Remove code that forced focus to skip from the title field to the editor. Add link to skip to editor to give the user control over their path. Set `aria-pressed` on editor selector buttons to communicate which editor is enabled. Make focus state visible on unselected editor button. Remove `wp_keep_scroll_position` flag used for IE compatibility. Add `role="presentation"` to table used as status info bar.
This addresses a long-standing accessibility problem in the classic editor which created a confusing keyboard navigation path by skipping all content between the title field and the content editor.
Props afercia, rcreators, benjamin_zekavica, sharonaustin, joedolson.
Fixes#29838.
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Add visible labels to inputs that are using placeholder attributes as a substitute for visible labeling.
Labels added or made visible on the customizer theme search, customizer widget search, customizer menu item search, customizer new page UI, the search plugins screens, the media search screens, and the classic editor link inserter.
Props afercia, joedolson, rcreators, sabernhardt.
See #40331.
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Apply new focus styles from WordPress 5.3 more broadly. An updated focus style for form inputs, buttons, and link styled as buttons was added in WordPress 5.3; this commit makes other focus styles consistent with those changes so they meet accessibility standards for color contrast.
Props johnbillion, kebbet, joedolson, afercia.
Fixes#51870.
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This updates the following dependencies to their latest versions:
- `chalk`
- `cssnano`
- `dotenv`
- `grunt-contrib-cssmin`
- `grunt-contrib-qunit`
- `grunt-webpack`
- `jest-image-snapshot`
- `postcss`
- `sass`
- `sinon`
- `webpack`
Additionally, `npm audit fix` has been run to automatically fix as many issues as possible.
See #58863.
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The `{min|max}-device-pixel-ratio` syntax as a a non-standard CSS media feature that was used as an alternative to the now standard `resolution`. Prior to Safari 16.0, `-webkit-{min|max}-device-pixel-ratio` was needed to correctly support it.
This change is a result of the `caniuse-lite` update that was applied recently in [56065]. Though there were no changes to target browsers as a result of this update, it seems an upstream change identified these as unnecessary.
See #57856, #58869.
Props desrosj, joemcgill, isabel_brison.
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Update CSS in the classic visual editor link popup to remove sizing in pixels that caused significant text overlaps when the base font size is scaled or set to a larger custom value in the browser or operating system.
Props jonny-s, sabernhardt, joedolson.
Fixes#53174.
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This officially removes support for Internet Explorer 11 in the CSS files run through the build process in Core.
Individual tickets should be opened for removing each manually maintained area of the code base targeting IE11.
The resulting changes to CSS files are included in this commit.
Fixes#53077.
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This is part of a larger project in cleaning up core's admin CSS. This collapses all colors used in the CSS to one of 12 blues, greens, reds, and yellows, 13 grays, pure black, and pure white. The colors are perceptually uniform from light to dark, half of each range has a 4.5 or higher contrast against white, the other half has a 4.5 or higher contrast against black.
Standardizing on this set of colors will help contributors make consistent, accessible design decisions. The full color palette can be seen here: https://codepen.io/ryelle/full/WNGVEjw
Props notlaura, danfarrow, kburgoine, drw158, audrasjb, Joen, hedgefield, ibdz, melchoyce.
See #49999.
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For a number of years, WordPress has been using a `#00a0d2` blue shade for the links `:hover` state. This blue shade doesn't have a sufficient color contrast with the various (too many) background colors used in the admin interface.
The new `#006799` blue shade is part of the official WordPress color palette and does have a sufficient color contrast with most of the admin backgrounds.
Props ryokuhi, audrasjb, joedolson, mapk.
See #47682.
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In WordPress 3.2 support for IE6 was dropped, IE7 followed a few versions later. With the 4.8 release, WordPress officially ended support for Internet Explorer versions 8, 9, and 10. Yet, we still have shipped CSS for the unsupported IE versions....until now! Goodbye to ie.css and star hacks!
* Removes ie.css and `ie` style handle.
* Removes IE specific class names and any related CSS.
* Drops support for IE8 and older in `wp_customize_support_script()`.
* Updates compatibility mode for CSS minification to `ie11`.
Props ayeshrajans, isabel_brison, afercia, netweb, peterwilsoncc, ocean90.
Fixes#17232, #46015.
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This improves the appearance of various form controls in the admin and addresses some visual inconsistencies in WordPress 5.3.
Props afercia, audrasjb, jameskoster, GDragoN, azaozz, michaelarestad, murgroland, SamuelFernandez, chetan200891, veminom, dlh.
