As it may happens that the codemirror content flows underneath the
status bar, this patch should help to avoid it. It adds the size of the
status bar as margin-bottom so the codemirror window itself is forced
above the statusbar.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
When people link a section or use the ToC to scroll to it upwards, it
happens that those become hidden behind the navbar.
This patch adds a little hack from StackOverflow[1] in order to fix this
problem. By adding a pseudo element in front of any field that contains
an id, it's possible to add the needed space.
There was no negative impact found except of marking around the header
areas in the rendered view requires a bit preciser work. This needs some
more detailed testing.
[1]: https://stackoverflow.com/a/24298427
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
When introducing night mode the rule for the background of the view
switches seems to be generated from the view button.
This patch should change the introduced rule to fix for all default
buttons.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
Octicon no longer provides its CSS classes and this way is useless in
CodiMD. Replacing all used classes in the UI and remove it from build
system.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
The ToC generated broken HTML with unclosed `<li>` tags. This got fixed
as well as some minor optimisation and adding list elements for the
subentries so the elements appear in the ToC while scrolling.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
We have some issues with night mode and the font color. This should fix
this in the permission table and the delete node modal. As well as some
picture styling.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
Night mode provides a generally, dark interface. This fix provides the
needed CSS to also turn modal and panels into night mode design as well.
This mainly effects the help modal.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>
HTML5 provides a wide feature set of useful elements. Since Markdown
usually supports HTML it should be able to use these HTML5 tags as well.
As they were requested by some users and they where checked for being
safe, whitelisting them isn't a problem. To make the experience the same
as on GitHub when it comes to the basic look and feel of the rendered
markdown, some CSS was added to make the summary and the details tag
look like on GitHub.
Signed-off-by: Sheogorath <sheogorath@shivering-isles.com>