- Deleted /stylesheets folder
- Removed sass build from gulpfile
- Changed gov links to usa links
- Changed other govuk styles, like breadcrumbs
- Changed name of uk_components file to us_components
- Fixed a few tests that broke on account of the changes
Pill pages are:
- /notifications
- /template-usage
- /monthly
- /organisations/<organisation_id>
- /templates
Includes changes to:
- the folder-path component
- the page-header component
...all their h1s have the same id.
Includes:
- turning off :visited styles to match existing
design
- swapping heading classes used to make links bold
for the GOVUK Frontend bold override class
- adding visually hidden text to some links to
make them work when isolated from their context
We may need to revisit whether some links, such as
those for documentation and features, may benefit
from having some indication that their target has
been visited.
Includes:
- turning off :visited styles to match existing
design
- swapping heading classes used to make links bold
for the GOVUK Frontend bold override class
- adding visually hidden text to some links to
make them work when isolated from their context
We may need to revisit whether some links, such as
those for documentation and features, may benefit
from having some indication that their target has
been visited.
This makes the template statistics section of the dashboard look less
like its own weird thing and more like:
- the templates page
- the upcoming changes to the styling of the received text messages
banner on the dashboard
Generally, bigger click areas are better[1], as long as they don’t cause
ambiguity or accidental clicks.
This commit expands the clickable area of tables where the left-hand
column is a link to include the meta information under the link.
We can’t make the whole row clickable, because sometimes we have links
in the right hand column which go to a different place
This commit also removes the CSS for `.spark-bar-label`, because these
elements are visually identical to `file-list`s now.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fitts%27s_law
Did most of this work in:
https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-admin/pull/1118
> In pages specific to a service (e.g. dashboard and sub pages) the
> title needs to distinguish which service it applies to. This is mainly
> to give context to screen reader users who could be managing multiple
> services.
>
> Implementing this uses template inheritance:
>
> `page_title` includes `per_page_title` includes `service_page_title`
>
> ‘GOV.UK Notify’ is inserted into every page title.
>
> Pages that set `service_page_title` get the service name inserted too.
The dashboard looked a bit table-y. This commit makes four main changes:
- show a bar chart (drawn in CSS) for template usage (only shown if
you’ve used more than one template recently)
- only break down template usage by template name, not template type
(because that’s happening with the big numbers)
- change the style of the ‘show more’ links under each section so that
they are all consistent, and a little less busy (one less keyline)
- remove the ‘recent templates‘ title so that the first two sections of
the page group under ‘in the last 7 days’
Takes the number of emails and SMS fragments sent from:
https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-api/pull/273
Using these numbers it’s possible to show:
- how much of your allowance is left
- or how much you have spent
For now the allowance and rates are hard coded.
Only for users that have manage service.
> We show the last weeks template usage on the dashboard, which is
> great, but if you're looking for longer term trends, you're out of
> luck...
> So, let's let you see more on a more detailed page (linked from the
> dashboard). Initially this should just show you all templates that you
> have used ever and the count for each. Order same as dashboard, most
> popular first.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/117614585