Improves the create account modal for screen readers by doing the following:
* Making the `modal-alert` section into an `aria-role="alert"` region and making it show and hide using height instead of display:none so screen readers pick it up. Made a change so the field-related error messages are always shown beneath the field.
* Add `aria-invalid` and `aria-describedby` attributes to each field in the modal, so the screen reader will read out the error hint on error. This necessitated an Ember component extension to allow both the `aria-*` attributes to be bound and to render on `{{input}}`.
* Moved the social login buttons to the right in the HTML structure so they are not read out first.
* Added `aria-label` attributes to the login buttons so they can have different content for screen readers.
* In some cases for modals, the title that should be used for the `aria-labelledby` attribute is within the modal content and not the discourse-modal-title title. This introduces a new titleAriaElementId property to the d-modal component that is then used by the create-account modal to read out the title
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This is the same as e0d2de73d8 but
fixes the Ember-input-component-extension to use the public
Ember components TextField and TextArea instead of the private
TextSupport so the extension works in both normal Ember and
Ember CLI.
Improves the create account modal for screen readers by doing the following:
* Making the `modal-alert` section into an `aria-role="alert"` region and making it show and hide using height instead of display:none so screen readers pick it up. Made a change so the field-related error messages are always shown beneath the field.
* Add `aria-invalid` and `aria-describedby` attributes to each field in the modal, so the screen reader will read out the error hint on error. This necessitated an Ember component extension to allow both the `aria-*` attributes to be bound and to render on `{{input}}`.
* Moved the social login buttons to the right in the HTML structure so they are not read out first.
* Added `aria-label` attributes to the login buttons so they can have different content for screen readers.
* In some cases for modals, the title that should be used for the `aria-labelledby` attribute is within the modal content and not the discourse-modal-title title. This introduces a new titleAriaElementId property to the d-modal component that is then used by the create-account modal to read out the
Major changes included:
- better support for screen readers
- trapping focus in modals
- better tabbing order in composer
- alerts on no content found/number of items found
- better autofocus in modals
- mini-tag-chooser is now a multi-select component
- each multi-select-component will now display selection on one row
During some authentication flows (e.g. external auth with validated emails), some fields on the signup form are readonly. Previously, they were rendered in a simple `<span>`, with no associated label. This commit makes them render in a disabled `<input>` field, so that the styling matches the rest of the form.
A subtle background is added to the disabled input to distinguish them from editable inputs.
When configured, all topics in the category inherits the slow mode
duration from the category's default.
Note that currently there is no way to remove the slow mode from the
topics once it has been set.
Replaces the autocomplete overlay for categories and usernames on the search input and adds suggestions as items in the search results instead. Also adds the same behaviour for @mentions as well as special `in: status: order:` keywords. See PR for more details.
Size of headings increased proportionally with their nesting because
their size was relative to the parent element (used em). This commit
makes headings from posts use rem instead which are relative to the
root HTML element.
<h1><div><h1>test</h1></div></h1> looks the same as <h1>test</h1> now.
We want to remove completely our custom modal for uploading files in composer and directly trigger the system file picker.
This PR makes it happen. The fix is pretty simple since we already weren't using our custom modal on mobile. We just need to start using the same hidden <input type="file"> that we already use on mobile.
It seems to be pretty tricky to test opening a system modal so I haven't added new tests. We already have other tests for file uploading though. We directly trigger jquery-File-Upload plugin hooks in those tests - 3dda926cb2/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/tests/acceptance/composer-attachment-test.js (L89).
The styling between the "Create Invite" and "Share Topic" modals is
shared. The margin that was used to organize inputs in a list is not
needed for the "Share Topic" modal.
Add Members could also invite new users via emails, but that was a less
known fact. Splitting the previous modal into two more accessible
modals should make this feature more discoverable.