Before, when autosaving a draft, removing a repetition row would
send `_destroy` inputs to the controller – but not remove the row
from the DOM. This led to the `_destroy` inputs being sent again
on the next autosave request, which made the controller raise
(because the row fields were already deleted before).
To fix this, we let the controller response remove the deleted
row(s) from the DOM.
Doing it using a controller response avoids the need to keep track
of operations on the Javascript side: the controller can easily
know which row was just deleted, and emit the relevant changes for
the DOM. This keeps the autosave requests robust: even if a request
is skipped (e.g. because of a network interruption), the next request
will still contain the relevant informations to succeed, and not let the
form in an unstable state.
Fix#5470
After clicking on a radio button option, it is impossible to revert to
the "None of the values selected" state.
However on non-mandatory fields, reverting to the no-selection value
should be possible.
To fix this, add an explicit "N/A" option.
current year + 50] (or [entered_date; current_year + 50] if old date already entered) because:
The type_de_champ Datetime is used for close future dates and very close past dates (for accident declaration for ex.)
The select currently has a range from 1950 to 2100, so 70+ years not supposed to be used, leading to:
- many bad data entered (0000 or 1950 to not scroll)
- making it difficult for users to give the proper date (current date is lost in the middle of 149 others) so risk to be lazy and select a random one or genuinely make a mistake
Starting from Rails 5.1, `form_with` behavior is to generate remote
forms by default.
However with Turbolinks disabled, the form gets sent, but nothing is set
up to handle the server response (like replacing the content of the
page).
So we have two choices: either enable a global config option that makes
`form_with` generate non-remote forms, or do it explicitely on each
form. I chose the explicit way, so that developers expecting the usual
remote behavior of `form_with` are not surprised.