095ebbed83
This PR was merged into the 2.8 branch.
Discussion
----------
Fixed the antialiasing of the toolbar text
| Q | A
| ------------- | ---
| Bug fix? | yes
| New feature? | no
| BC breaks? | no
| Deprecations? | no
| Tests pass? | yes
| Fixed tickets | -
| License | MIT
| Doc PR | -
### Problem
The Symfony toolbar looks ugly in some situations (the text is too thin and unreadable); for example inside a SonataAdmin backend:
(top: toolbar in a normal page; bottom: toolbar in Sonata backend; if you don't see any difference, click on the image to zoom it)
#### Chrome
![before_chrome](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/73419/13181902/8836e586-d72f-11e5-9394-490f81978606.png)
#### Firefox
![before_firefox](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/73419/13181905/8cca5eac-d72f-11e5-9905-b85cb5249a45.png)
### Solution
The cause of this problem are the styles applied by the popular AdminLTE template used by Sonata and other admin bundles. The proposed changes neutralize any aliasing set by external CSS styles, so the toolbar is always displayed the same way:
#### Chrome
![after_chrome](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/73419/13182022/0e15fade-d730-11e5-8e0b-d5a712c7158e.png)
#### Firefox
![after_firefox](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/73419/13182024/104e3cb2-d730-11e5-83d8-86cb52b87358.png)
Commits
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.github | ||
src/Symfony | ||
.composer-auth.json | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitignore | ||
.php_cs | ||
.travis.php | ||
.travis.yml | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
CHANGELOG-2.2.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.3.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.4.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.5.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.6.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.7.md | ||
CHANGELOG-2.8.md | ||
composer.json | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
CONTRIBUTORS.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
phpunit | ||
phpunit.xml.dist | ||
README.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.1.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.2.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.3.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.4.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.5.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.6.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.7.md | ||
UPGRADE-2.8.md | ||
UPGRADE-3.0.md |
README
What is Symfony?
Symfony is a PHP 5.3 full-stack web framework. It is written with speed and flexibility in mind. It allows developers to build better and easy to maintain websites with PHP.
Symfony can be used to develop all kind of websites, from your personal blog to high traffic ones like Dailymotion or Yahoo! Answers.
Requirements
Symfony is only supported on PHP 5.3.9 and up.
Be warned that PHP 5.3.16 has a major bug in the Reflection subsystem and is not suitable to run Symfony (https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=62715)
Installation
The best way to install Symfony is to use the official Symfony Installer. It allows you to start a new project based on the version you want.
Documentation
The "Quick Tour" tutorial gives you a first feeling of the framework. If, like us, you think that Symfony can help speed up your development and take the quality of your work to the next level, read the official Symfony documentation.
Contributing
Symfony is an open source, community-driven project. If you'd like to contribute, please read the Contributing Code part of the documentation. If you're submitting a pull request, please follow the guidelines in the Submitting a Patch section and use Pull Request Template.
Running Symfony Tests
Information on how to run the Symfony test suite can be found in the Running Symfony Tests section.