar"
role = "whatever">
{{ bla }}
</div>
After linting:
<div class = "foo"
id = "bar"
role = "whatever">
{{ bla }}
</div>
I've wanted this when looking at a tab from the day before.
Also provides the date and time in UTC, which is handy for
interpreting some of the data.
Pretty sure this is not the world's cleanest way to do this in the
front-end code. It'll do for now.
Not only does this look better, but in the parallel case of ≤
(coming soon) it prevents a naive parser, like in our linter,
from getting confused by seeing a "<" character.
Substantively, this makes the table more readable by grouping users
into expanding sets by level of activity: active in last day, active
in last week, have an account at all. The class "active in last week",
as opposed to "active in last week but not in last day", makes more
natural comparisons both between realms and for one realm through time,
and it's less sensitive to the details of our definitions.
This also makes the terminology more standard. We already made that
change in the display, in the previous commit; as we go through the
logic here, we adjust the terminology in the code too.
This shows the number of messages sent by humans for the last
eight 24-hour periods, for each realm. "Messages sent" isn't a
perfect metric of activity, but it's easier to query with our
current data model than certain other statistics.
(imported from commit 9de3c479640a0b9dbc017b245dda21d951f4efa4)