Commit Graph

339 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Jenwald
7b5a540a52 Add (basic) support for Stylelint, to allow linting of CSS files
This is *similar* to the existing linting for JavaScript files, but covers CSS files instead.
While there's a lot of rules that could potentially be used, the main advantage of using Stylelint is that it has Prettier integration which means that we can automatically enforce a *consistent* style for our CSS files as well.

As a proof of concept, this patch is purposely limited to:
 - Adding a simple rule, here `block-no-empty` is chosen; see https://stylelint.io/user-guide/rules/block-no-empty
 - Adding Prettier integration, to unify the style of our CSS files.

Please find additional information at https://stylelint.io/
2020-08-30 21:48:35 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
66aabe3ec7 [api-minor] Add support for toggling of Optional Content in the viewer (issue 12096)
*Besides, obviously, adding viewer support:* This patch attempts to improve the general API for Optional Content Groups slightly, by adding a couple of new methods for interacting with the (more complex) data structures of `OptionalContentConfig`-instances. (Thus allowing us to mark some of the data as "private", given that it probably shouldn't be manipulated directly.)

By utilizing not just the "raw" Optional Content Groups, but the data from the `/Order` array when available, we can thus display the Layers in a proper tree-structure with collapsible headings for PDF documents that utilizes that feature.

Note that it's possible to reset all Optional Content Groups to their default visibility state, simply by double-clicking on the Layers-button in the sidebar.
(Currently that's indicated in the Layers-button tooltip, which is obviously easy to overlook, however it's probably the best we can do for now without adding more buttons, or even a dropdown-toolbar, to the sidebar.)

Also, the current Layers-button icons are a little rough around the edges, quite literally, but given that the viewer will soon have its UI modernized anyway they hopefully suffice in the meantime.

To give users *full* control of the visibility of the various Optional Content Groups, even those which according to the `/Order` array should not (by default) be toggleable in the UI, this patch will place those under a *custom* heading which:
 - Is collapsed by default, and placed at the bottom of the Layers-tree, to be a bit less obtrusive.
 - Uses a slightly different formatting, compared to the "regular" headings.
 - Is localizable.

Finally, note that the thumbnails are *purposely* always rendered with all Optional Content Groups at their default visibility state, since that seems the most useful and it's also consistent with other viewers.
To ensure that this works as intended, we'll thus disable the `PDFThumbnailView.setImage` functionality when the Optional Content Groups have been changed in the viewer. (This obviously means that we'll re-render thumbnails instead of using the rendered pages. However, this situation ought to be rare enough for this to not really be a problem.)
2020-08-30 16:28:40 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
ef5a5c142a
Merge pull request #12299 from Snuffleupagus/progressBar-indeterminate
Update the indeterminate progressBar to the new design (PR 11077 follow-up)
2020-08-30 16:14:01 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
d1cc382383
Merge pull request #12300 from Snuffleupagus/findbar-hover
Fix various :hover effects in the findbar (PR 11077 follow-up)
2020-08-30 16:07:43 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
931f2cff1e Fix various :hover effects in the findbar (PR 11077 follow-up)
This patch:
 - Removes the :hover effect from the `findMsg` element, since it's a simple span and clicking it *obviously* does nothing.
 - Given the way that the checkboxes are visually hidden, with `opacity: 0;` and absolute positioning, they are unfortunately still focusable (fixed by adding `pointer-events: none;`). To reproduce this, in `master`: Place the mouse pointer over the upper left-hand corner of the "Highlight all"-option, and notice that the :hover effect vanishes and clicking toggles the "Match case"-option instead.
2020-08-29 15:44:51 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
55e1dda52a Update the indeterminate progressBar to the new design (PR 11077 follow-up)
This special progressBar is only used in the (fortunately) rare case when a server doesn't provide a valid `Content-Length` header. Since this progressBar isn't normally seen, when testing the default viewer, it's certainly very easy to see why these CSS rules were missed during review.

