each section and reword the help texts quite a bit. This will
later be used to collect the correct set of email addresses to
notify a particular audience about changes in a particular section.
Notice that a project admin will have to explicitely opt-in for
"Others" notifications, i.e. unless the checkbox is checked, existing
email addresses won't be notified anymore. This is surely debatable
for existing setups, but makes much more sense for new setups.
Eventually we'll write a small migration script to add the specific
enabled setting for those (existing) projects that have a non-empty
mail list configured.
This commit has been sponsored by SciLab.
add a new view and plain form to upload an archive; rename the internal
URLs, handlers and templates from submit to create for single downloads
and also add a help section about the new format as well as a detailed
FAQ entry. Archive files get a bigger upload limit (default: 20MB).
Next up: archive uploading, validation and processing.
just before the search input field. Also rename "Open Issues" to
"All Issues" (since one can view both, open and closed issues under
this view, just like in every other issue list view we have) and
mark "All Issues" as active if we filter by label.
- Make stuff that should be private in IDF_Diff really private
and comment out a test that was the only call path for a previously
public method.
- Apply the whitespace emphasizing on the normal file view as well
and get finally rid of padLine()
row's height to fit the up-popping horizontal scrollbar, but all rows
just a little, so the heights did not match. I've reworked this to not
used the ill-advised rowspan any longer, but two separate tables whose
heights match each other now in both browsers.
Also I fixed a bug in the whitespace detection code - utf8 characters
where broken into single bytes, so apparently the [:print:] character
class does not accout for them, even in //u mode, so we're selecting
the characters that we want to make visible on our own (basically
control characters lower than space, I might add more).
into a separate container that can overflow and side-scroll for long lines.
This effectively removes the need for all kinds of line-breaking hacks
that have been applied before and only worked when the browser was
actually able to break a word group apart somewhere.
Lines are now always rendered as-is; as a nice side effect the line numbers
are always visible, independently how far one scrolled into one direction,
so the context is always clear. If the rendering area is made smaller, the
table rendering also degrades gracefully and provides horizontal scrolling
for views that did not need them before.
The size that is occupied by the number display is now also automatically
determined by the size that is needed to render the biggest line number
in a column. Empty columns are rendered with a zero size.
Currently all this works nicely with a recent version of Chrome, Firefox
still needs some fine tuning for the vertical positioning. Other browsers
are untested as of now.