The way that we collapse column headings so that they don’t take up any
vertical space is by setting their `font-size` to zero. However this
seems to take them out of the flow of the document, so their top border
also disappears. This commit sets the `font-size` to the smallest
non-zero value to avoid this.
For two reasons:
- it’s extra stuff in tour that users dont yet need to know about
- test messages are hidden from the dashboard, so you’d have no
visibility of when they were sending once you’d scheduled them
If a job is scheduled then we can’t show the notifications yet, and the
progress report will stay at 0%.
In their place we should show what time a job will start.
Later on (when the API is ready) this area of the page should also show
a cancel button.
On the dashboard:
- adds a new ‘in the next 24 hours’ section to the dashboard which lists
upcoming jobs
- tweaks some spacing on the dashboard so that it doesn’t look like too
much of a mess
- don’t show scheduled jobs in the table of normal jobs
On the jobs page:
- don’t show scheduled jobs
The GOV.UK content style guide says:
> - 5:30pm (not 1730hrs)
> - midnight (not 00:00)
> - midday (not 12 noon, noon or 12pm)
This commit changes all times to be 12h not 24h, and adds a special case
for when a time is exactly 12:00am or 12:00pm.
`status` will be deprecated at some point. `job_status` is what gets
set to `scheduled` to show that a job has been scheduled for some time
in the future.
Users need to pick a time in the next 24hrs, or send a file immediately.
Rationale for this is a bit lost in time-before-holiday, but generally:
‘Now’ and ‘later’ as the inital choices makes it really clear what
this feature is about conceptually.
The choice of times is absolute, eg ‘1pm’ not ‘in 3 hours’
Because the placeholder highlighting was defined in pixels it got
slightly out of line when it was used at larger type sizes, eg inside a
heading.
By using `em`s it will scale with the size of the type.
The job is complete when all notifications are delivered or failed.
The report is complete once we have all notifications are in the
database.
This commit changes the meaning of the percentage from the former to the
latter. This is how it was before we removed the aggregate stats for
jobs.
This is just some refactoring.
`defaultdict` is a data structure which won’t raise a `KeyError` if you
try to access a key that doesn’t exist.
By passing `int` as the first argument, trying to access the value of
any key that doesn’t exists will return the value of `int()`, ie `0`
It’s useful to know how many notifications we’ve handed off to our
providers. This is a measure of how complete the processing of the job
is.
This is important, because once the job processing is complete then you
can accurately reconcile the report with the CSV file that you’ve
uploaded.
The mesaure on these pages was too short, making them awkward to read.
Also varies the size of text boxes to make them appropriate to the
expected size of content that they will contain.
The previous text on this page around trial mode was a bit of a
mouthful. Also it only really made sense if you already knew what trial
mode was.
This commit tries to make it really explicit:
- that you’re in trial mode
- what it means to be in trial mode (copied from the trial mode page)
- where you go to not be in trial mode
This was an early reckon feature. There were a few of problems with
it:
- it worked on the service, not just on the API keys as described
- it was back to front, ‘suspending’ a service set `active` to `True`,
reactivating it set `active` to `False`
- no part of the API actually respected the `active` flag on a service
The same intent can be acheived by either:
- revoking an API key
- having a platform admin put your service back into trial mode
So this commit removes the link and the code behind it.