Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris Hill-Scott
c4544eb833 Add API key component
This commit adds a component for showing an API key. Usage:

```jinja
{{ from 'components/api-key.html' import api_key }}
{{ api_key('e1b0751388f3cd0fc9982c701acdb3c2') }}
```

Depending on the user’s browser, it works in three different ways.

No Javascript
---
The API key is shown on the page.

Older browsers with Javascript
---
The API key is hidden, and users can click a button to reveal it.

Newer browsers that support copying to clipboard without Flash
---
As above, but when the key is shown there is a button which copies it to the
clipboard. This is acheived by using
[this polyfill](https://www.npmjs.com/package/query-command-supported)
to reliably detect browser support for the ‘copy’ command.

The styling of the component is a bit different to the initial sketch. I think
a grey button works better than green. Green feels like it’s going to take you
somewhere else.
2016-01-17 09:39:09 +00:00
Chris Hill-Scott
6bcbeaef70 Install GOV.UK Elements + Frontend Toolkit w/ NPM
Because:
- GOV.UK elements is now published with a package.json that only install the
  SASS files (https://github.com/alphagov/govuk_elements/pull/156)
- We can drop Git submodules, so one less dependency management tool

This commit also changes the `gulpfile.js` and `main.scss` files to use the
assets from `node_modules` rather than the Git submodules.
2016-01-14 16:45:26 +00:00
Chris Hill-Scott
1b7658e09a Fix flakiness with Gulp + Travis
Gulp was failing silently on Travis. I tracked this down to the task that
builds a custom, slimmed-down version of jQuery from source.

To fix this I’ve removed the task and replaced it with just `src`ing the
minified version of jQuery from `node_modules`.

Cons:
- A few more kb of JS

Pros:
- Less random, afternoon-chewing complexity
2016-01-12 15:16:16 +00:00
Chris Hill-Scott
74da3b1adf Use EcmaScript 6, w/ transpiling for compatibility
ES6 has some nice new features. Specifically relevant to this piece of
work are:

Arrow functions[1], whose `this` context is bound the value of `this` in the
current scope and can’t be overidden. The code is cleaner as a result, and
doesn’t need the addition of a bind polyfill for older browsers.

Template strings[2], which are similar to triple-quoted multi line strings in
Python. This means less fiddly and error-prone string concatenation.

This commit adds Babel[3] to the Gulp pipeline. This transpiles Javascript
written to the ES6 specification into code which is compatible with older
browsers that don’t understand ES6 syntax.

It also rewrites the gulpfile itself using some ES6 syntax, for the same reasons.

1. https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Functions/Arrow_functions
2. https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/template_strings
3. https://babeljs.io
2016-01-06 09:39:42 +00:00
Chris Hill-Scott
3ed415fb75 Enhance message textbox by styling placeholders
Users can add placeholders to their messages, eg

> …your vehicle ((registration number))

when the message is sent, this gets replaced with the data the user uploads, eg

> …your vehicle LC12 BFL

We reckon that it will be useful to see that the placeholder has been
recognised, ie that its syntax is correct, before uploading any data.

We reckon that the best way to do this is by styling it differently to the rest
of the text that the user types.

This is not a trivial problem. There are two possible ways to do it:

1 Write a Google Docs-style text rendering engine, which completely replaces
  the native HTML `<textarea>` with a custom control, and programme what should
  happen when the user types something that looks like a placeholder, or
  presses an arrow key, or makes a selection, or…
2 Leave the `<textarea>` in place, unmodified, and duplicate layers in front
  of/behind it to visually replace a placeholder with the blue lozenge

Unsurprisingly, this commit implements 2.

There are four layers. Each layer contains live-updated copy of the text in the
textbox, and each is styled differently:
- one layer behind the textbox to make the blue background
- the textbox itself
- a layer with the white text, which overlays the black text of the textbox
- a layer with an inner shadow to knock back the brackets

This is because of some interesting limitations:
- The text in the foreground and background must occupy the same physical space,
  so no deleting characters from the duplicated layers
- Words can’t be split up into multiple elements,
  eg `<span>((</span>regist…`:—this results in slightly different kerning to
  `((regis…`, which messes up the alignment of the layers
- The textbox can’t be completely overlapped with a block of colour, because
  the cursor disappears behind it. Trying to edit text when you can’t see the
  cursor is hard.

Implementation

Technically this makes use of Paul Hayes work on Javascript modules in the
GOV.UK frontend toolkit[1].

It also makes use of the `oninput` event to detect changes to the textbox’s
contents. This is much more performant than `onkeydown`, `onpaste`, etc. Without
it the delay between user input and the layers all updating is too slow and you
see misalignment of the layers.

1. https://github.com/alphagov/govuk_frontend_toolkit/pull/227
2016-01-06 09:39:42 +00:00
Chris Hill-Scott
5ebeec08ae Use a Node-based tools for handling assets
…or how to move a bunch of things from a bunch of different places into
`app/static`.

There are three main reasons not to use Flask Assets:
- It had some strange behaviour like only
- It was based on Ruby SASS, which is slower to get new features than libsass,
  and meant depending on Ruby, and having the SASS Gem globally installed—so
  you’re already out of being a ‘pure’ Python app
- Martyn and I have experience of doing it this way on Marketplace, and we’ve
  ironed out the initial rough patches

The specific technologies this introduces, all of which are Node-based:
- Gulp – like a Makefile written in Javascript
- NPM – package management, used for managing Gulp and its related dependencies
- Bower – also package management, and the only way I can think to have
  GOV.UK template as a proper dependency

…speaking of which, GOV.UK template is now a dependency. This means it can’t be
modified at all (eg to add a global `#content` wrapper), so every page now
inherits from a template that has this wrapper. But it also means that we have a
clean upgrade path when the template is modified.

Everything else (toolkit, elements) I’ve kept as submodules but moved them to a
more logical place (`app/assets` not `app/assets/stylesheets`, because they
contain more than just SASS/CSS).
2016-01-05 13:12:35 +00:00