Because some people don’t know they can put their own logo on letters:
> The HM Government Logo is at the top of the letter and we can't see
> a way of putting the [organisation] logo on
> We are intending to use the letter template feature for the first time
> and wondered whether the branding is configurable or whether the HM
> Government header is the standard default.
> Can we replace HM Government logo with our own in the letter? IF yes,
> then how?
> I don't seem to be able to set the branding on the letters to be
> [organisation]. it's always HM government. Is there something that
> needs enabling for this account?
No-one actually wants the HM Government logo (no-one is sending real
letters using it). So we should leave the space blank and put a button
there prompting people to add their own logo.
The contact block fills from the bottom upwards. So if it only has a few
lines then the ‘Edit’ link button sits quite far away from where the
text appears in the letter. This commit moves the link button to bottom
align with the contact block, so it’s always in close visual proximity.
Previously they were relative (ie percentages). This made sure that they
worked on mobile, when the letter might be narrower.
However it broke when the preview was more than one page, because
13% of the height of 2 pages is different to 13% of the height of one
pages.
This commit changes the positions to be pixel values, which match the
calculated percentage values when the preview is one page.
Not sure how these got out of line (maybe when we brought the date into
the left-hand text area). But this commit updates the percentages to
match the comments.
This is so it’s clear from the position of the link which part of the
letter you’re editing.
Letter templates have (or will have) multiple different editable
regions. I think that the most intuitive way for this to work is to have
- an edit link for each of these areas
- positioned next to the thing to be edited
Again, this isn’t fully hooked up, but since no-one is using letters
live yet this is a good way of getting research feedback and pointing
towards where we want the feature to go.
Uses percentages for the positioning so that the alignment is maintained
on mobile.