Unfortunately the normal font families like "sans-serif" and
"monospace" are basically broken because the browser defaults are
decades old.
TODO: Inline code is barely distinguishable.
Adding the underline in the list of sections makes them bleed
together, making it hard to discern where one ends and the other
begins.
In the body of the text we don't have that issue - multiple links are
rarely next to each other.
Fixes#8439
This uses a bit of javascript to add copy buttons, so you can directly
copy all the code in a given block to the clipboard!
For codeblocks without prompts, it just copies all the code, for
blocks with prompts, it copies all the lines after prompts, under the
assumption that that's the code to be executed.
It would give you *all* the lines, so the output wouldn't be
interleaved like it is in the html, but good enough.
The buttons appear on hover, so they aren't usable on phones, but
since you won't really have a clipboard on phones and I have no idea
how to make them not always in front of the text otherwise: Eh.
I'm not in love with the javascript here, but it'll do.
Especially in dark-mode this was often too close to the background.
Should make it easier to read.
As always, colors not checked for artistic merit for I have none.
This set "clear: both", which resulted in code blocks sometimes being
pushed down a lot, resulting in weird empty space.
Just undo it, I have no idea why it's there, presumably it makes sense
with sphinx' stock theme?
Otherwise there's this weird *gap*, where the sections are narrow even
tho there's plenty of space?
So you have this screen layout:
```table
| sidebar | text |
| sidebar | narr |
| sidebar | ower |
| sidebar | than |
| sidebar | need |
| sidebar | ed |
```
For some gosh-forsaken reason.
Otherwise this would look ugly by stopping the gradient after the
content, so in e.g. the `end` or `false` page it would leave an ugly stripe at
the bottom.
The "classic" theme is a mostly useless wrapper around the basic theme
that just adds a collapsible sidebar (that we no longer have).
Moving to basic directly drops a layer of indirection and a file that
needs to be transferred over the net.
Same thing goes for "default.css" which literally just includes
classic.css (WHYYYY???)
(also this removes some useless javascript)
This used to put the TOC last, which is the last place you'd want it.
It's not perfect and we do some hacky layoutery to achieve it, but it
should generally be usable.
This makes the *tables* themselves scrollable, not the section div
they are in, which means the section doesn't scroll along with
them (it's already reflowed).
This clips overflowing padding/margins and thereby removes
non-"content" that's just off-screen, making the site scrollable.
The exception here is for tables - we allow scrolling the *section*
divs for those (because I have no idea how to only make the <table>
scrollable), if necessary of course.
This removes the margin with the background gradient and such
completely once the screen falls under 700px. In those cases we really
don't want to waste space, and having just a weird blue bit above the
docs looks weirder than not having anything.