Spree::Admin::UserController is for super admin user only. Moving to a
reflex simplifies the code by getting rid of a new route and a new stimulus
controller
Remove shop-tabs controllers since we can listen on `"data-action":
"orderCycleSelected@window->tabs-and-panels#activateDefaultPanel"`
Test for cases:
* activate by clicking on tab
* activateDefaultPanel on orderCycleSelected event
* activateFromWindowLocationOrDefaultPanelTarget to activate tab based
on achor in URL
I would have like to use a standard form to submit to the reflex but the
whole enterprise settings tab is in a form already and HTML doesn't
allow nested forms. While it does still work in browsers, it would have
added much more HTML to set up a form with a hidden input field instead
of just one additional data attribute.
The whole page is rendered by the controller again but the reflex root
attribute ensures that only parts of this tab are replaced. Otherwise
unsaved data on other tabs could be replaced and the page actually
becomes blank because AngularJS doesn't play well with the morph.
This is unrelated to the rest of the PR, I just noticed this issue so decided to fix it. I can't find any explanation, or think of any good reason for this rule, so I'm burning it.
Hmm, but this isn't useful until we get Tom-Select to work the way we want..
To do that, I think we'd ned to hook into TS to clear the current selection when focused, then set it back upon blur (if no selection was made). Hmm, but we still want it to show slected in the dropdown list.
Can we do it with css maybe?
We should be able to use @extend .icon-chevron-down, but I couldn't get it to work. I'd like to have a better method for this, but we should upgrade our ancient FontAwesome before worrying about that.
It doesn't matter where the flash messages appear in the HTML (thanks to fixed positioning), so why not keep it simple and send them with the main response.
preventDefault in case we are inside a form, so the button doesn't submit it.
This code was from Spree. Unless you have good focus/active styles for all links, the outline is very helpful for accessibility.
Most websites these days add nice thick outlines, which might be worth considering in the future.
This ensures morphed flashes hide like other flashes (eg in bulk order actions). I wanted to write a spec to prove it, but Capybara doesn't support mocking setTimeout and I didn't want to use sleep.
I've made it optional because this controller is shared with the shop frontend ([supposedly](5ef34347a3), although angular seems to override it).