I've dropped it accidentally with my last commit. Furthermore I moved
the data-feed-id definition to the article element and dropped multiple
references of the feed id. That's similar to what I've done before with
the data-item-id in 3dae99ac.
The article element holds the information whether a feed is disabled now.
Now it is shown if a feed had errors while updating.
Use CSS3 Animation for the "loading icon" blinking and move the definition of
the loading icon to CSS as well.
CSS3 Animations are supported by IE10, Firefox and using the -webkit prefix by
Chrome and Safari.
I've dropped the usage of element.classList in favour of supporting refreshing/
article downloading in IE9 (again). The classList stuff isn't necessarily
needed, as the elements in question only get one or no class assigned.
I've dropped no longer supported css options like:
the appearance option isn't supported by any browser, the -webkit-appearance
doesn't change anything visible.
-webkit-font-smoothing support was dropped in chrome 22 and font-smoothing
isn't specified anywhere.
The item id exists as data attribute or as element.id postfix on multiple
elements in an article.
The basic idea is to traverse the DOM tree - starting from the event firing
element - in reverse order till an article element is found.
This article element is passed to the JavaScript functions. These JavaScript
functions are getting the elements which they want to manipulate starting from
the article utilizing the JavaScript querySelector function.
The bootstrap themes had a conflicting and unused class style definied, which is
removed by now.
Unified the page-counters before.
This makes processing of counters in javascript way more easier. The minimum
required browser versions for the needed CSS3 selectors are IE9, Firefox 3.5
and Chrome 5. Confirmed working with IE9, Firefox 24.6, Chrome 36, Mobile Safari
on iOS6.
An unintended side effect of CSS brackets is that theme designers are able to
implement there idea of brackets.
Remove line breaks and indentation around links text: At least Chrome/Firefox on
Windows add the white space(s) from the HTML Code to the link text, which
results in "jumping" labels. The behaviour can be observed with the Hello Theme
while toggling the bookmark status.