The old line:
from path import path
produced pylint errors because of the baroque way that path.py defined
"path". We tried to get them to change how they defined it, but they
deleted the name instead: https://github.com/jaraco/path.py/issues/102
(Jason then changed his mind, but this is a better way to use path.py,
it avoids the pylint error at least.)
When running locally, XBlocks which access third-party software no longer
cause server errors.
Because devstack inherits from aws, the HTTPS flag was implicitly set to 'on'.
This meant that XBlocks attempted to use SSL when dealing with third-party
components like LTI. Since SSL is not enabled on devstack, this caused server
errors whenever these features ran.
* updated the flags for social media sharing
* added facebook feed ui to share public url
* update the condition logic
* update the code as per suggestion and added pick new style for share buttons
* update the css class reference
* update the bok-choy test
* updated description and some text touch-ups
* moved the JS related to facebook into separate location
* js formatting
* Add trailing comma per chrisndodge
* Add wait to fix flaky test...maybe
This is a public, versioned, RESTful API for importing and
exporting full course content. The code was initially ripped from the
existing import/export API in the CMS contentstore djangoapp and wrapped
in Django Rest Framework view classes. It's a new djangoapp in
the openedx directory which is largely an abstraction off the CMS
Import/Export views.
This PR includes configuration changes. Most notably, Studio is
configured to serve the OAuth2 provider alongside the LMS.
This is the initial thread on the code list:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/edx-code/DmnHWmly25A/ZqjD1zb4o7oJ
And this thread contains another description of the changes:
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/edx-code/6dP9SEKsmqQ/Pvyn8fBDx68J
There are a numerous non-covered lines, all of which are missing
coverage in the CMS API this was ported from. They're mostly error
conditions, such as handling of multipart file upload errors.
Currently, Python implicitly concatenates two string entries located next to
each other because there is no comma separating them. The code concatenates
"*.pyc" and "sass/*.scss", creating a single entry called "*.pycsass/*.scss".