Due to the varying types of layouts used and the short time-frame the best
option seems to set a max-width etc. around the "outercontent" block. For now
this means we can't do "full bleed" body content, but that's not currently used
anyway.
Uses a combination of CSS changes and Tachyons classes to implement the design.
Adds the non-minified Tachyons CSS library itself and SVG icons from Font Awesome.
* Put more common donation methods higher up.
* Delist Flattr.
* Update the list of foreign currency accounts we hold.
* Update the section about donating to member projects.
* Wordsmith throughout, primarily to avoid accounting jargon and
abbreviations, and use fewer exclamation marks.
When one sponsor has a logo, and the next one doesn't, it looks like
the textual name of that sponsor is the sponsor above it. This bit
of CSS corrects that problem.
The expandable sections can be expanded either one-by-one, or with
the “Expand All” button. Add a counter for each expandable
section (which requires their div's to have 'id' attributes, lest
they be counted in the '__global' section of expandables).
The __global counter will work as advertised if you have no 'id'
attributes on any of your 'expandable-section'-classed div's, but if
you mix a __global without an id with ones that *do* have an id, it's
likely this particular code won't work for that.
Finally, add some documentation which is probably over-documenting
for someone who knows Javascript and jQuery well, but it took me a
while to figure out this code so I felt throwing some notes in there
might be helpful.
I pulled this from the `blog-left` style I used to use in blog posts
and created a new style called picture-small. On smaller screen
real estate, Tony's picture was ultimately too big.
I wrap the entire section that has material that can be expanded in a
div with class `expandable-section`. Once doing so, if you provide an
anchor with the class of `expander`, that anchor will be created with
text in the `data-expand-link-text` attribute.
I've also added some CSS to make the link look a certain way, for
good measure.