Furthermore, this patch also makes a couple of *small* progressBar CSS tweaks not related to the colours.
2020-08-28 16:18:41 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
16f5080bef Tweak the vertical positions of the findbar and secondaryToolbar (PR 11077 follow-up)
With the changes in PR 11077, these panels are no longer aligned exactly with the *center* of the corresponding toolbar buttons. This is especially noticeable for the `findbar` at narrow viewer width.
2020-08-28 13:04:10 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
7762205c52 Reduce the leading padding for the numPages span (PR 11077 follow-up)
Currently there's enough leading padding that the `numPages` span feels somewhat "disconnected" from the `pageNumber` input, which seems unfortunate when they contain related state.
2020-08-23 16:21:07 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
2683f44b40 Update the zoom dropdown width calculation to work better in locales with long zoom-strings (PR 11077 follow-up)
With the changes in PR 11077, the zoom dropdown now looks "squashed" in locales with longer than average zoom-strings[1]. The reason is that the zoom-value and the dropdown-icon are too close together, which doesn't look good in affected locales.

To fix this, the following changes are made:
 - Increase the calculated dropdown width, in `Toolbar._adjustScaleWidth`, to account for the much wider icon (7 px -> 16 px) and the increased padding.
 - Move the dropdown-icon *slightly* outwards, and also *slightly* reduce the left (right in RTL locales) padding of the dropdown-contents.
 - Finally, remove the right (left in RTL locales) padding to reduce the chance of the *default* browser dropdown-icon being visible.

---
[1] This affects e.g. the `de` and `nl` locales, but there's probably other examples as well.
2020-08-20 09:57:42 +02:00
utopianknight
c0b671d91b Photon Design 2020-08-19 14:21:13 +04:00
Jonas Jenwald
8e32c17e85 Set direction: ltr; on the canvases used during printing (bug 1335712)
This essentially mirrors the CSS rules used for the viewer itself, see `web/pdf_viewer.css`, and according to my very quick tests it seems to fix https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1335712
2020-08-10 18:35:56 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
6e9da55a39 Extract common methods from PDFOutlineViewer/PDFAttachmentViewer into a new abstract BaseTreeViewer class
These two classes are unsurprisingly quite similar, and with upcoming changes[1] the amount of (essentially) duplicated code will increase even further.

Notable changes:
 - Collect shared functionality in the `BaseTreeViewer` class, reducing both current and future code-duplication.
 - Reduce unnecessary duplication in the CSS rules, which will be particularly useful with upcoming changes.
 - Tweak the attachmentsView to use links, rather than buttons, to simplify (primarily) the CSS rules.

---
[1] Once API support for "Optional Content" lands, I've got more-or-less finished patches to add viewer support as well.
2020-08-05 23:08:06 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
8521f70157 Add a new pdfjs.enablePermissions preference, off by default, to allow the PDF documents to disable copying in the viewer (bug 792816)
*Please note:* Most of the necessary API work was done in PR 10033, and the only remaining thing to do here was to implement it in the viewer.

The new preference should thus allow e.g. enterprise users to disable copying in the viewer, for PDF documents whose permissions specify that.

In order to simplify things the "copy"-permission was implemented using CSS, as suggested in https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792816#c55, which should hopefully suffice.[1]
The advantage of this approach, as opposed to e.g. disabling the `textLayer` completely, is first of all that it ensures that searching still works correctly even in copy-protected documents. Secondly this also greatly simplifies the overall implementation, since it doesn't require a lot of code for something that's disabled by default.

---
[1] As the discussion in the bug shows, this kind of copy-protection is not very strong and is also generally easy to remove/circumvent in various ways. Hence a simple solution, targeting "regular"-users rather than "power"-users is hopefully deemed acceptable here.
2020-04-08 18:20:47 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
63efe61245 Replace the RTL images with CSS transforms of the standard images (issue 11766)
This avoids unnecessary duplication of many images, thus reducing the size of PDF.js image resources slightly.

Note that since the images should only be flipped horizontally, this required specifying the horizontal/vertical scaling separately for the hiDPI-images.
2020-03-30 22:47:49 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
1dd617e091 Remove transition effects from toolbar buttons/fields
While Firefox originally used transition effects for browser UI toolbar buttons, that was removed years ago in https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1393057

Since the PDF.js viewer toolbar transitions were likely based on the Firefox ones, it seems reasonable that these transition effects are removed from PDF.js as well. Besides removing a bunch of CSS, this also makes the toolbar feel ever so slightly more "snappy" without these delays on mouse interaction.

