Since that used to be the default shortcode notation
for our core "insert media" functionality, its important
to have this fixed and keep supporting "legacy" content
created with 3.0.
Makes setups which are completely driven by that file a bit easier
to automate, particularly if the same codebase is deployed
multiple times (e.g. to a staging and live instance)
Caused the UploadField rows to show "[Object object]" because
it tried to pass through a PHP object to JS without string casting
(the return used to be a string).
DO NOT MERGE: to be reviewed. Only i18n & Deprecation classes use
->getModules() as far as I can see. Given that the method still simply
returns an array of modulename => modulepath, I don't think it's really
an API change
The generic email template encapsulates the "body" content in a paragraph mark. This is undesirable as it can lead to invalid HTML. Rather than using a paragraph, it is better to have a div encapsulating the content.
The underlying reason for this is that $Body is usually HTML and this can included block elements (div, p, etc...) that are not allowed within paragraphs (p).
It is important that the HTML is valid, because it will reduce the likelihood for it being marked as spam, because it is less likely to show up strange formatting and for use of tools like emogrifier.
The parser could sometimes generate invalid code if the
source-file-comments were enabled, this moves the comments outside the
html-tag to circumvent these problems, update test as well.
This is related to how Zend_Date returns year for YYYY & yyyy format. Detailed explanation is here http://framework.zend.com/issues/browse/ZF-5297
Sample code (adapted the Datetimefield setValue() method) to highlight the problem:
include 'framework/thirdparty/Zend/Date.php';
$userValueObj = new Zend_Date(null, null, 'en_US');
$userValueObj->setTimezone('GMT');
$userValueObj->setDate('2012-01-01', 'YYYY-MM-dd');
$userValueObj->setTime('00:00:00', 'HH:mm:ss');
echo $userValueObj->get('YYYY-MM-dd HH:mm:ss', 'en_US'), "\n"; // returns 2011-01-01 00:00:00
echo $userValueObj->get('yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss', 'en_US'), "\n"; // returns 2012-01-01 00:00:00
This reverts commit 14b997eea3.
Its just not practical to use the Config API as it stands,
the add_extension() wrapper does more than just a Config->update().
Most use cases can be covered via YML, but any conditional
additions (e.g. in unit tests) can still benefit from the
add_extensions() shorthand.