- modify controller.Users.current() to return the user's groups
- update test_current() unit tests to expect empty groups list in results
- modify Main_page, Notebook_rss, Front_page, Tour_page, and Upgrade_page to accept a new groups parameter
- Main_page should add it as a hidden HTML variable
- update Wiki.js to read the hidden groups variable and display the groups in account settings
* Implemented new controller.Notebooks.load_recent_updates() method.
* Added new Wiki.js total_notes_count_updated signal
* Added "more" and "less" links to "recent updates" table.
* Updated Wiki.js Recent_notes to support new "more" and "less" links.
* Commented out unfinished discussion forums unit test.
* controller.Notebooks now takes (and stores) an https_url constructor parameter.
* New controller.Notebooks.updates() method to produce an updates RSS feed for a particular notebook.
* New controller.Notebooks.get_update_link() method to make a brief page with just a link for an updated note, referred to by the feed.
* Implemented views for the new RSS feed.
* Fixed bug in Rss_item's guid that caused newlines to be inserted before and after long URLs.
* Still need to unit test new controller code.
* Put all expanders into <div>s, which are then wrapped in <td>s. This makes for better vertical centering, especially in IE.
* Modified Wiki.js to account for expanders now having yet another parent.
* Put note tree instructions in a <tr><td> instead of in a <div>, as <div>s alone don't belong in tables.
in IE6. Apparently Internet Explorer doesn't support appending rows directly
to tables. Fixed by adding a <tbody> to the table and appending to that
instead of the table itself.
Add a brief paragraph with instructions on how to add a note to the note tree, shown only when there are no notes there.
Added a heading for "recent notes", which should be filled out with links in a subsequent commit.
associated expanders.
* Waged an epic battle against the dark forces of CSS. Did you know that the
max-height property applies to nearly all HTML elements *except* tables? No?
Well neither did I until I looked it up, seriously wondered what the W3C
could have been smoking, and then proceeded to spend the next DAY AND A
FRICKING HALF making my table have a max-height without breaking any of my
other intricately arranged CSS. Victory is mine.