(In order to make it more feasible to modernize/improve the viewer UI, trying to clean-up/simplify existing rules iteratively seems like the most reasonble way to make any progress here w.r.t. being able to test/review things.)
2020-03-11 14:02:39 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
ecbe0076fc Prevent the zoom dropdown icon from being overridden when the element is :active (bug 1619595)
This changes the dropdown icon from being set using the `background` CSS property, to being set with `::after` which is *similar* to all the other toolbar button icons (which use `::before`).
Also tweaks the dropdown `background-color` on `:hover` slightly, since the other changes made it too light.
2020-03-04 16:16:41 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
45e2ab80e4 Merge pull request #11570 from Snuffleupagus/zoom_adjustScaleWidth
Re-factor `Toolbar._adjustScaleWidth` to improve/simplify how the zoom dropdown width is calculated
2020-02-08 20:31:58 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
a73a38029c Merge pull request #11569 from Snuffleupagus/rm-most-setAttribute
Replace most remaining `Element.setAttribute("style", ...)` usage with `Element.style = ...` instead
2020-02-08 20:13:56 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
b54c1fe395 Re-factor Toolbar._adjustScaleWidth to improve/simplify how the zoom dropdown width is calculated
This patch contains some *much* needed clean-up of, and improvements to, this old code thus addressing a number of issues:

 - Set more reasonable *default* values for the widths, in `web/viewer.css`, since the current ones are actually too small even for the (default) `en-US` locale.
   This obviously result in a slightly larger zoom dropdown width for many locales, but the more consistent UI does look good to me.

 - Stop setting the `min-width`/`max-width` and just use `width` instead.

 - Set an explicit `height` of the zoom dropdown, in an attempt to get Google Chrome to display it with the same height as the toolbar buttons.

 - Remove additional `Element.setAttribute("style", ...)` usage.

 - Actually check *all* of the predefined l10n strings, since the old implementation (implicitly) assumed that the currently selected one was the longest (note e.g. the `ja-JP` locale where one string is considerably longer than the rest).

 - Stop invalidating the DOM multiple times when doing the measurements. This was achieved by using a temporary in-memory `canvas`, and we now only need to query the DOM once in order to get the current font properties of the zoom dropdown.
2020-02-08 15:29:29 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
5cbd44b628 Replace most remaining Element.setAttribute("style", ...) usage with Element.style = ... instead
This should hopefully be useful in environments where restrictive CSPs are in effect.
In most cases the replacement is entirely straighforward, and there's only a couple of special cases:
 - For the `src/display/font_loader.js` and `web/pdf_outline_viewer.js `cases, since the elements aren't appended to the document yet, it shouldn't matter if the style properties are set one-by-one rather than all at once.
 - For the `web/debugger.js` case, there's really no need to set the `padding` inline at all and the definition was simply moved to `web/viewer.css` instead.

*Please note:* There's still *a single* case left, in `web/toolbar.js` for setting the width of the zoom dropdown, which is left intact for now.
The reasons are that this particular case shouldn't matter for users of the general PDF.js library, and that it'd make a lot more sense to just try and re-factor that very old code anyway (thus fixing the `setAttribute` usage in the process).
2020-02-05 22:26:47 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
102142537f Update the left/right CSS calculation for the sidebarContainer HTML element to enable IE11 compatibility
As gross as this hack is, it nonetheless seem necessary to allow using CSS variables; see also https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/pull/11567#issuecomment-582166160
2020-02-05 20:13:21 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
cb61bdee34 Add support for CSS variables using the PostCSS CSS Variables package (issue 11462)
Having thought *briefly* about using `css-vars-ponyfill`, I'm no longer convinced that it'd be a good idea. The reason is that if we actually want to properly support CSS variables, then that functionality should be available in *all* of our CSS files.
Note in particular the `pdf_viewer.css` file that's built as part of the `COMPONENTS` target, in which case I really cannot see how a rewrite-at-the-client solution would ever be guaranteed to always work correctly and without accidentally touching other CSS in the surrounding application.

