Previously it was centered with respect to its enclosing div, which
looked slightly off.
(imported from commit da64f33551b500857bb91cb3ece959aafc9b1eb0)
This should hopefully cause the page not to scroll around when we load
a giant block of emoji, because now the size of the emoji is known
before it finishes loading.
(imported from commit f566437edd725f6084c6a10c6230fd36e8d12346)
This should make their size totally known to the DOM,
which should prevent jumpiness when they load.
(imported from commit 564d920014f5bc52c217adf54c2f5bab6ba625e0)
This uses the unauthed v1 of the Twitter API, which is going to go
away soon, but it's fine as an interim measure.
(imported from commit 709a250271321f5479854a363875c9da43e6382d)
We now add the my_fullname class to the entry for you in the sidebar so
that we can automatically update this element when changing your name.
This closes trac #979.
(imported from commit f1473d6bb6f18810311d42c85d4b57aab9966498)
We also grey out the box to prevent the user from clicking twice.
This closes trac #1030.
(imported from commit eec810e3fbc5b7c9350c2d91e448fb27d4c856f8)
This simplifies a bunch of fragile resizing logic in our code,
and also addresses the Chrome Canary bug where clicking in the
searchbox causes the navbar to get huge.
This fixes Trac #764 and Trac #1039
(imported from commit fc8c3995109de384b71dfba2b986a8500ff7f08d)
Now when the font increases, so will the size of the emoji. (1.4em
seems to be 20px at our default settings, so this doesn't change the
size of the emoji for any of our existing people).
(imported from commit edb0b590f00bfbad0355a41b1f995335cf0e9e07)
Prior to this commit, at 800px, e.g., the Google button
is smushed into the login form.
(imported from commit 422d1b677439460785f6b31ea2fe2c819e23e259)
It's not quite what the CUSTOMER4 person wanted, but
I think it scratches the itch.
This fixes Trac #1023
(imported from commit 9186499c8f6bacb230a2d1ed6d5ca7ffa7416ac3)
To be fully responsive, we can basically never specify the width of
our container in a fixed number of pixels; otherwise we'll run into
the situation where there's an inordinate amount of wasted space on
our left and right.
So everything needs to change from, e.g. row to row-fluid,
and that has a whole cascading series of changes that that implies.
(imported from commit 7e2771d916f429548c65c0a00fc4c11397054656)
If this is not the case, then you can't actually click the
"Press Enter to send" checkbox in the composebox (or anything
in the space occupied by where the popup will go).
This actually is not a perfect solution because that area still
remains unclickable for anything else. (In particular, for example,
scroll a message's "Info" link and then try to click on it -- you
can't! The click is captured by the #notifications-area div.)
http://www.vinylfox.com/forwarding-mouse-events-through-layers/
proposes an alternative more general way of dealing with this,
but it seems like a real pain.
This fixes Trac #1017.
(imported from commit 9cfde1cfff63ab32ae7d129980c47567e221eac3)
I kind of expect this to work, and hopefully this'll help with
people getting stuck on the "Settings" page in the tutorial.
(imported from commit 1159d884dcd331bcfb74864a0176fa293e8c3714)
This keeps the name to the right of the bullet even if it overflows
onto two lines.
Fixes#909.
(imported from commit 60528bb30c2d9e29687b773abc76c18369a8a068)
This fixes Trac #912.
My guess is that 'overflow: hidden hidden' was just being interpreted
as no setting on the overflow, which is why this was broken.
Regardless, this fix seems to work in Firefox and Chrome.
(imported from commit a08ddc5db97ee1e8a65a278c0d278e823afae65d)