Custom header: Use add_theme_support('custom-header', $args) instead of add_custom_image_header(). Deprecates all use of constants.
* HEADER_TEXTCOLOR is now (string) 'default-text-color'.
* NO_HEADER_TEXT is nowi ! (bool) 'header-text'.
* HEADER_IMAGE_WIDTH (and _HEIGHT) are now (int) 'width' and 'height'.
* HEADER_IMAGE is now (string) 'default-image'.
* The 3.4 arguments 'suggested-width' and 'suggested-height' are now just 'width' and 'height' (they are "suggested" when flex-width and flex-height are set).
* Callback arguments for add_custom_image_header() can now be passed to add_theme_support().
Custom background: Use add_theme_support('custom-background, $args) instead of add_custom_background(). Deprecates all use of constants.
* BACKGROUND_COLOR is now (string) 'default-color'.
* BACKGROUND_IMAGE is now (string) 'default-image'.
* Callback arguments for add_custom_background() can now be passed to add_theme_support().
Inheritance: add_theme_support() arguments for custom headers and custom backgrounds is a first-one-wins situation. This is not an unusual paradigm for theming as a child theme (which is included first) overrides a parent theme.
* Once an argument is explicitly set, it cannot be overridden. You must hook in earlier and set it first.
* Any argument that is not explicitly set before WP is loaded will inherit the default value for that argument.
* It is therefore possible for a child theme to pass minimal arguments as long as the parent theme specifies others that may be necessary.
* Allows for a child theme to alter callbacks for <head> and preview (previously, calling add_custom_image_header more than once broke things).
* The just-in-time bits ensure that arguments fall back to default values, that the values of all constants are considered (such as one defined after an old add_custom_image_header call), and that all constants are defined (so as to be backwards compatible).
get_theme_support(): Introduce new second argument, which headers and backgrounds leverage to return an argument. current_theme_supports() already supported checking the truthiness of the argument.
* For example, get_theme_support( 'custom-header', 'width' ) will return the width specified during registration.
* If you had wanted the default image, use get_theme_support( 'custom-header', 'default-image' ) instead of HEADER_IMAGE.
Deprecate remove_custom_image_header(), remove_custom_background(). Use remove_theme_support('custom-header'), 'custom-background'.
Deprecate short-lived custom-header-uploads internal support; this is now (bool) 'uploads' for add_theme_support().
New 3.4 functions renamed or removed: Rename get_current_header_data() to get_custom_header(). Remove get_header_image_width() and _height() in favor of get_custom_header()->width and height.
git-svn-id: http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/trunk@20212 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
* ['Template Files'] and ['Stylesheet Files'] need to return files from the parent theme as well.
* Don't strip links from the Author header. Some themes rely on the previous behavior, such as to link multiple authors (Sandbox, for example.) Don't restore links to the Name, that's just a bad idea.
* Ensure we are always passing around arrays in get_files/scandir.
* Better inline doc for wp_get_themes() arguments.
* Introduce a 'force' flag for search_theme_directories() to re-scan, rather than return the cache. We will use this to re-build the theme_roots transient in get_theme_roots(), but it is more helpful for unit tests. Since search_theme_directories() is cached, don't cache again in wp_get_themes(). (Again benefits testing.)
* Handle duplicate theme names in the old get_themes() when two themes match (and neither are a default theme, which is already handled). wp_get_themes() will consider both names to be the same; this is just for back compat since get_themes() is keyed by name.
* Include an old array key in wp_broken_themes().
git-svn-id: http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/trunk@20193 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
wp.Uploader is a wrapper that provides a simple way to upload an attachment (using the wp_ajax_upload_attachment handler). It is intentionally decoupled from the UI. When an upload succeeds, it will receive the attachment information (id, url, meta, etc) as a JSON response. If the upload fails, the wrapper handles both WordPress and plupload errors through a single handler.
As todos, we should add drag classes for the uploader dropzone and account for the rough 100mb filesize limit in most browsers. The UI for the customizer upload controls could be improved as well.
git-svn-id: http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/trunk@20179 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd