Commit Graph

22 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Javi Martín
4153e52e70 Remove ES6-specific syntax in amsify suggestags
It was causing JavaScript to stop working completely on old browsers
which don't support this syntax.
2021-07-08 19:46:50 +02:00
Javi Martín
f8500cea62 Add SDG icons for Serbian (Cyrillic)
Icons obtained at the UNDP page for Serbia [1].

Thanks Dantic for the link ;).

[1] https://www.rs.undp.org/content/serbia/sr/home/sustainable-development-goals.html
2021-04-09 17:55:03 +02:00
taitus
15b39f1231 Resize all sdg goal images to 200x200
The objective of this change is to reduce the size of the images to improve the
experience in slow connections, poor coverage situations or data limits so common in
mobile devices.
2021-03-24 16:46:30 +01:00
taitus
4eda906a93 Move current goal images to origal folder
We keep the original images (with a larger size) in case we want to resize them to
another size in the future.
2021-03-24 16:42:20 +01:00
taitus
f463baf14a Fix removing item twice
Add spec which is fixed with this commit.

In the `sTagsArea` zone there are two elements with the same `data-val`:
the `<span class="amsify-select-tag>` containing the selected tag and
the `<li class="amsify-list-item" data-val="1">` containing the
suggested tag.

This means every time we call `removeTag`, the `removeTagByItem`
function is called twice, and might remove extra items.

Suggested PR:
c8765a6915
2021-01-20 19:18:03 +01:00
taitus
beda6cb8c8 Add JQuery library for input tags
Source: https://github.com/amsify42/jquery.amsify.suggestags
2021-01-20 10:41:08 +01:00
Javi Martín
7144c80d0c Add SDG icons for Brazilian Portuguese
Downloaded from: https://odsbrasil.gov.br/
2021-01-08 15:18:36 +01:00
Javi Martín
432fea8a3d Add SDG icons for Western European languages
Downloaded from: https://unric.org/en/sdgs-in-your-language/

Only languages enabled by default in CONSUL have been downloaded:
Danish, German, Greek, Italian, Dutch and Swedish.

Note that, unlike the icons for the 6 official UN languages, these icons
vary in size and quality. They've also been converted from JPEG files.
2021-01-08 15:18:36 +01:00
Javi Martín
9d5f08de25 Add official UN SDG icons
Note we're adding the icons in English on both the `sdg/en/` folder and
the `sdg/default/` folder. The latter stores the default icons when the
desired language does not have a fallback with an icon folder.

Also note we need to explicitely add the images to the asset pipeline
because they've been added to the `vendor/` folder; for some reason,
everything works properly without adding them to the asset pipeline if
we use the `app/` folder instead.
2021-01-08 15:18:01 +01:00
Javi Martín
46c6aa7f5f Use the Oswald Medium font for goal titles
The same way it's done in the official SDG icons. We're also using
uppercase with slightly smaller letter spacing for the same reason.

Even though we didn't do so in the past, we're moving the font to its
own folder inside the vendor folder and including the license file as
well in order to make it clear that these files do not follow the same
license CONSUL uses.
2020-12-27 21:43:17 +01:00
Javi Martín
1f82c62711 Add SDG icon-only images to SDG header 2020-12-27 21:43:17 +01:00
Javi Martín
a42cb050a7 Add SDG content section 2020-12-02 12:38:03 +01:00
Javi Martín
925f04e3f3 Allow loading icons from SVG files
There are a dozen ways to add an icon used for decoration. Each of them
offers advantages and disadvantages regarding these topics:

* Accessibility
* Ease of use for developers
* Ease of customization for CONSUL installations
* Maintainability
* Resulting file size
* Number of HTTP requests
* Browser support
* Robustness

We were using one of the most common ones: icon fonts. This technique
shines in many of these aspects. However, it misses the most important
one: accessibility. Users who configure their browser to display a
custom font would see "missing character" icons where our icons should
be displayed. Some users have pointed out they use a custom font because
they're dyslexic and webs using icon fonts make it extremely painful for
them [1].

Screen reader users might also be affected, since screen readers might
try to read the UTF-8 character used by the icon (even if it uses a UTF
Private Use Area) and will react to it in inconsistent ways. Since right
now browser support for different techniques to prevent it with CSS
ranges from non-existant (CSS speech module) to limited (use an
alternative text in the `content` property [2]), we've been adding an
HTML element with an `aria-hidden` attribute. However, by doing so the
ease of customizations for CONSUL installations is reduced, since
customizing ERB files is harder than customizing CSS.

Finally, font icons are infamous for not being that robust and
conflicting with UTF settings in certain browsers/devices. Recently Font
Awesome had a bug [3] because they added icons out of the Private Use
Area, and those icons could conflict with other UTF characters.

So, instead of loading Font Awesome icons with a font, we can add them
using their SVG files. There are several ways to do so, and all of them
solve the accessibility and robustness issues we've mentioned, so that
point won't be mentioned from now on.

