Skip to content
  1. Feb 25, 2011
  2. Dec 01, 2006
  3. Mar 28, 2006
  4. Mar 09, 2006
  5. Mar 01, 2006
  6. Feb 05, 2006
  7. Jan 12, 2006
  8. Dec 21, 2005
  9. Dec 19, 2005
  10. Dec 06, 2005
  11. Sep 07, 2005
    • Steven Wittens's avatar
      Fixes for AJAX/JS stuff in Konqueror: · 7f73c2bf
      Steven Wittens authored
      - Fix collapsible fieldsets (broken since to 'IE5 icons alignment' fix)
      - Fix JS upload (broken due to mysterious form submission abortion bug)
      
      Thanks Bèr for letting me use VNC :).
      7f73c2bf
  12. Aug 31, 2005
    • Dries Buytaert's avatar
      - Patch #28483 by Steven: JavaScript enabled uploading. · e03ce2f9
      Dries Buytaert authored
        Comment from Steven: It does this by redirecting the submission of the form to a hidden <iframe> when you click "Attach" (we cannot submit data through Ajax directly because you cannot read file contents from JS for security reasons).  Once the file is submitted, the upload-section of the form is updated.  Things to note:
      
          * The feature degrades back to the current behaviour without JS.
          * If there are errors with the uploaded file (disallowed type, too big, ...), they are displayed at the top of the file attachments fieldset.
          * Though the hidden-iframe method sounds dirty, it's quite compact and is 100% implemented in .js files. The drupal.js api makes it a snap to use.
          * I included some minor improvements to the Drupal JS API and code.
          * I added an API drupal_call_js() to bridge the PHP/JS gap: it takes a function name and arguments, and outputs a <script> tag. The kicker is that it preserves the structure and type of arguments, so e.g. PHP associative arrays end up as objects in JS.
          * I also included a progressbar widget that I wrote for drumm's ongoing update.php work. It includes Ajax status updating/monitoring, but it is only used as a pure throbber in this patch. But as the code was already written and is going to be used in the near future, I left that part in. It's pretty small ;). If PHP supports ad-hoc upload info in the future like Ruby on Rails, we can implement that in 5 minutes.
      e03ce2f9