Changes in the Gruntfile:
* Use two spaces for consistency with the rest of the codebase.
* Tasks are now organize based on task type. since lodash templates are used across tasks/targets, this makes it easier to follow.
* Use `src-dest` files format when only src-dest pairing is necessary. This saves a line over the files-object format, but more importantly it allows use the src or dest in lodash templates (e.g. `<%= concat.bootstrap.src %>`), which isn't possible in the files-object or files-array formats.
* Make the explicit order of the javascript files more obvious in concat task , maybe just a tiny bit more usable and easier to customize - but really just OCD
* Use `<%= pkg.name %>` variable for dest CSS, both for consistency with how javascript targets are defined, and to make it just little easier for devs to customize bootstrap.
ran the build to test, everything seems good.
In place of commit #9040, fix#8844
And sizing .navbar-toggle more like .btn elem
+ change `position:absolute` to `position:relative`
+ remove `right: 10px` in favor of `float:right`
+ change to `height: 34px`
+ remove `top:` in favor of `.navbar-vertical-align` basis new height
+ change `padding:` to match `.btn` el
* Smaller padding on buttons and large buttons
* Same with inputs and large inputs
* Remove about 10px from height of large inputs/buttons and 4px from
regular ones
Fixes#8707 and #8700.
(Also relevant: #8711)
The Getting-Started page only lists the actual instructions for respond.js (its purpose and source) *after* listing a piece of example HTML code for the user to copy and paste. It would probably be more clear if that piece of HTML code actually lists where the user can obtain respond.js. Otherwise the user has to scroll down and read 1 specific line on the rest of the page (under the 'IE 8 and 9' compatibility section), in order to know that respond.js can be obtained from a GitHub page (and that it is in fact NOT part of the downloadable Bootstrap file that's provided earlier on the page, even though the use of response.js in the example HTML code seems to suggest that it *is* part of the Bootstrap download).
It's a minor issue but this fix should make it just a little bit more clear to a user how the example HTML code works (lest they copy/paste it and find out the browser can't find respond.js).