* Specify type before parameter name
Various JSDoc `@param` entries were specified as `name {type}` rather
than `{type} name`.
A couple of `@return` entries have been given types as well.
* Use JSDoc optional syntax rather than Closure syntax
* Use @returns rather than @return
* Use consistent built-in type capitalization
Primitive types are lower-case, and Object is upper-case.
* Separate param/return description with a dash
This component used to persist form contents to LocalStorage. This was
especially useful for the popup UI, as each time the mouse left the
popup, the UI was completely torn down and state was lost.
This component was only being referenced by one form, and it wasn't
even being used there (e.g. no fields were labelled appropriately to
be persisted).
This was a useful component, and it seems this feature was lost
somewhere in the past couple of years. It was tempting to re-instate it
rather than delete it, but I decided not to because I'd likely approach
the problem differently if we wanted to reinstate it again today (maybe
by using a React Hook, or storing the state in Redux and persisting a
subset of the Redux store instead).
The account details close button is difficult to click from the e2e
tests because it has a size of zero. The actual icon is added via CSS
as an `::after` pseudo-element.
The CSS has been adjusted to give the icon a size, and it the markup
is now a `button` rather than a `div`.
These unused props weren't being caught by ESLint because this
component extended another, which I guess made it difficult for the
React plugin to determine what was unused.
The `componentWillUpdate` logic was moved into `componentDidUpdate` so
that it would be picked up by ESLint. Also it seemed like a sensible
place for it to go. Having three redundant gas updates as part of
the same lifecycle function seemed too far, so I ensured it's
only called once.
* Make gas estimate update on debounced token amount change, not just on blur after change
* Updated tests
* Ensure `updateGas` is bound early
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The "blockies" style identicon is handled by a module that was copied
from MyEtherWallet and inlined. This has been removed, and replaced
with the upstream package it was originally derived from.
* Add `react/no-unused-prop-types` rule
All detected unused prop types have been removed. I have attempted to
ensure these props are no longer passed in either.
* Update handling of props to avoid false positive lint errors
These cases were detected by `react/no-unused-prop-types` as being
unused props, even though they were used. These minor adjustments
prevent them from being flagged as errors.
* Update unit tests
Many of these tests were just checking that specific props were passed
from containers or to a child component. These were deleted, as I can't
imagine how they'd be useful.
* Disable `react/no-unused-prop-types` in `componentWillReceiveProps
The rule `react/no-unused-prop-types` doesn't seem to be detecting
props used within `UNSAFE_componentWillReceiveProps`. The two cases
have been disabled temporarily until we can replace these unsafe
lifecycle functions.
* Use arrow property initializer functions
* Use pure components where applicable
* Add UNSAFE_ prefix for deprecated lifecycle hooks
* Add allow UNSAFE_
* Removed unused "Component"
* Replace boron with 'fade-modal'
* Upgrade react/no-deprecated to an error
* Paste react-tooltip-component source directly
* Use arrow functions to bind `this`
* Add UNSAFE_ prefix
* Update react-redux, react-router-dom
* Remove things from inlined 'fade-modal'
* Adjust mountWithRouter to get unit tests passing again
* Remove domkit
* Add Wrapper to render-helpers
* Upgrade @storybook/addon-knobs
The connect route now takes a route parameter: the permissions request
id. This id is set whenever the permissions connect screen is opened,
ensuring that that tab is for that specific request alone.
This makes handling of multiple permissions requests a bit more
intuitive. Previously whenever opening multiple permissions requests,
the first one would be shown on each successive tab, whereas you
would expect each tab to show the request that prompted the tab to
open. Users may now address permissions request in whichever order
they'd like to, rather than being forced to deal with them
chronologically.