Before 4f37f8643, we were using `innerText` to retrieved the code content for
copying. This preserved the text layout (including newlines), but suffered from
other issues (browser support, performance). With 4f37f8643 we switched to
`textContent`, which works well except in the following case:
When `prettify` formats the code to have line numbers, it removes the newlines
and uses `<li>` elements instead. This affects `textContent`.
This commit fixes this by keeping a reference of the code as text and using that
for copying.
Fixes#17659
This version fixes the DISCONNECTED errors (described in #17543) and removes the
need to the workaround (8af203c).
The relevant jasmine commit is jasmine/jasmine@c60d66994.
`innerText` is not supported in Firefox prior to v45. In most cases (at least
the ones we are interested in), `innerText` and `textContent` work equally well,
but `textContent` is more performant (as it doesn't require a reflow).
From [MDN][1] on the differences of `innerText` vs `textContent`:
> - [...]
> - `innerText` is aware of style and will not return the text of hidden
> elements, whereas `textContent` will.
> - As `innerText` is aware of CSS styling, it will trigger a reflow, whereas
> `textContent` will not.
> - [...]
[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node/textContent#Differences_from_innerTextFixes#17585
The footer background (implemented via `footer:after`) had a higher `z-index`
than other footer elements and was obscuring the footer links on certain
browsers (Firefox, Edge, IE), which made them unclickable.
This commit lowers the index of `footer:after`, so that links are clickable on
these browsers.
Fixes#17460
You can now specify what environment you are building
by add it to the `yarn build` command. For example:
```
yarn build -- --env=stage
```
Moreover the `deploy-to-firebase.sh` script will automatically apply the
appropriate environment.
Previously, we always assumed that elements would be scrolled to the top of the
page, when calling `element.scrollIntoView()`. This is not true for elements
that cannot be scrolled to the top, e.g. when the viewport height is larger than
the height of the content after the element (common for small sections near the
end of the page).
In such cases, we would unnecessarily scroll up to account for the static
toolbar, which was unnecessary (since the element was not behind the toolbar
anyway) and caused ScrollSpy to fail to identify the scrolled-to section as
active.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that we do not scroll more than necessary in
order to align the top of the element with the bottom of the toolbar.
Fixes#17452
* update to latest version of lunr search
* add trailing wildcard to search terms to increase matches
* fix unwanted error when escape was pressed
Closes#17417
Using `<a>` inside a `<button>` is not syntactically valid HTML and breaks on
some browsers (e.g. Firefox). Furthermore, clicking the button doesn't do
anything unless you click on the link (e.g. clicking on the padding around the
link does nothing), which is inconvenient and confusing.
Fixes#17448
* Remove the "info-banner" styling from the filters.
* Fix alignment of the search box on a narrow screen (closes#17395)
* Remove unnecessary whitespace before section headers
Chrome (v58+) often gets disconnected during unit tests (causing them to fail).
This has been happening locally (on Windows) and on Travis. The exact reasons
are not known, but it seems that some of the `AppComponent` tests are to blame.
Based on the discussion in https://github.com/jasmine/jasmine/issues/1327 (and
plenty of trial-and-error), using Jasmine's `done()` callback before each of
test (even calling it synchronously) fixes the issue.
Closes#17245 and #17253
When the user selects a doc item in the side nav:
1) expand folder(s) leading to the selected doc item
2) on a wide display, keep other already expanded folders open
3) on narrow (mobile) display, collapse other expanded folders
Used to do (3) when wide. Issue #17245 asks for (2).
That logic was bypassed for selected node when we allowed headers to have content
because that unintentionally expanded the header’s folder when selected.
Because the selected node is no longer a header with content, removing this exclusion
also means that folders are expanded/collapsed with above logic even for API pages.
Previously, the main content would always leave a 18% margin on the right to be
occupied by the ToC (even if there was no ToC).
This commit lets the main content expand to the right to occupy all the
available space when there is no ToC.
Fixes#17205Fixes#17270
Previously, when scrolling the ToC and reaching the top/bottom, further
mousewheel events would result in scrolling the window (and thus the main
content). This is standard browser behavior. In the case of the ToC though, the
`ScrollSpy` would detect scrolling in the main content and scroll the active ToC
to entry into view, thus resetting the scroll position of the ToC.
Reproduction:
1. Open `~/guide/template-syntax`.
2. Start scrolling through the long ToC.
3. Try to go to the bottom of the ToC.
4. Once you reach the bottom, the main content starts scrolling down.
5. The first section ("HTML in templates") becomes "active", so the ToC is
scrolled back up to make its corresponding entry visible.
6. Go back to step 2.
This commit improves the UX, by not allowing the main content to scroll when the
cursor is ovr the ToC and the user has scrolled all the way to the top/bottom of
it.
When navigating from a page with open SideNav to a page without closed SideNav,
the main content area animates from a non-zero left margin to zero left margin.
Additionally, the top-bar on the homepage is transparent, which allows the white
background behind the main content to be seen while the left margin is animated
to zero, making it appear as if something (e.g. the SideNav covers the top-bar).
This commit works around this issue, by not making the top-bar transparent
immediately when navigating to the homepage, but animating it from its blue
color to transparent with a delay.
Fixes#17248