Changes the check to say ‘does the user have any live services’ rather
than ‘are all their services in trial mode’. The former is closer to
meaning the thing we care about.
Also has the opportunity to short-circuit without having to go through
the full list.
Only users who work for government can accept the terms of use. This
will save us from having to email these requesters back telling them
they need to find someone else to submit the request.
We suggest people format their numbers with commas when telling us how
many things they’re going to send.
This causes problems when we paste these values into a spreadsheet,
because the commas get interpreted as column separators.
This is better because it saves vertical space for the contents of the
pop-up menu.
This commit also adds some padding to the cancel and clear buttons, to
make them easier targets to hit.
Being able to see how many things you have selected gives you positive
feedback that reinforces that what you’ve done has been recognised. It
helps you understand the implications of your actions (ie you see ‘3
selected’ before you press the ‘Move’ button). And it gives you an
escape hatch the get out of the state you’re in by providing the ‘Clear’
button.
We also found in prototyping that having a ‘Nothing selected’ message
helps draws people’s attention to the checkboxes when they first
encounter the folders feature.
This commit implements the counter and the cancel button. It tries to
follow the existing patterns for this module.
We ‘shim’ the sticky element so that its space in the page is reserved
while it is sticky.
This means the shim have have the same height as the sticky element.
It’s height was not getting set because of a missing semicolon in the
shim element’s `style` attribute.
Otherwise we can end up collecting invalid email addresses…
This required some refactoring to allow our email fields to be optional
(but not by default).
We adjust the spacing under the textbox when doing the send one off
flow. This was based on the assumption that there would always be a
sticky header in the send one off flow.
This assumption is no longer true, so this commit implements the same
spacing in an independent way.
After showing this to a few people the consensus seems to be that
‘Templates’ isn’t itself a folder. Therefore it shouldn’t have a folder
icon.
This has the advantage of disambiguating between being in a folder:
> [screenshot]
…and being in a subfolder:
> [screenshot]
The idea behind the sticky textbox on this page is so you can scroll
through a long email or letter to find where in the message the
placeholder appears, while still being able to see the textbox you
should be typing in.
With text messages, they’re hardly ever long enough for anything to be
off the screen – ie no scrolling is required.
However if the user does scroll, they can end up covering the message
content with the sticky top panel. Which then looks like the message
has disappeared, so they click ‘back’ in the browser, then click into
the message again to make the page reload.
This commit removes the stickyness when sending from a text message
template.