Fixes#48420.
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Updates package dependencies to more modern versions, also adds .nvmrc and package-lock.json as followups to [43683] and [43571].
Merge notes: trunk already had an identical .nvmrc. package-lock.json exists in trunk, but has some changes based on the dependency updates.
Props jorbin.
Merges [43684], [43685] and [43686] to trunk.
See #44600.
Fixes#45064.
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In many a strange and curious file of forgotten lore—
While I pondered, blaming Nacin, my notifications suddenly awakened,
As of someone quietly DMing;—DMing me, I can’t ignore.
“’Tis some contributor,” I muttered, “DMing me an idea or four—
Only this and nothing more.”
Ah, distinctly I remember, at WordCamp US, last December;
A mad proposal nearly laid me—down out cold—upon the floor.
Curious, I listened closely;—to a plan I agreed with, mostly—
A way to make our JavaScript—JavaScript which was a chore—
Maintainable, extendable, for the future, is what I saw.
Guten-ready for evermore.
Open here I switch to Slack, when, with many a patch and hack,
In there stepped Omar, a JavaScript developer hardcore;
Pronouncing all the changes fit; ready now to be commit;
“There’s nothing else for us to do,” DMing me, “It’s done!” he swore—
“No longer random guessing at which file need next be explored—
Let’s move on, we’re all aboard.”
Moved all together, grouped and managed, in folders all is packaged,
The code had all been cleaned and tidied, important parts moved to the fore,
“Though this change be useful here,” I said, “it is too large, I fear,
We couldn’t manage such a patch, we’ve done nothing like this before—
Tell me where doth go this change, change to make our codebase soar!”
Quoth Omar, “In WordPress Core.”
Props omarreis for shepherding this significant change.
Props adamsilverstein, aduth, atimmer, dingo_bastard, frank-klein, gziolo, herregroen, jaswrks, jeremyfelt, jipmoors, jorbin, netweb, ocean90, pento, tjnowell, and youknowriad for testing, feedback, discussion, encouragement, commiserations, etc.
I make no apologies for this commit message.
Fixes#43055.
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Patches occasionally come in on generated files. We should be kind to new contributors and give them a hint that these files are auto generated.
Props drewapicture, samuelsidler, netweb, valendesigns, kpdesign, nacin, jorbin
Fixes#30666
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WordPress no longer supports many old old browsers: https://make.wordpress.org/core/2017/04/23/target-browser-coverage/
This also removes alot of no longer necessary CSS. It served us well, but we are never getting back together with IE8,9,10.
So, in the (paraphrased) words of Taylor Swift:
I remember when we dropped support the first time
Saying, "This is it, I've had enough, " 'cause like
We hadn't seen many users in a month
When you said you needed flexbox. (What?)
Then you postMessage again and say
"IE8, I miss you and I swear I'm gonna change, trust me."
Remember how that lasted for a day?
I say, "I hate the box model, " we break up, you call me, "I love css-grids."
Ooh, we called it off again last night
But ooh, this time I'm telling you, I'm telling you
We are never ever ever supporting IE 8,9,10,
We are never ever ever supporting IE 8,9,10,
You go talk to EDGE, talk to my FIREFOX, talk to CHROME
But we are never ever ever ever getting back together
Like, ever...
Fixes#37651.
Props stunnedbeast, netweb, jorbin.
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When Open Sans was in use, the `300`, `400`, and `600` weights were loaded. `400` is the equivalent of `normal`; however, `bold` is equivalent to `700`, not `600`. With the move to system fonts, we need to be specific rather than relying on the lack of a `700` weight. Not all system fonts include a `600` weight; in those instances, they will use the `bold`/`700` weight.
The WordPress CSS Coding Standards have been updated accordingly.
props coderste.
see #36753.
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Rejoice, for your admins will feel more native to your surrounding computing environment and likely load faster, especially when offline, as they no longer have to talk to The Google Overlord.
At the time of introduction in 3.8, there were not good system fonts common to all platforms at the time. In the years since, Windows, Android, OS X, iOS, Firefox OS, and various flavors of Linux have all gotten their own (good) system UI fonts.
There will definitely be visual bugs, mainly around alignment and spacing; these should be documented and reported on the ticket and fixed more atomically so that our current and future selves have a better understanding of what happened and why.
The style remains registered, as it is almost certainly in use by themes and plugins.
props mattmiklic.
see #36753.
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