Standardise template locations
Move CMSSettingsController class to SiteConfig module
Fix CMSMenu behaviour for namespaced admin sections
Split classes into one per file
Manual fixes and cleanup
API Introduce HTMLFragment as casting helper for HTMLText with shortcodes disabled
API Introduce DBField::CDATA for XML file value encoding
API RSSFeed now casts from the underlying model rather than by override
API Introduce CustomMethods::getExtraMethodConfig() to allow metadata to be queried
BUG Remove _call hack from VirtualPage
API Remove FormField::$dontEscape
API Introduce HTMLReadonlyField for non-editable readonly HTML
API FormField::Field() now returns string in many cases rather than DBField instance.
API Remove redundant *_val methods from ViewableData
API ViewableData::obj() no longer has a $forceReturnObject parameter as it always returns an object
BUG Fix issue with ViewableData caching incorrect field values after being modified.
API Remove deprecated DB class methods
API Enforce plain text left/right formfield titles
Also created a contributing/coding_conventions landing page separately from the PHP ones, since we now need to account for JS and CSS conventions as well
* Swap out .Actions class for bootstrap .btn-toolbar
* Converted all south toolbars to use new toolbar component styles, content and preview styles for scrollbars adjusted where required
* More pointers to new build tooling docs in upgrading guide
* Fixed docs references to moved files
We don't want to mandate every module to switch from javascript/ to client/src,
but at the same time shouldn't reference non-existant files and confuse newcomers that way.
* More pointers to new React docs
The Bay of Plenty Rugby team is the Steamers, and play in the NPC (National Provincial Championship), hailing from the Te Ika a Maui (North Island).
The Canterbury Crusaders (note the alliteration) hail from Te Waipounamu (South Island), and are an entry in the Super Rugby championship, which is an international affair (also known as the Super12, Super15 & most recently Super18), in which the Bay of Plenty is (most unfortunately, depending on your disposition) drafted under the Waikato region's entry with The Chiefs. Being the most popular sport and widely announced news topic in the country means that even people that don't particuarly follow rugby know this, and simple trolls (whether intentional or not) cannot be allowed to slide past quality control; for those that do can get quite upset about this kind of thing. Plus international folk can't be getting the wrong idea; Everyone knows the internet is no place for misinformation!