- Added an example on how to setup a controller with a form
- Notice about adding form methods to $allowed_actions
- Using the FormField::create() in all examples
- Corrected some errors in the examples that did not work
- Aligned docs to use 120 chars lines
Fixed broken links. Hash links were not working. I don’t know how to hide heading-anchor-link links. Tried to correct some layout errors (code quotes).
I replaced the subclassing example by one using a DataExtension. This
is the preferred way to add extra functionality to the Image class. You
can now add any existing image from the assets section instead of only
those belonging to the subclass.
Added a warning not to use has_many relations, because the UploadField
doesn't fully support them.
Documentation for the uploadfield. Only the implementation in the CMS
is documented, as the field doesn't seem to fully support being used in
the frontend just yet.
This is a measure to support form fields and controllers
interacting with files in different contexts,
for example an UploadField used in a ModelAdmin,
or a website frontend. The check for 'CMS_ACCESS_AssetAdmin'
was too restricting. This wasn't a problem in 2.x simply because
the old FileField/Upload classes didn't respect File->can*()
permissions.
In locales other than en_US, as a result of missing jQuery locale
files, the DatePicker defaulted to English whenever day and monthnames
were used, breaking validation. Needed to change official locale files
before adding, because Zend_Date and jQuery day/monthnames not matching
again breaks validation.
Removed hard setting the names to uppercase, breaking validation for
other locales
Changed order in convert_iso_to_jquery_format(), to prevent EEE(E)
settings from being overwritten
Added a check for existing locale files, and made DatePicker fallback
to ISO yyy-MM-dd if a missing locale file would otherwise break
validation.
Added documentation for the DateField
The current guides have a few areas where they recommend an approach that is more complex than what most people take.
- Rebase straight onto upsteam/msaster
- Force push a rebased branch
I also fixed the conflict resolution help to be relevant to rebase commands, and kept the push instruction out of the rebase instruction.
I don't know what that release candidate branch stuff is, but:
* I've never seen any of the core team do it
* I think it's overkill for most patches
* I think it's being too prescriptive: if contributors want to do that, that's cool, but it doesn't affect the core team.
* It makes our contributing guidelines more complex than they need to be.
The guidelines for contributing code were scattered across a section of contributing.md and collaboration-on-git.md. I've updated this to have separate contributing/code.md page with all the content in a single cohesive page. We also have contributing/documentation.md, contributing/issues.md and contributing/translation.md.
The entire framework repo (with the exception of system-generated files) has been amended to respect the 120c line-length limit. This is in preparation for the enforcement of this rule with PHP_CodeSniffer.
Adds three extra methods to Data/SQLQuery query that allow for starting
a disjunctive subgroup, a conjunctive subgroup and for ending a subgroup.
Database::sqlWhereToString() now builds up the WHERE clause one by one
instead of with a straight implode. Uses a stack to know which conenctive
to use.
The documentation was quite verbose, and most of this can be replaced
with instructions on using PHP Manager for IIS which sets up most of
the PHP configuration for us, with small tweaks done afterwards.
In addition, there were references to SVN version control locations
which are long since used, we now refer to stable download locations
on silverstripe.org instead, for SilverStripe as well as the mssql
module.
In addition to supporting IIS 7+ with a note that IIS 6 *may* work,
mark the IIS 6.x install docs with a cautionary note that those instructions
are no longer maintained and may not work.