All-in-all, simply re-writing the CSS variables at build-time seems much easier and is thus the approach taken in this patch; courtesy of https://github.com/MadLittleMods/postcss-css-variables
By using its `preserve` option, the built files will thus include *both* a fallback and a modern `var(...)` format[1]. As a proof-of-concept this patch removes a couple of manually added fallback values, and converts an additional sidebar related property to use a CSS variable.

---
[1] Comparing the `master` branch with this patch, when using `gulp generic`, produces the following diff for the built `web/viewer.css` file:
```diff
@@ -408,6 +408,7 @@

 :root {
   --sidebar-width: 200px;
+  --sidebar-transition-duration: 200ms;
 }

 * {
@@ -550,27 +551,28 @@
   position: absolute;
   top: 32px;
   bottom: 0;
-  width: 200px; /* Here, and elsewhere below, keep the constant value for compatibility
-                   with older browsers that lack support for CSS variables. */
+  width: 200px;
   width: var(--sidebar-width);
   visibility: hidden;
   z-index: 100;
   border-top: 1px solid rgba(51, 51, 51, 1);
   -webkit-transition-duration: 200ms;
           transition-duration: 200ms;
+  -webkit-transition-duration: var(--sidebar-transition-duration);
+          transition-duration: var(--sidebar-transition-duration);
   -webkit-transition-timing-function: ease;
           transition-timing-function: ease;
 }
 html[dir='ltr'] #sidebarContainer {
   -webkit-transition-property: left;
   transition-property: left;
-  left: -200px;
+  left: calc(-1 * 200px);
   left: calc(-1 * var(--sidebar-width));
 }
 html[dir='rtl'] #sidebarContainer {
   -webkit-transition-property: right;
   transition-property: right;
-  right: -200px;
+  right: calc(-1 * 200px);
   right: calc(-1 * var(--sidebar-width));
 }

@@ -640,6 +642,8 @@
 #viewerContainer:not(.pdfPresentationMode) {
   -webkit-transition-duration: 200ms;
           transition-duration: 200ms;
+  -webkit-transition-duration: var(--sidebar-transition-duration);
+          transition-duration: var(--sidebar-transition-duration);
   -webkit-transition-timing-function: ease;
           transition-timing-function: ease;
 }
```
2020-02-05 20:13:19 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
e3c0181357
Convert all six-digit HEX colors to RGBA colors 2020-01-01 14:52:37 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
403a994556
Convert all three-digit HEX colors to RGBA colors 2020-01-01 14:52:37 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
d002637405
Convert all named colors to RGBA colors 2020-01-01 14:48:56 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
2c2fc36c54
Normalize all RGBA colors
This is not only useful to have one format for consistency, but also to
be able to quickly search for colors for e.g., finding duplicates or
when tweaking the CSS for custom deployments.
2020-01-01 14:48:55 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
dd1c8a9149
Convert all RGB colors to RGBA colors 2020-01-01 14:48:55 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
3717dcdf57
Convert all HSLA colors to RGBA colors 2020-01-01 14:48:55 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
0bdb1ab202
Convert all HSL colors to RGBA colors 2019-12-28 20:54:57 +01:00
siarhei.zdabnou
fea102b235 border & box-shadow duplications removed 2019-10-22 14:25:42 +02:00
Thiago da Silva
811c8803b3 Fix small visual quirk in thumbnail viewer 2018-12-18 22:48:26 +01:00
Brendan Dahl
826893e6f4 Use high DPI icons on semi-high DPI screens.
The icons looks really fuzzy on a machine with a device pixel ratio of
1.5. Using the 2x icons looks much better.
2018-12-14 16:27:38 -08:00
PalmerAL
5f15dc2023 Use span instead of div in the text layer
This improves copy/pasting text content since it reduces the amount of unnecessary newlines.
2018-11-18 15:54:08 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
36d6255866 Hide the Scroll/Spread mode buttons when the viewer is a PDFSinglePageViewer instance
If the current viewer is a `PDFSinglePageViewer` instance the Scroll/Spread modes are no-ops, hence displaying buttons that do *nothing* when clicked will probably do very little besides confuse users.
2018-07-08 12:08:48 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
5198b6d0dc Fix regression affecting the horizontal viewerContainer offset for small window widths (PR 9816 follow-up)
*The danger of fixing one bug is that it can, sometimes too easily, cause another one in the process; sorry for not catching this when testing PR 9816 locally.*

When the *entire* viewer becomes narrow enough, as controlled by the `@media all and (max-width: 840px)` media query, the sidebar should (semi-transparently) overlay the `viewerContainer` instead of moving it horizontally. Unfortunately the changes made in PR 9816 caused the relevant CSS rules to be skipped, because of how the inheritance model works in CSS.

