So far, it worked fine if both `w`/`h` were enforced or neither.
If one was, then there was a chance one axis would end up 9999
pixel wide or tall. This worked fine when the `.svg` was inserted
using `<img>`, but now that it's using `<object>`, it now scales
down to zero.
The goal is to catch cases where the return value exists, but is
forgotten. There was a large enough number of them to turn this
into a real check. Initially, I just wanted to implement it to fix
the problems, then delete the code. But since this is so common, I
think it is worth the annoyance.
Right now the UML template write many files which were not tracked
by CMake. This caused them to be missing from the doc since the
post-processing was added.
Previously, clients were displayed even when they were not tagged
or minimized. This was fixed in the shims. However, some examples
never created tags, so the client were never tagged, thus no longer
displayed.
This is an attempt at solving several problems reported by novice
users. The old rendering was very compact and quite fine once you
got used to its, ..., "conventions". But it was also sometime rather
hard to read.
First of all, it abused bold and italic. It also "merged" optional
parameters and parameters with default content. It got worst when
the documentation was spread over mutiple lines.
For property types and constructors with large number of parameters,
it was also quite unreadable.
The new representation, while far from perfect, is less dense and
more explicit. It has a separate column for "optional" using the
new "metadata chip" documentation concept. It is also an aligned
table and correctly renders multi-line documentation.
Finally, it adds a "note" message when the named parameter convention
is used. This way the users looking at the examples will be less
confused.
It no longer does `foo(bar[,bar=42])` and will rather do `(foo, bar)`.
This is easier to read and some new user are no familiar with the
optional parameter convention. They copy/paste the mangled value in
their config and end up with invalid Lua.
Below a screen width of 768px (Bootstrap's "medium" breakpoint)
the sidebar will collapse to a small strip. Hovering the sidebar will
fully reveal it until the mouse leaves it.
Clicking the sidebar will reveal it until another part of the page is
clicked.
* Rendering problems
* Incomplete type information
* Obsolete type information
* Missing type information
* Missing return value
* Incomplete return value type
It is hard know to which row a "chip" like inherited belongs to. This
fixes it for mouse users.
I also tried using alternate row colors, but our colors are so "light"
that there wasn't any good candidate between "white" and the <body>
background color.
This removes the hardcoded foreground color and inherit it from
the browser and/or CSS stylesheet.
This commit only support the foreground colors, future changes could
extend it to support all standard colors.