All these techniques imply having to manually download Font Awesome
icons every time we upgrade Font Awesome, since the `font-awesome-sass`
gem doesn't include the `sprites/` and `svgs/` folders Font Awesome
includes in every release. So, from the maintenance poing of view,
they're all pretty lacking.

Method 1: SVG sprites with inline HTML

We can use SVG files where template icons are defined, like so:

<svg>
  <use xlink:href="solid.svg#search"></use>
</svg>

This technique has great browser support and it only generates one HTTP
request for all icons. However, it requires adding <svg> tags in many
views, making it harder to customize for CONSUL installations. For
developers we could reduce the burden by adding a helper for these
icons.

Downloading all the icons just to use one (or a few) might also be
inconvenient, since the total file size of these icons will be up to a
megabyte. To reduce the impact of this issue, we could either minimize
the SVG file, compress it, or generate a file with just the icons we
use. However, generating that custom file would be harder to maintain.

Method 2: CSS with one SVG icon per file

We can use the separate SVG files provided by Font Awesome, like so:

background: url("solid/search.svg");

Or, if we want to add a color to the icon:

backgound: blue;
mask-image: url("solid/search.svg");

Using this technique will result in one HTTP request per icon, which
might affect performance. Browser support is also limited to browsers
supporting mask-image, which at the time of writing is 95% of the
browsers, with the notable exception of Internet Explorer 11.

On the plus side, using CSS makes it easy to customize and (IMHO) easy
to work with on a daily basis.

Method 3: CSS with SVG sprites

We can use the aforementioned sprites provided by Font Awesome and use
them with CSS:

backgound: blue;
mask-image: url("solid.svg#search");

The number of HTTP requests and file size are similar to Method 1, while
browser support, ease of customization and ease of use are similar to
Method 2.

There's one extra gotcha: this method requires doing minor changes to
the files provided by Font Awesome, which means this solution is harder
to maintain, since we'll have to do the same changes every time we
upgrade Font Awesome. Mainly we need to add these changes to every
sprite file:

- <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" style="display: none;">
+<!--
+This is a modified version of Font Awesome Free regular sprite file.
The icons are exactly as they originally were; the only changes are:
+
+* <symbol> tags have been replaced with <svg> tags and a <style> tag
has been added
+* A <style> tag has been added
+* The style="display:none" attribute of the main <svg> tag has been
removed
+-->
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
+  <style>
+    svg svg { display: none }
+    svg svg:target { display: inline }
+  </style>

And then replace every <symbol> tag with a <svg> tag.

Method 4: CSS with Data URI

Finally, we can write the icons directly in the CSS:

backgound: blue;
mask-image: url('data:image/svg+xml;utf8,<svg...');

This method does not generate any extra HTTP requests and only downloads
the icons we need. However, maintaining it is really hard, since we need
to manually copy all the <svg> code for every icon we use, and do it
again every time we upgrade Font Awesome.

In this commit, we implement Method 2. To improve browser support, we're
falling back to font icons on browsers which don't support mask images.
So 5% of the browsers might still conflict with users changing the fonts
or with screen readers trying to announce the icon character. We believe
this is acceptable; the other option for these browsers would be to show
those icons as a background image, meaning the icons would always be
black, meaning users of these browsers would have trouble to distinguish
them if the background was dark as well.

Since we aren't sure whether the performance hit of having one HTTP
request per icon is overcome by only requesting the icons we actually
use, we aren't taking this factor into account when choosing between
methods 2 and 3. We believe this method will be the less painful one to
maintain and customize. Generating SVG sprites with just the icons we
use would increase performance, but it would make it harder for existing
CONSUL installations to use icons we haven't included in the sprites.

[1] https://speakerdeck.com/ninjanails/death-to-icon-fonts
[2] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/content#Browser_compatibility
[3] https://blog.fontawesome.com/fixing-a-unicode-bug-in-5-14-0/
2020-10-26 16:26:21 +01:00
Javi Martín
738e9ebc8b Remove code specific to Internet Explorer 8
Internet Explorer 9 was released eight years ago. Besides that, we don't
really support IE8 anyway, since we show a popup to IE8 users saying
we don't support it, we haven't maintained the IE8-specific CSS file for
years, and we don't test our JavaScript against IE8.
2019-09-10 22:43:37 +02:00
taitus
9b6b57a24c Remove all white spaces 2017-09-06 14:12:32 +02:00
Juanjo Bazán
15fc911bfb adds js for input type=number to IE<9 2016-03-08 14:32:54 +01:00
kikito
b864c164b2 eliminates unused javascript files 2015-12-18 17:17:15 +01:00
Alberto Garcia Cabeza
0021eb58ff Comments annotator css on js file 2015-12-17 21:03:52 +01:00
kikito
f43248b174 renames & refactors annotations.js into annotable.js 2015-12-16 16:07:23 +01:00
Abigail Sosa
189a6426b1 Se agregan anotaciones a propuestas existentes 2015-12-16 11:45:46 +01:00
Eloy Gomez
637e428f4c Add c3.js and dependencies 2015-08-17 19:13:38 +02:00
rgarcia
8db3630837 initial commit 2015-07-15 13:32:13 +02:00