Dynamically generate the CSS style for <pre> elements
for inclusion in the HTML <head> element when messages
are displayed.
This permits a user to change their font-family preference
for plain text messages and see the results immediately.
Obviously any old locally-stored messages that had their
font-family stored with them will continue to display using
that font-family, irrespective of the user's current
preference setting.
The MIME type for the supplied text was always text/html,
so there is no need to pass that as a parameter.
Furthermore, we are relying on it being text/html because
we are wrapping it with HTML code.
Likewise, change/simplify/rename AccessibleWebView.loadDataWithBaseURL().
Previously, <html>, <head>, & <body> tags were
attached to messages before they were stored locally.
But now that the <head> element also needs to include
a <meta> element (for proper MessageWebView display),
it seems unecesary to store all these tags with each
message.
Now the tags are no longer stored with the messages. Instead,
MessageWebView applies the tags before displaying the message.
This also eliminates the need to upgrade an older
message database where all the old messages would have
otherwise needed to be wrapped with the new tags.
- Android does not support ellipsize in combination with maxlines
for TextViews. This caused getEllipsisCount() in MessageTitleView
to always fail, and the full subject was never shown in the regular
headers area when needed.
To work around that, check for ourselves whether the text is
longer than 2, and ellipsize manually.
- Clicking the star button on a message caused the subject line to
re-appear, even if it fits in the action bar title without being
cut off. This was caused by MessageHeader.populate(), which always
set the subject to visible.
As a workaround: Only set subject to visible in case populate()
actually shows a new message.
- delete res/layout/actionbar_message_view.xml, its already present
in the actionbar_custom.xml
- The attachments view still had the wrong background color in case
of different global and message themes.
- The attachments view used the activity LayoutInflater, but it needs
to use the one of the fragment.
- The background drawable for the attachments used transparency, and
thus was completely invisible in the black theme. Fix it by adding
another one for the black theme.
- Since the split-view change, MessageView is only a fragment, so we
can't call setTheme() anymore so easily.
Instead, use a ContextThemeWrapper and use that to inflate the
layout. This way the message header and attachment view
are styled correctly.
- The HTC WebView fix in SingleMessageView was returning the wrong
background color, when message view theme and global theme differ,
because it always used the global theme to retrieve it.
Fix: Specifically put the light/dark values in the themes.xml,
and get them using getContext().getTheme().resolveAttribute().
getContext() will use the ContextThemeWrapper from above, so
even if the global and message view themes differ, it aleays
returns the correct one.
The getThemeBackgroundColor() method added to the K9ActivityMagic
interface in 309eeb72ac is now not
needed anymore, and was removed.
Using dark theme with white WebView background looks very ugly,
especially when a "download complete message" or a "show images"
button is present.
This change applies the theme to the whole activity.
Also changed the text for the toggle menu. It's also shorter now,
and isn't cut off anymore on hdpi/480px wide devices.