According to the docs, you just need to apply the `navbar-nav` to an
`<ul>` tag in a list-based navbar. In fact, `navbar-nav` seems to
override all the css properties set by `nav`.
Also, `nav-item` class should be used only for `<li>` tags, or in
conjunction with `<a>` tags to entirely avoid the list-based approach.
This commit removes the redundant `nav` class from `navbar-nav` `<ul>`
tags, moves `nav-item` from `<a>` tags to `<li>` tags and properly
adds `nav-item` class to `<li>` tags where missing.
Refs:
* https://v4-alpha.getbootstrap.com/components/navs/
* https://v4-alpha.getbootstrap.com/components/navbar/#nav
* add the svg icon as a partial so we can include it easily
* add the icon to the homepage
* drop .bd-booticon for svgs here
* rip out the import for .bd-booticon sass file
* Delete _booticon.scss
* indentation
* Update bootstrap-icon.html
* remove those
* Fixed dead link to browser list
The link to the list of browsers supported through Autoprefixer was dead, now updated to a working link.
* Updated label to display new file path
Changed the labeling on the updated link to show read as the new updated file path.
Remove class and attributes from buttons which are not expected to trigger dropdowns.
Code used to render the examples is correct but code shown was not.
The link to package.json in the v4 docs was linking to package.json in the v3 source. Fixed to point to the correct v4 location. A change like this will need to be made for all branches on version 4 if you want the docs to be linked correctly (github may be smart enough to follow the link to the current branch if you are on github but it was wrong from the main site).
* Fix incorrect code indentation
* Remove unnecessary vendor prefix for `box-sizing` - all modern browsers now support this unprefixed
* Remove incorrect `<label>` and change static controls to readonly inputs
* Allow `<img>` elements without `src` to allow for `holder.js` images used in the docs, which lack `src` and use `data-src` instead
As the question often comes up about why Bootstrap does not do "true"
ARIA menus (with their `role="menu"` etc), add an admittedly lengthy
note (tl;dr because BS is generic, and ARIA menus are specific and quite
limiting).
Additionally, fixes up the `<a>` example for dropdown trigger, with the
missing `role="button"` and neutering the `href` (which would be useless
anyway since BS overrides the link-like nature of the `<a>` so it could
never be triggered/followed anyway)
* Add carousel mouse listeners even if touch events enabled
- touch events are enabled not just on "mobile", just also on
touch-enabled desktop/laptop devices; additionally, it's possible to
pair a mouse with traditionally touch-only devices (e.g. Android
phones/tablets); currently, in these situations the carousel WON'T pause
even when using a mouse
* Restart cycle after touchend
as `mouseenter` is fired as part of the touch compatibility events, the
previous change results in carousels which cycle until the user
tapped/interacted with them. after that they stop cycling (as
`mouseleave` is not sent to the carousel after user scrolled/tapped
away).
this fix resets the cycling after `touchend` - essentially returning
to the previous behavior, where on touch the carousel essentially never
pauses, but now with the previous fix it at least pauses correctly for
mouse users on touch-enabled devices.
includes documentation for this new behavior.
A long overdue rewrite of the accessibility section - instead of the few
snippets of strangely superficial and out-of-context advice (skip links,
use correct heading levels), this tries to answer some of the
fundamental questions about "is Bootstrap accessible", with emphasis on
the fact that the final result will depend in large part on what BS is
applied to/on (since BS relies on the markup etc authored by
developers). This also sets out our ambition to have things work for
keyboard and assistive tech users, and that we strive to make all our
examples etc accessible and semantic.
* Changes based on @mdo's feedback
This makes them keyboard-accessible. For mouse users, the only change
here is that the focus outline will remain on the button once clicked
(in future, this can be solved with :focus-ring, but for now this would
require a polyfill). the tooltip is explicitly hidden on `mouseleave`,
so even though the `<button>` retains focus after clicking, the tooltip
won't stay visible once mouse user moves away.
the mouse hover styles have explicitly not been make to also apply to
:focus, so as to minimise the visual impact for
mouse users (though the tooltip remains visible)
- but due to the default outline and the custom tooltip, it
should be fairly clear when keyboard users set focus to a copy button
too.
* Replace backdrop with simple noop mouse listener
As discussed in https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/pull/22422 the current
approach of injecting a backdrop (to work around iOS' broken event
delegation for the `click` event) has annoying consequences on
touch-enabled laptop/desktop devices.
Instead of a backdrop `<div>`, here we simply add extra empty/noop
mouse listeners to the immediate children of `<body>` (and remove
them when the dropdown is closed) in order to force iOS to properly
bubble a `click` resulting from a tap (essentially, method 2 from
https://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2014/02/mouse_event_bub.html)
This is sufficient (except in rare cases where the user does manage to tap
on the body itself, rather than any child elements of body - which is not
very likely in an iOS phone/tablet scenario for most layouts) to get iOS to
get a grip and do the correct event bubbling/delegation, meaning the regular
"click" event will bubble back to the `<body>` when tapping outside of the dropdown,
and the dropdown will close properly (just like it already does, even without
this fix, in non-iOS touchscreen devices/browsers, like Chrome/Android and
Windows on a touch laptop).
