On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 4:03 PM, Michal Čihař michal@cihar.com wrote:
Hi
Dne Sat, 21 May 2011 06:38:47 -0400 Marc Delisle marc@infomarc.info napsal(a):
I would say no. Anyway, looking at the development done for 3.4, the trend is to avoid inline js. We are now supposed to use jQuery to make visible a link or button that brings the user to a feature that requires js.
Yes, dropping inline js should be a goal to avoid need for inline and eval options in CSP.
Note that 3.3 and 3.4 have problems with this. For example, Synchronize should not be shown to non-js users. Clearly, testing on non-js browsers has not been our priority.
Well I doubt it was tested without javascript at all.
Probably it's really time to drop support for browsers without javascript, it would make lot of things easier. However what I would like to avoid is making all things using javascript. I really prefer when I can open link in new tab when I want and this does not work with javascript only solutions.
It does, if its done right. It works when you represent links with anchors (and ideally use a js history lib like RSH: http://code.google.com/p/reallysimplehistory/) I've implemented such behavior for my CMS that I'm using on my website tyron.at where pages are being loaded with ajax whenever you click a link. You can try it out there - to open a link in a new tab.
-- Michal Čihař | http://cihar.com | http://blog.cihar.com
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