Doesn't have much effect in practice, because charset and collation
are already hardcoded on an ALTER TABLE level (field definitions),
which take priority. Since most MySQL installs will still default
to a latin1 encoding, this propagates to the table though,
confusing devs and in some cases causing wrong data.
Example: A MSSQL->MySQL DB migration tool used the table metadata
to determine the charset, creating encoding issues.
In terms of hardcoding, we don't really support anything other than UTF8,
and the field-level settings are already hardcoded.
We should probably remove the field-specific settings and rely
on the DB defaults, but that's a sensitive API change
(need to set on existing DBs during upgrade).
It produces invalid HTML since the "for" attribute doesn't
map to any HTML input field. Each individual checkbox or radio button
input element has its own <label for>
- Based on new (last) translation download from getlocalization.com
- Removed untranslated strings. Getlocalization started including those at some point
which is highly annoying, unnecessary and breaks the new transfix system,
since it'll mark all of the english strings as actual translations
- Avoid dots in entities. It confuses the Transifex YML parser
- Removed some locales unknown to Transifex which didn't have any translations anyway
- Removed "lolcat" locale, uses custom notation (en@lolcal)
which SilverStripe's i18n system can't handle
(needs mapping from SS naming to Zend naming)
- Renamed "Te Reo/Maori" locale from "mi_NZ" to "mi" (Transifex/CLDR notation)
- Namespaced all entities used in templates (deprecated usage)
- Converted dots to underscores where template filenames are used for namespaces,
since Transifex YML parsing handles them as separate YML keys otherwise
- Removed whitespace in entity names, SilverStripe i18n can't handle it
- Only allow selection of locales registered through i18n::$all_locales to avoid
issues with unknown locales in Zend's CLDR database
Allow DataList::limit() to take a null value to remove the limit.
Added tests for limit(). Note the one failure, currently the ORM doesn't support unlimited values with an offset.
The function "first" on ArrayList uses the PHP function "reset", which
returns false if there aren't any elements in the array. Two functions
inside ArrayList use this function, "canFilterBy" and "byID". I've
changed these functions to catch the possibility of a false return from
first().