691def10a0 made all Subquery() instances
equal to each other which broke aggregation subquery pushdown which
relied on object equality to determine which alias it should select.
Subquery.__eq__() will be fixed in an another commit but
Query.rewrite_cols() should haved used object identity from the start.
Refs #30727, #30188.
Thanks Makina Corpus for the report.
Backport of adfbf653dc from master
Subquery annotation references must be resolved if they are excluded
from the GROUP BY clause by a following .values() call.
Regression in fb3f034f1c.
Thanks Makina Corpus for the report.
Backport of 42c08ee465 from master
Horizontal scrollbar doesn't appear with the headless mode on small
windows, that's why window.scrollTo() is not an option for these
tests.
Tests changed after adding a navigation sidebar in
46fe506445.
Backport of 18eb852874 from master
The {% if %} tag provides all features of these tags.
Since Django 1.2 (May 17, 2010), the docs have hinted that
{% ifequal %} and {% ifnotequal %} will be deprecated in a future
Django version. Time to make it official.
The SetupConfigureLogging test case does not restore the logging config
after its execution. It leaves the logger django.request with an empty
handlers array.
This also removes the last use of LOGGING_CONFIG, introduced in
43503b093a.
Thanks to Adam Johnson, Carlton Gibson, Mariusz Felisiak, and Raphael
Michel for mentoring this Google Summer of Code 2019 project and
everyone else who helped with the patch.
Special thanks to Mads Jensen, Nick Pope, and Simon Charette for
extensive reviews.
Co-authored-by: Mariusz Felisiak <felisiak.mariusz@gmail.com>
Firefox does not include shorthand properties, such as "border", in the
computed CSS properties object. This is documented at MDN:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/getComputedStyle
> The returned CSSStyleDeclaration object contains active values for CSS
> property longhand names. For example, border-bottom-width instead of
> the border-width and border shorthand property names. It is safest to
> query values with only longhand names like font-size. Shorthand names
> like font will not work with most browsers.
This difference between Firefox and Chrome is also discussed in the
stackoverflow thread at:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/32296604