This code should be easier to adapt to future matches too, by just changing
the constants in the first `with` declaration and whatever text is desired.
I don't know if this code is left over from previous versions or what, but
it's not doing anything now. custom_index doesn't pass kwargs to anything
else, so there's no need to fiddle with the dict so much.
170aa38bb5 fixed one bug but added another:
#mainContent would always be the max-width of 1000px. If the user's window
wasn't wide enough to accommodate that alongside the sidebar, it would be
rendered below the sidebar.
Fix that by using positioning instead of floats, so #mainContent can have a
flexible width.
Our Form 990 Filing deadline was today, 2017-01-17. As is our usual
practice, we make them publicly available on or before our filing
deadline date.
This commit includes our USA IRS Form 990, NYS CHAR500 and the
independent auditor's report for FY 2015.
This makes it easier to keep baseline alignment between labels and their
respective inputs. Declaring `margin-left: 51%;` for the post-input notes
is not exactly what we want, but it's much closer and less troublesome than
dealing with the vertical alignment of labels otherwise.
* Separate out amount-parsing and reacting into separate events. This sets
the stage for other elements to react to the custom
'conservancy:newamount' event.
* Set up events in the context of each supporter form, with closures. This
lets us avoid weird CSS selector gymnastics in the event, and instead
drill down from the form to find the elements we need.
There are no functional changes in this code, barring bugs.
* Add an animation for state changes.
* Set the start state by triggering the event on the selection at page load.
Firefox at least remembers the selected button on page load. This avoids
a situation where the user says they want a shirt, reload, and now the
size selection is invisible because we used to hide that unconditionally.
This commit keeps the presentation basically the same, it just moves
presentation rules out of HTML and into CSS. It's not pixel-perfect but
pretty close.