Before, users needed to navigate to the list of groups in order to
add, edit or delete a group.
Also, they need to navigate to the list of groups first, and then to
the list of headings for that group in order to add, edit or delete a
heading.
Now, it's possible to do all these actions for any group or heading
from the participatory budget view to bring simplicity and to reduce
the number of clicks from a user perspective.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
IMHO selecting in how many headings it's possible to support investments
isn't necessary when there's only one option to choose from. It's
obvious that if there's only one heading, it will be impossible to
select investments from more than one heading.
We usually prefer local variables over instance variables in partials.
This way we'll be able to call the partial from views or components
where the instance variable isn't available.
And since we're using the `path` variable to configure the URL, we don't
have to specify extra variables like `@budget` or the namespace `:admin`
in `form_for`, since Rails only uses those variables to set the URL.
We're going to add help content here and having a floating button would
make the button disappear when creating content for mobile phones.
I'm not sure having the link in the <header> tag is semantically
correct, but is consistent to what we did to create local targets in the
SDG content section.
Note we're changing the style of the link to create local targets so
it's consistent with the link to create budgets/groups/headings.
Note the CSS could probably be improved to avoid duplication with other
button style definitions. However, that's fine because we're going to
change the style of the links soon.
For the same reason, I haven't bothered to style every single link the
way it was until now.
There were places where we had two links pointing to the same place; one
link would be the name/title of a record, and one link would be under
the "actions" column.
This is confusing, since users would probably expect these links to
point to different places (which is what happens in other tables in the
admin section) and might try to click one of them and then the other
one and be surprised when they found out both of them go to the same
page.
This partial was going to get too complex since in some places we've got
different texts, different URLs or different confirmation messages.
While we should probably try to be more consistent and that would make
the partial work in most cases, there'll always be some exceptions, and
using a partial (with, perhaps, some helper methods) will become messy
really quickly.
This way we can simplify the way we generate form fields. In some cases,
we also use the human attribute in table headers, which IMHO makes
sense.
I haven't moved all of them: for example, sometimes a label is
different depending on whether it's shown to administrators, valuators,
or users. And I haven't touched the ones related to devise, since I
wasn't sure about possible side effects.
Note I've also removed placeholders when they had the same text as their
labels, since they weren't helpful. On the contrary, the added redundant
text to the form, potentially distracting users.
Show information about longitude and latitude in a budget heading
Show information about custom content in a budget heading
Fix render of map (zoom scrollable and points clickable)
Fix typo in app/models/map_location.rb
To make it more consistent with the rest of the Admin panel,
the CRUD for budget groups and headings has been changed
from the old "all-in-one" form to a separate form for each resource.