Although most Consul Democracy installations will only have a few
available languages using `config.i18n.available_locales`, there's a
chance some installation will keep every language as available and will
enable the desired ones using the admin interface. In these cases,
enabling (or disabling) every language would be tedious, particularly
when casually experimenting in a staging environment or while using the
official Consul Democracy demo.
So we're adding buttons to simplify the process. Since some
installations might have only a couple of available languages, and in
this case these buttons would be pretty much useless, we're only showing
them when there are many languages available.
People using screen readers usually expect links to take them somewhere
else in the page on to a different page, while they expect buttons to
change something on the page.
Since we're in the latter scenario, using a button is more accessible.
It's also more natural; with a button, we don't need to provide `#` as
the URL or stop the default event when the button is clicked. And,
unlike links, buttons can be activated with either the space or the
enter key. Finally, clicking a link pointing to `#` with the middle
mouse button opens a useless new tab, while buttons do nothing in this
case.
Now that we only have one "All" link on the page, we no longer need to
specify which "All" link we're clicking or which "All" link we are
checking, so we're simplifying the code doing so.
For now we're only adding rules related to spacing and double quotes,
following the same rules we use in Ruby, which are the same rules
CoffeeScript followed when compiling these files.
We're also using the recommended ESLint rules, which will warn us about
many JavaScript common pitfalls, the `strict` rule which enforces using
strict mode, and the `no-console` rule, which will prevent us from
shipping code meant for debugging.
Although it's arguably more common to use the JSON format to define
these rules, I've chosen YAML because it's the format we use in all our
linters.
These statements were automatically added by CoffeeScript.
I'm only removing the obvious cases; there might be more cases where the
`return` statement isn't necessary.