With this PR, when JS is activated and WASM supported, the article editor will be dynamically replaced with `contenteditable`s elements. This makes the editing interface simpler and less like a regular form. It will also allow us to easily add visual formatting with native browser APIs (and to insert images or videos directly). Here is a little demo:
![peek 05-03-2019 16-12](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/16254623/53815536-1dc05680-3f62-11e9-94d3-b363ed84eb97.gif)
There is still a lot to do, but it is a good first step.
Fixes#255
* Slightly improve the media experience
- Use a grid to display the list of media
- Add icons for non-image media preview
- Paginate the gallery
- Add links to the gallery in the editor and in the profile settings to make it more discoverable when you need it
Fixes#432
* Allow video and audio tags in SafeString
Otherwise we can't display their preview, nor show them in articles
Also show controls by default for these two elements
* Show fallback images for audio and unknown files, to make them more visible
* Add a new constructor to SafeString when the input is trusted and doesn't need to be escaped.
And use it to generate media previews.
* Make it possible to insert video/audio in articles
* Allow customizing max form size from env vars
* Add error page for unprocessable entities
And change default http port to 7878
* Improve char counter: under the editor, more discrete, and give it a default value
Rust can compile to WASM, so let's use it for front-end code as well.
To compile the front-end:
```
cargo install cargo-web
cargo web deploy -p plume-front
```
Use uri! to generate links instead of hardcoded urls
Fix#110
Fix invalid links needing to be POST forms
Translate login message for boost and like directly from template
Put js for search in its own file
All the template are now compiled at compile-time with the `ructe` crate.
I preferred to use it instead of askama because it allows more complex Rust expressions, where askama only supports a small subset of expressions and doesn't allow them everywhere (for instance, `{{ macro!() | filter }}` would result in a parsing error).
The diff is quite huge, but there is normally no changes in functionality.
Fixes#161 and unblocks #110 and #273