This approach, though a bit hacky, has no impact on the DOM structure, and
has no unforeseen side effects on touch-enabled laptops/desktops. And crucially,
it works just fine in iOS.
* Remove dropdown backdrop styles
* Update doc for dropdowns and touch-enabled devices
...as touch is not exclusive to "mobile" anymore nowadays. also explicitly clarifies this is a fix for iOS, and that it impacts touch laptops etc as well. lastly, renames the variable from "dropdown" to "backdrop" for clarity/consistency
* Remove aria-expanded from collapse.js target element
aria-expanded="true"/aria-expanded="false" only applies to the trigger,
not the element that is being expanded/collapsed.
* Tweak collapse.js accessibility section
...to make it clearer that the aria-expanded attribute always just goes
on the control.
* Fix collapse.js unit tests
- reword some of the text to make it clear we're checking behavior of
trigger/control
- move incorrect aria-expanded out of the <div>s and to the actual
trigger/control <a>s
- fix incorrect test assertion text output false -> true
While `placeholder` is nominally valid per spec
http://rawgit.com/w3c/html-api-map/master/index.html#accessible-name-and-description-calculation
it is inelegant, a fallback, and not supported in ios/safari/voiceover
and android/chrome/talkback, to name a few combinations
`aria-describedby` is also not really the right tool for providing a
name/label equivalent, so remove that from the list of possible
alternative methods / clarify how it can be used
- add .col-*-auto to the extend in our grid framework mixins so it gets padding
- this means we can avoid the col-12 classes in our docs for the responsive variants
The example code has the class `"modal fade"`, but the visible example has the class `"modal"`. `"fade"` appears to not work for modals that you do not intend to animate onto the page
- Justified and fill nav variants need .nav-item classes on the anchors in addition to .nav-link
- Fix broken styles for the .nav-justified class which wasn't actually doing what we needed it to
- revert back to display block for list items to prevent unwanted behaviors
- fixes a handful of other linked issues (see main thread)
- updates docs to include more utilities for the one example
— Rename display docs page
— Move print display utils to display utils page
— Drop remaining of responsive utils page as it's being replaced with display utils
— Update nav to reflect changes
* Drop -x and -y as they're all the same
- Also move -width to elsewhere in the vars because it makes no sense by spacers.
- Update values of -x and -y across main Sass and docs Sass.
* Update docs to reflect changes; link to spacing utils from options page
* Get this party started by removing mention of Normalize.css
* Nuke the old comment, consolidate to a single line and number as appropriate
* Bring over styles for HTML element from Normalize to Reboot
* Move margin override for body element from Normalize to Reboot
* Drop the block reset for HTML5 elements in IE9- from Normalize given we dropped IE9 support
* Building on previous commit, do the same thing for figure, figcaption, and main
* Remove IE9- display from Normalize given our browser support
* Drop IE8 figure margin because we're IE10+
* No need for the h1 overrides because we reset these font and margin styles anyway in _type.scss already
* Drop Safari 6 b and strong normalization because we're Safari 8+
* Remove mark styles for IE9- from Normalize
* Remove old iOS audio fixes from Normalize
* Remove IE9- display for progress from Normalize
* Remove more IE9- rules from Normalize
* One more IE9- display removal for canvas element
* Move pre overrides from Normalize to Reboot
* Move over some link resets to Reboot, drop others
- Move over background-color and text-decoration
- Drop focus outline change given it affects the offset on hover of
focused links
* Move over more code element resets, consolidate with pre overrides, too
* Move over sub and sup wholesale
* Move over img normalization to Reboot
* Move over SVG override too
* - Drop dupe hidden, but add comment for it
- Move over template
- Move over summary
* Remove bulk of @viewport comment
* edit down that code comment
* consolidate html-based normalizations
* update comments
* Consolidate abbr styles
* move over more type elements
* move over hr changes
* move over form controls and more
* move over button resets
* move over firefox button changes
* move over search changes and more
* we nuke all these styles for fieldsets anyway, so outright remove them
* no need for those, we override them
* move over legend, fieldset, progress
* line break
* delete normalize file
* linting
* update comment
* clarify docs mentions of normalize and reboot
* remove normalize excludes from linter
* remove normalize excludes from cli task
* linting
* callout license since we forked part of normalize
* Improve comments, move table background reset to .table class instead of in reboot
* trailing space
On small screens (< 576px), all documentation pages containing
`.bd-example` styled tags, show the horizontal scrollbar because of a
wrong horizontal margin property.
This PR sets the horizontal margin on gutter width basis instead of rem.
Double up :hover styles to also apply on :focus (particularly the
masthead button needs this, as otherwise it gives no visible indication
of being focused)
Tried redoing this in flexbox, but it falls apart really quickly. Any changes in height of the cells throws it all off since the rows become columns (and thus, content across columns cannot be equally sized). Rather than implement something with such glaring flaws, I'm nuking it outright.
- Renames .pos-f-t to .fixed-top, adds .fixed-bottom and .sticky-top
- Updates utilities Sass to be split across more files (one for position, sizing, and spacing)
* Update ie10-viewport-bug-workaround.js year
* Update narrow-jumbotron copyright year to 2017
* Update carousel/index.html copyright year to 2017
* Update browsers-devices.md copyright year to 2017
* Update change-version.js copyright year to 2017