I'm well aware that `!important` is usually advised against, since it "breaks" the CSS inheritance model. However in this case it seemed reasonable to use it, to not only fix the bug at hand but to also prevent similar bugs from occurring in the future.
2018-06-15 20:27:02 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
39fc1c72fc Fix regression causing the pages to be offset horizontally in Presentation Mode (PR 8993 follow-up)
This is a regression from PR 8993; it causes the pages to be offset horizontally in Presentation Mode, if and only if the sidebar is currently open when the user triggers Presentation Mode.

Please note that while this doesn't seem to affect Firefox, both Chrome and IE are however affected.
Interestingly enough, despite the Chrome extension being affected as well, I cannot find any issue filed about this. (Either Presentation Mode isn't used much at all, or users don't open the sidebar before entering Presentation Mode.)
2018-06-14 16:32:19 +02:00
Ryan Hendrickson
3d83c646c6 Add spread modes to web viewer
This builds on the scrolling mode work to add three buttons for joining
page spreads together: one for the default view, with no page spreads,
and two for spreads starting on odd-numbered or even-numbered pages.
2018-05-14 23:10:32 -04:00
Ryan Hendrickson
91cbc185da Add scrolling modes to web viewer
In addition to the default scrolling mode (vertical), this commit adds
horizontal and wrapped scrolling, implemented primarily with CSS.
2018-05-14 23:10:32 -04:00
Wojciech Maj
dbb0e88bc1 Clean up browser-specific CSS 2018-04-04 00:25:12 +02:00
Soumya Himanish Mohapatra
b28962df1e Improve visibility of the findInput placeholder in Chrome 2017-12-12 15:34:51 +05:30
Jonas Jenwald
085e7a7a74 Implement sidebar resizing for modern browsers, by utilizing CSS variables (issue 2072)
By making use of modern CSS features, in this case [CSS variables](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Using_CSS_variables), implementing sidebar resizing is actually quite simple. Not only will the amount of added code be fairly small, but it should also be easy to maintain since there's no need for complicated JavaScript hacks in order to update the CSS. Another benefit is that the JavaScript code doesn't need to make detailed assumptions about the exact structure of the HTML/CSS code.

Obviously this will not work in older browsers, such as IE, that lack support for CSS variables. In those cases sidebar resizing is simply disabled (via feature detection), and the resizing DOM element hidden, and the behaviour is thus *identical* to the current (fixed-width) sidebar.
However, considering the simplicity of the implementation, I really don't see why limiting this feature to "modern" browsers is a problem.

Finally, note that a few edge-cases meant that the patch is a bit larger than what the basic functionality would dictate. Among those is first of all proper RTL support, and secondly (automatic) resizing of the sidebar when the width of the *entire* viewer changes. Another, pre-existing, issue fixed here is the incomplete interface of `NullL10n`.

*Please note:* This patch has been successfully tested in both LTR and RTL viewer locales, in recent versions of Firefox and Chrome.

Fixes 2072.
2017-11-06 15:58:24 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
7a0db8960d Layout the sidebar in the same vertical position regardless of the viewer width (issue 4052, bug 850591)
If we want to (eventually) make it possible to resize the sidebar, then having its width indirectly affect the toolbar is going to wreck havoc on the media queries used to show/hide buttons in the main toolbar (since many of them depend on the toolbar state, and thus its width).
Updating all of the media queries dynamically with JavaScript seems like a non-starter, given that it'd cause *very* messy code. It thus seem to me that we'd need to fix the position of the sidebar, to have any hope of (in the short term) addressing issue 2072.

