- Feb 25, 2011
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The Great Git Migration authored
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- Dec 01, 2006
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Gerhard Killesreiter authored
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Gerhard Killesreiter authored
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- Mar 28, 2006
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Gerhard Killesreiter authored
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- Mar 09, 2006
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Steven Wittens authored
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- Mar 01, 2006
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Steven Wittens authored
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- Feb 05, 2006
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Steven Wittens authored
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- Jan 12, 2006
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Steven Wittens authored
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- Dec 21, 2005
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Steven Wittens authored
- JS Updater: stop monitoring progress when 100% is reached (can lead to infinite refresh loops in Safari)
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- Dec 19, 2005
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Dries Buytaert authored
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- Dec 06, 2005
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Dries Buytaert authored
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- Sep 07, 2005
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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 :).
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- Aug 31, 2005
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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.
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