* Carousel: use buttons, not links, for prev/next
- expand the styles to neutralise border/background
- change docs page
- add extra unit test to check that links or buttons work as controls
- modify visual test to use buttons as well
- use buttons instead of links for prev/next
- remove `role="button"` from links that are actually links
* Clarify that controls can be button or link
* Update site/content/docs/5.0/components/carousel.md
Co-authored-by: Mark Otto <markd.otto@gmail.com>
* Explicitly set padding to 0 to prevent dipping/moving on active in Firefox
Co-authored-by: XhmikosR <xhmikosr@gmail.com>
* Rename `sr-only`/`sr-only-focusable`
To be more representative of the fact that these are not necessarily "screen reader" specific, but actually apply to assistive technologies in general (and also things like Alexa/Siri/etc). Goes hand-in-hand with #31133
Co-authored-by: XhmikosR <xhmikosr@gmail.com>
- Move 4.1 docs to 4.2
- Update versions everywhere to 4.1.3 with release script
- Manually bump the shorthand version in package.json
- Add 4.2 to the versions docs page
- Update some redirects
- Fix tests asset URLs
- Bump Nuget and more
* use a trailing slash when possible
* use https when possible
* remove a few redirected links
* consistently use `https://popper.js.org/`
* fix `iconUrl` in nuget files
* change Jekyll Windows guide to the official one
* Remove IE compatibility mode meta tag from docs, examples, and JS tests as we no longer support IE9 and IE8
* update and remove some IE bits from our supported browser page
* update introduction.md to match
* reword starter template intro
faster and easier to test/develop js functionality not represented in unit tests, and gives us
a playground for interactions, etc.
It also makes it so developing javascript is now decoupled form jekyll, which should make everything
faster and less painful.
This commit also reverts my filter commit 9900771aa7
which broke scrollspy for dropdowns.