Hence, I'm suggesting that the we always layout the sidebar in a consistent vertical position, and only animate the `viewerContainer` rather than the entire `mainContainer`.

Fixes 4052.
Fixes bug 850591.
2017-10-11 18:17:28 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
36c2791296 Unify handling of various cursor tools, e.g. the current Hand Tool and a possible future Zoom Tool, in a new PDFCursorTools module
With the current way that the `HandTool` is implemented, if someone would try to also add a Zoom tool (as issue 1260 asks for) that probably wouldn't work very well given that you'd then have two cursor tools which may not play nice together.
Hence this patch, which attempts to refactor things so that it should be simpler to add e.g. a Zoom tool as well (given that that issue is marked as "good-beginner-bug", and I'm not sure if that really applies considering the current state of the code).

Note that I personally have no interest in implementing a Zoom tool (similar to Adobe Reader) since I wouldn't use it, but I figured that it can't hurt to make this code a bit more future proof.
2017-05-22 00:51:01 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
8f96909e97 Remove unnecessary .toolbarButton.group CSS class
I noticed that we have a `.toolbarButton.group` CSS class, which is currently applied to some buttons in the viewer. Since it attempts to adjust the `margin-right` property, I was initially a bit puzzled as to why there wasn't different rules for LTR/RTL locales.

However, checking the viewer with the DevTools inspector, in both LTR and RTL locales, I quickly found that the rule in question is *always* being overridden by other CSS rules.
It thus seem to me that while this rule was probably useful at some point, it has been dead for years and could now be removed.
2017-03-10 13:49:24 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
b151666c53
Viewer: consistently wrap find bar elements for small screen sizes
This patch ensures that the find bar is not extended to the window width
when element wrapping occurs on small screens.
2017-03-08 23:55:13 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
87a30a7ee1
Viewer: enable find functionality for small devices
The find functionality is currently not available for small devices
because the find dialog is not responsive. This patch fixes that.

To achieve this goal, the HTML is changed to always show the find
button. To prevent issues because of the addition of an extra button for
small views, the previous/next page buttons are hidden if the view
becomes small. These buttons are not useful anyway because on small
devices navigation is usually done via scrolling. The find functionality
is much more useful to have in this case. Moreover, we wrap the existing
elements into separate `div`s so that the browser can position the
elements itself when the view becomes smaller and logically connected
elements stay together when this happens.

In the CSS, extra rules for the find bar have been added to ensure that
the dialog's doorhanger is always below the find button. All findbar
`div`s are forced to be 32 pixels high to prevent the find message text
being aligned under the checkboxes. Finally, the find message is only
visible when there is actually text to display. This prevents wrapping
issues because, by default, the label has padding and margin even if
there is no text.
2017-03-08 23:54:28 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
c79e5b3f17
Viewer: replace find label with placeholder/tooltip
This is common in the rest of the UI and helps us prevent responsiveness
issues for different length strings in different locales.
2017-03-08 23:54:14 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
616e5fadff Display a notification on the sidebarToggle button for PDF documents with outline/attachments
A longstanding issue with the viewer is that you cannot tell if a PDF document includes an outline and/or attachments without actually opening the sidebar.
This patch contains a suggested solution for that, by displaying an hide-on-interaction notification on the `sidebarToggle` button (and the relevant sidebar view buttons). Note that this was inspired by e.g. the update notification that is displayed on the menu button in Firefox.

For an initial implementation, I've tried to do this in such a way that the notification isn't too distracting. Without being an UX expert, I don't think that we'd want something too in-your-face, in order to keep the viewer toolbars reasonable clean. (We probably do *not* want e.g. an entire notification bar in these situations, since that would take up unnecessary screen space and require actions from the user to close.)

However it's certainly possible that the current notification might simply be *too* inconspicuous to be truly helpful to users, but we could probably iterate on that if the feature itself is deemed useful.
2017-01-30 15:39:04 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
14d7e2f29c Viewer: remove unused CSS rule
This appears to have been part of the first mock-up of the viewer, but
hasn't been used since.
2016-11-24 23:44:57 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
f95915fc73 Viewer: amend .sidebarOpen responsiveness rules with rules for
`.sidebarMoving`
2016-11-07 16:23:50 +01:00