no issue
Automated tools, code generators, and editor integrations are increasingly standardising on the import style used in `ember-modules-codemod`. Our import style differed a little with regards to service/controller injection imports which meant we were starting to see inconsistent naming.
no issue
- add eslint-plugin-ember, configure no-old-shims rule
- run `eslint --fix` on `app`, `lib`, `mirage`, and `tests` to move imports to the new module imports
- further cleanup of Ember globals usage
- remove event-dispatcher initializer now that `canDispatchToEventManager` is deprecated
no issue
- adds `eslint-plugin-sort-imports-es6-autofix` dependency
- implements ESLint's base `sort-imports` rule but has a distinction in that `import {foo} from 'bar';` is considered `multiple` rather than `single`
- fixes ESLint's autofix behaviour so `eslint --fix` will actually fix the sort order
- updates all unordered import rules by using `eslint --fix`
With the increased number of `import` statements since Ember+ecosystem started moving towards es6 modules I've found it frustrating at times trying to search through randomly ordered import statements. Recently I've been sorting imports manually when I've added new code or touched old code so I thought I'd add an ESLint rule to codify it.
no issue
- add ember-suave dependency
- upgrade grunt-jscs dependency
- add a new .jscsrc for the client's tests directory that extends from client's base .jscsrc
- separate client tests in Gruntfile jscs task so they pick up the test's .jscsrc
- standardize es6 usage across client
closes#5317
- Adds back button to steps 2 and 3
- Prevents user navigating from step 1 to step 3 unless blog has been created
- Prevents user navigating from step 2 to step 3 unless blog has been created
No Issue
- Switches to the newer style of dependency injection.
- Instead of injection Controllers via "needs," use
Ember.inject.controller().
- Get rid of initializers that were only injecting objects
into various factories. Converts these objects into Ember.Service
objects and declaratively inject them where needed via
Ember.inject.service(). The added benefit to this is that it's no
longer a mystery where these properties/methods come from and it's
straightforward to inject them where needed.