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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Also, adds missing labels and improves the existing ones.
Updates the "custom links" labels and inputs in the Customizer too.
Introduces a generic, reusable, `.wp-initial-focus` CSS class to be used for
the sole purpose of setting the initial focus.
"Quick Search": uniform the attached events and avoids new AJAX requests to
be triggered when the pressed key doesn't change the searched term.
Fixes#35374.
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A couple of small tweaks to the nav menu locations form that make it friendlier to assistive technology. These include:
* labels for selects
* better context for the "Edit" link. We hide "edit" from screen readers and instead give them a phrase with context since they may not be able to take advantage of the visual context
Additionally, there are some minor css tweaks to improve the visual alignment of the rows.
We also remove duplicate IDs and use classes instead.
Props afercia.
fixes#31090.
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The admin CSS was merged in #18314.
After a couple years as it stood,
The mess it had become just was no good.
One day we realized Grunt is pretty cool,
And said "we should use this as our build tool!"
Now we can maintain separate files with ease,
Using @import and cssmin meets all our needs.
Welcome to the future of the WordPress stylesheets,
And thanks to Slick Rick for the beats.
props jorbin for the initial patch.
fixes#26669.
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