Styles on keyboard focus are essential for keyboard navigation; without
them, keyboard users wouldn't see which element they're currently
interacting with. That's why we use an `outline` on elements having the
current keyboard focus.
However, this is sometimes annoying for mouse/touchscreen users, since
clicking/touching an element also gives it keyboard focus.
When clicking on a button performing some kind of action through
JavaScript, keeping the outline on the button after clicking it is
distracting.
Even after clicking a link, for some users having the outline present
while they wait for the next page to load is annoying.
That's why modern browsers (at the time of writing, 74%) implement the
`:focus-visible` pseudoclass, which selects elements which have received
focus using the keyboard, but not elements which have been
clicked/tapped on. We can use it to provide focus styles for keyboard
users without getting in the way of mouse/touchscreen users.
Usually we wouldn't use a feature which isn't supported in more than 96%
of the browsers out there. However, in this case we've got a solid
fallback: we just use the `:focus` pseudoclass. Since the `@support` CSS
condition doesn't accept pseudoclasses as parameters, we're disabling
`:focus` styles only on browsers supporting the `:focus-visible`
pseudoclass using the `:focus:not(:focus-visible)` selector, which will
be ignored by browsers without support for `:focus-visible`.
Since now users receive less feedback when clicking/touching a link or a
button, we're adding styles for the `:active` pseudoclass. This way
users will know which item they're clicking/tapping on. I'm not sure the
outline is a good option for this case, though; I think for touchscreen
users a better solution would be to apply the styles we apply on hover.
We might change it in the future.
Note grouping styles together like this would *not* work:
```
&:focus,
&:focus-visible {
// Styles here
}
```
Browsers not supporting the `:focus-visible` pseudoclass would ignore
this statement completely, meaning they wouldn't apply the styles on
`:focus` either.
CONSUL
Citizen Participation and Open Government Application
This is the opensource code repository of the eParticipation website CONSUL, originally developed for the Madrid City government eParticipation website
Documentation
Check the ongoing documentation at https://docs.consulproject.org to learn more about how to start your own CONSUL fork, install it, customize it and learn to use it from an administrator/maintainer perspective.
CONSUL Project main website
You can access the main website of the project at http://consulproject.org where you can find documentation about the use of the platform, videos, and links to the community space.
Configuration for development and test environments
NOTE: For more detailed instructions check the docs
Prerequisites: install git, Ruby 2.7.4, CMake, pkg-config, shared-mime-info, Node.js and PostgreSQL (>=9.5).
git clone https://github.com/consul/consul.git
cd consul
bundle install
cp config/database.yml.example config/database.yml
cp config/secrets.yml.example config/secrets.yml
bin/rake db:create
bin/rake db:migrate
bin/rake db:dev_seed
RAILS_ENV=test rake db:setup
Run the app locally:
bin/rails s
Run the tests with:
bin/rspec
You can use the default admin user from the seeds file:
user: admin@consul.dev pass: 12345678
But for some actions like voting, you will need a verified user, the seeds file also includes one:
user: verified@consul.dev pass: 12345678
Configuration for production environments
See installer
Current state
Development started on 2015 July 15th. Code was deployed to production on 2015 september 7th to decide.madrid.es. Since then new features are added often. You can take a look at the current features at the project's website and future features at the Roadmap and open issues list.
License
Code published under AFFERO GPL v3 (see LICENSE-AGPLv3.txt)
Contributions
See CONTRIBUTING.md
