* update from ionicons-npm to ionicons ver.5
* drop the webfont built by grunt for icons
* built icons.html template for inlining icons with jinja2 into html
* update icon to use mostly the outline version
* add icons to categories and do not display them on mobile to save space
* remove all legacy ion icon font files from simple theme
* icons.html is added in this commit since make statc.build.restore requires git to know the file already
* cleanup error-dialog
* remove hover effect from vim help modal
* remove bold font weight from active item in prefenreces tab bar
* remove margin from answer box to unify with rest of result page
buttons:
* previous & next in the result page
* save, restore, & back in the preferences
* back to top
<select> input in Chrom* browsers:
* fix the white text with a white background issue
It is not possible to use CSS variable in a SVG when this is in a background.
This commit adds two .svg files, less converts them into data URL.
The two files are indentical except the fill color.
* clean up vars in defenition
* results look now the same on mobile and desktop
* reworked results on mobile
* new color theme with more vibrant colors
* remove vars and add elements to base and btn vars
* change default border radius to 10px and padding to 0.7em
* put border radius and padding on search input form, infoxbox and buttons
* remove unused .help class in #categories_container
* remove active background from tabs to straemline design
* redo search form: 10px padding
* 2rem margin on search results on desktop
* fix modal pacement of engine reliability in prefs
* use darker accent colors
* streamline autocomplete with more padding and a hover effect
This patch disables role 'no-descending-specificity'. IMO it is better to have
this rule active (see below [1]), but it is hard to rewrite the less files to
pass this rule, so for the first I chose to disable this rule.
---
Source order is important in CSS, and when two selectors have the same
specificity, the one that occurs last will take priority. However, the situation
is different when one of the selectors has a higher specificity. In that case,
source order does not matter: the selector with higher specificity will win out
even if it comes first.
The clashes of these two mechanisms for prioritization, source order and
specificity, can cause some confusion when reading stylesheets. If a selector
with higher specificity comes before the selector it overrides, we have to think
harder to understand it, because it violates the source order
expectation. Stylesheets are most legible when overriding selectors always come
after the selectors they override. That way both mechanisms, source order and
specificity, work together nicely.
This rule enforces that practice as best it can, reporting fewer errors than it
should. It cannot catch every actual overriding selector, but it can catch
certain common mistakes.
[1] https://stylelint.io/user-guide/rules/list/no-descending-specificity/
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
This fix was autogenerated by::
npx stylelint -f unix --fix 'searx/static/themes/simple/src/less/**/*.less'
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>