This is a follow up to #1. The onclick event is triggered by different
mouse buttons across browsers:
Firefox
- all mouse buttons trigger document.onclick (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=430310)
- only left mouse button triggers document.body.onclick
Internet Explorer
- only left mouse button and without any modifier key triggers
document.onclick
Chrome
- left & middle mouse button trigger document.onclick
Safari
- left mouse button triggers document.onclick
- middle click via mac os?
By switching to the onmouseup event this can be unified for all
mentioned browsers to:
- (CTRL+) left click triggers event
- middle click triggers event
- right click does nothing
The 'open original' link marks the item as read but doesn't open the
article.
After double clicking one 'open original' link, all other
'open original' links open the article as expected. Sounds like the IE
blocks the 'popup' silenty here.
The following in #196 reported issues are fixed by the change as well:
- a middle click on an 'open original' link triggers the popup blocker
- original link opened via middle click is always a foreground tab
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.
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.
I had particular problems with Ctrl-N (open new window/tab)
interfering with N (go to next unread item). This change
disregards keyboard shortcuts if Alt, Shift, or Ctrl are used.
It also tries to disregard Win/Super/Meta, though this didn't
work for me in Firefox. Still, just the Ctrl is an improvement
for me.