- The aim of this template is to display unit price
- Duplicate the angular directive
- Add a question mark icon and its own file
- Add some needed colors in the branding file
We started to move to Open Street Maps (OSM) and one simple change was
to show OSM tiles on top of the current Google Maps functionality. This
hybrid use violates Google's terms and conditions though and I'm
reverting it here (basically reverting daa5b00a2).
Another branch of work was already started to use OSM without Google
functionality and it's available behind a feature toggle. We can
continue that work in our own time without a license violation. This
change is only changing the tiles, the look of the map and doesn't touch
any functionality which was always provided by Google Maps.
- use variables for colors instead of values
- trailinf line at the end of file
- new line after each declaration
- 2 spaces of indentation
- avoid qualifying elements in selectors
- prefer lowercase in hexa color
by default, `input[readonly]` is styled as disable one. Using flatpickr with these disable inputs need to be customized. By clinking on it, it opens the datepicker widget.
This moves a step closer to having a simple and straightforward way to
configure the app's mail delivery which doesn't require to be a nuclear
engineer to troubleshoot mail issues.
It happens way too often that servers have mail config broken when
restarted or redeployed and it takes too much brain power to fix it. No
doubt; it's way too complex.
I chose to leave this page's form fields but "Send mails as" as
read-only. This other field is still used by instance manager to
troubleshoot mail issues.
Adding bigger quantities can now be done via an input field instead of
clicking a thousand times.
The add-button has been widened to match the new space requirements.
The trick using `width: 100%` and a set `max-width` doesn't work if we
can't know the image width as it can be uploaded by superadmins. There's
no need though because the media query breakpoint triggers just before that.
This line-wrap makes the icons-menu overlap the OC selector. The menu's
background is transparent, what makes it look even more broken.
The fix involves refactoring the `.top-bar-section` into using flexbox
instead of this highly coupled CSS and floats. With flexbox it becomes
as easy as telling the browser to space the three sections evenly
filling-up the window, while scaling down the logo if there's not enough
room.
The root cause is that every instance uses a custom logo, which wasn't
the one we used while designing and implementing. This is why using
fixed-sizes in pixels won't work.