Although no coops seem to be referencing this client, there were already
lowercase versions of the relevant files, i.e. `_clients/kaspersky.md`
and `images/clients/kaspersky.svg`. So the uppercase version,
`Kaspersky.md` was effectively a duplicate.
This led to the following warning messages on case-insensitive
filesystems, making it hard to work on the project on such systems:
> warning: the following paths have collided (e.g. case-sensitive paths
> on a case-insensitive filesystem) and only one from the same colliding
> group is in the working tree
In this commit, I've deleted `Kaspersky.md` which didn't contain
anything different to `kaspersky.md`. I think this is the right thing to
do, because ideally all the markdown files should be lowercase in case
they are used in URL paths.
There are other similar issues, but I plan to address them in separate
commits.
Both Blake House and InFact were already using lowercase version of the
CAST client markdown and image files, i.e. `_clients/cast.md` and
`images/clients/cast.png`. So the uppercase versions of the files, i.e.
`_clients/CAST.md` and `images/clients/CAST.png`, were effectively
duplicates.
This led to the following warning messages on case-insensitive
filesystems, making it hard to work on the project on such systems:
> warning: the following paths have collided (e.g. case-sensitive paths
> on a case-insensitive filesystem) and only one from the same colliding
> group is in the working tree
In this commit, I've added the website from `CAST.md` into `cast.md`,
deleted `CAST.md` & `CAST.png`, and changed the reference in
`dot-project.md` from `CAST` to `cast`. I think this is the right thing
to do, because ideally all the markdown files should be lowercase in
case they are used in URL paths.
There are other similar issues, but I plan to address them in separate
commits.
I think having the seperator is not properly supported by the
foundation CSS. I was a bit confused with app.css as some seems to
be vendor CSS and some custom CSS, so I left the original padding
rule, and added an override in what seems more like a "custom CSS"
section...
I don't know why they didn't all just float nicely
together in the first place though :/
As the map tab is created hidden by default, leaflet seems unable
to deal with the sizing properly initially, but we can hook into
the "tab changed" event, and tell leaflet to recalculate the size
after switching tabs