Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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If the server has a clock running a bit ahead of the web browsing client,
relativedate could cause somewhat confusing displays like "3 seconds from now"
for just posted things.
As a hack, avoid displaying times in the future if they're less than a
small slip forward. I chose 30 minutes because both client and server could
be wrong in different directions, while it's still close enough that "just
now" is not horribly wrong.
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This adds support for gecko and newer versions of opera
to call onload once the DOM is ready, rather than waiting for
all images in the page to load. Makes relativedate behave
somewhat better.
Dealing with this means jumping into the browser
incompatability waters that I prefer to avoid.
Full solutions for most of the major browsers are listed here:
http://dean.edwards.name/weblog/2006/06/again/
However, no *license* is listed there, so I can't use that code. Also, the more
involved code appears to have various issues (such as the inline IE code not
working via https). So I only added the simple call to a hook needed
for gecko/opera.
It seems that the only standards-compliant way to do this is using the
`defer` attribute to a `script` tag, using an external script that will be
loaded once the DOM is ready, and can call onload. However, that has
browser compatability issues of its own, since not all browsers honor
`defer`.
Perhaps I should really just be using one of the javascript frameworks, that
include code to solve this for the major browsers. But something about them
still puts me off, and this issue is minor enough that I'm willing to live
with incomplete support for now.
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Clearly it's suboptimal for it to be loaded twice, but this is a quick fix
at least.
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relative, in a very nice way, if I say so myself.
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* Add an underlay for javascript, and add ikiwiki.js containing some utility
code.
* toggle: Stop embedding the full toggle code on each page using it, and
move it to toggle.js in the javascript underlay.
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