Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
"absolute" does not mean absolute in default calendar module
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@hango I just checked the development branch of MM and changed the following files. It now works perfectly on my Ipad2. Of course, if you use non-default modules you may have to edit them as well.
- modified: js/electron.js
- modified: js/translator.js
- modified: modules/default/alert/alert.js
- modified: modules/default/alert/notificationFx.js
- modified: modules/default/calendar/calendar.js
- modified: modules/default/compliments/compliments.js
- modified: modules/default/newsfeed/newsfeed.js
- modified: modules/default/updatenotification/updatenotification.js
- modified: modules/default/weather/weather.js
- modified: modules/default/weather/weatherobject.js
- modified: modules/default/weatherforecast/weatherforecast.js
The changes I made to the above files are:
- Changed all “let” to “var”.
- Changed all “() =>” to “function ()”. Also, you have to make sure that the expression following “function ()” is enclosed in curly braces “{}”, i.e. no one-liners!
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@Alvinger That’s the one relative time I can agree with, honestly. Give me a timer so I can kick people out of my office… 🤣🤣
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@sdetweil I used develop-hidden-module-update-restriction as that was the one with relevant changes for me
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@Alvinger then u can change back to master, and create another branch from there
git checkout master git checkout -b new_name
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@hango Okay, I thought electron.js was executed in the browser. But that’s one less file to edit. Also, there were no references to this within the => constructs that I could find.
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@Alvinger the arrow function () =>{} , makes the use of ‘this’ not needed, because the context is not lost.
use of function(){} does change ‘this’