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.
This is the companion setting to canUpload, letting you control whether existing files from the asset store can be referenced. It's particularly useful when using UploadField on the front-end.
Although editing meta-data or deleting permanently would require File editing/deleting permissions, merely linking to a record does not. This change is important for allowing front-end use of UploadField; or, more importantly, use of UploadFile by people without CMS rights.
The field carries the configuration, and some non-upload functionality
like "attach files" still relies on the fileupload jQuery plugin
being initialized.
Conflicts:
templates/UploadField.ss
The field carries the configuration, and some non-upload functionality
like "attach files" still relies on the fileupload jQuery plugin
being initialized.
Add extra preview-mode selector to the CMS actions so we can show
something when the preview is closed (and with it all options are not
visible).
Thanks @mateusz, @clarkepaul and @robert-h-curry for contributing.
Put "File upload complete" and "back to folder" together. Turned 'File
upload' into a message, and updated the message styles.
Moved allowed file types into the area where users are uploading files.
This is a temporary fix until js tooltips are implemented, at which
point, these details will be shown when clicking a question mark beside
"Choose files".
Added small animation effect to files when opening iframe to edit. Now
slides down, rather than just appearing open
Linked to silverstripe/silverstripe-cms#223
The existence of .ss-tabset triggers JS which applies $.tabs(),
and in turn interprets the first available link as the tab navigation.
jQuery UI subsequently tries to ajax-load this link, which is not
desired. Instead, $.tabs() should *only* be applied to a container
DOM element with .cms-tabset applied.
This is reverting templates back to pre-3.0 conventions,
which were dominated by XHTML templates.
HTML5 allows both self-closing and unclosed tags,
so opting for self-closing to achieve maximum compatibility.