Sadly there is no clean way of detecting a keyboard is connected to an iPad
If the keyboard is connected we want to disable all the touch related hacks
on iOS
This allows iPad users to specify they have a keyboard connected. Setting
is per device.
* UX: make composer resize work on touch devices
This also replaces a vendor dependency with a small built-in resize mechanism.
* Make blue bar's larger padding specific to touch devices
This attribute is used when a submit button is out of a form. It makes it explicit which form this button is submitting.
It's currently used in our login modal form.
When a new post is triggered via message bus post stream will attempt to load
it, previously the `/topic/TOPIC_ID/posts.json` would unconditionally include
suggested topics, this caused excessive load on the server.
New pattern defaults to exclude suggested and related topics from this API
unless people explicitly ask for suggested.
Negative option was leading to a fair amount of confusion, going forward
if we want to allow selection of emails from user selector it must be
supplied with `allowEmails=true`
This corrects a regression in 1f4ace4f which broke invite by emails and
start PM to email
This commit also:
- removes [+ New Topic] behaviour from share, this feature has been duplicated in composer actions, months ago
- introduces our new experimental spacing standard for css: eg: `s(2)`
- introduces a new panel UI for modals
Following this change when a user hits `@` and is replying to a topic they
will see usernames of people who were last seen and participated in the topic
This is somewhat experimental, we may tweak this, or make it optional.
Also, a regression in a423a938 where hitting TAB would eat a post you were writing:
Eg this would eat a post:
``` text
@hello, testing 123 <tab>
```
https://stackoverflow.com/a/47822599/17174
Chrome 63 and up start ignoring `autofill="off"`
Per: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=468153#c164
> The tricky part here is that somewhere along the journey of the web autocomplete=off become a default for many form fields, without any real thought being given as to whether or not that was good for users. This doesn't mean there aren't very valid cases where you don't want the browser autofilling data (e.g. on CRM systems), but by and large, we see those as the minority cases. And as a result, we started ignoring autocomplete=off for Chrome Autofill data
So to work around this decision we now explicitly say: autocomplete="discourse"
when we don't want Chrome to randomly fill in addressed (aka. always)