Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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explicit references to accordion widget from admin ui.
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invalid left/right pointers.
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communicate. Almost all controllers now use JSON to speak to the
theme when we're dealing with form processing. This means tht we only
send the form back and forth, but we use a JSON protocol to tell the
browser success/error status as well as the location of any newly
created resources, or where the browser should redirect the user.
Lots of small changes:
1) Admin -> Edit Profile is gone. Instead I fixed the "Modify Profile" link
in the top right corner to be a modal dialog
2) We use json_encode everywhere. No more Atom/XML for now. We can bring those
back later, though. For now there's a lot of code duplication but that'll be
easy to clean up.
3) REST_Controller is no longer abstract. All methods its subclasses should create
throw exceptions, which means that subclasses don't have to implement stubs for
those methods.
4) New pattern: helper method get_add_form calls take an Item_Model,
not an id since we have to load the Item_Model in the controller
anyway to check permissions.
5) User/Groups REST resources are separate from User/Group in the site
admin. They do different things, we should avoid confusing overlap.
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on success)
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and XML for now, we have no driver for those technologies so anything
we implement is not going to be sufficiently tested and therefore
it'll be broken.
Change all comment functions to return JSON and update the JS to deal
purely with JSON. This is our new protocol for talking to the browser
and it should be flexible and portable.
Create comments.html.php. This duplicates comment.html.php, but will
be more efficient for rendering comments since we won't be creating a
new View for every comment we render.
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their results, as opposed to having them return their view back
upstream. This is a little more code in every controller, but it's
much less magical and more consistent.
Look up the active_theme and active_admin_theme inside the view
itself, no need to do that in the controllers. This makes view
initialization easier in the controllers.
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1) Deleted in-place-editing. We'll be replacing this with a real edit
system that groups settings together and is more coherent.
2) Tweaked the way that dialog boxes work to get the ajax stuff working
again. It's imperfect and does not work properly for uploading images.
This is going to get redone also, but this is a good resting point.
3) Created edit forms for albums and photos. Moved _update and _create out
of Items_Controller and into the individual subclasses.
4) Created access::required which is a shorthand for:
if (!access::can(...)) {
access::forbidden();
}
5) Added validation rules to Items_Model
6) Converted login to use the regular modal dialog approach in the theme.
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1) If the create request is Ajax, then return a 201 Created response code
2) If we receive back a 201 response, then switch to the new page.
3) Display a status message when we do an upload.
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changed.
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instead of ids.
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Track a set of rules in Graphics_Rule_Model which specify how we turn
original images into thumbnails and resizes. There's one set of rules
that applies to every image in the Gallery.
Track the state of thumbs and resizes with a "dirty" bit. The new
graphics helper manages the rules and can rebuild the thumbs and
resizes for any images that are considered "dirty".
Introduce the concept of an "album cover" which is an item that an
album points to. We'll use that item as the source for the album's
thumbnail/resize.
Conflated with this change (sorry!) I also changed the Var table to
use module_name instead of module_id. This may be marginally less
efficient, but it's much easier to follow in the database.
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us use it in the watermark module too
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