IE11 and scrolling autocompletes didn't get along great; this should help fix
their relationship.
When you click on an autocomplete scrollbar in IE11, the menu temporarily
gains focus, which caused a couple problems.
1. Depending on how long you clicked, the dropdown could close.
2. Scrolling down by clicking the scrollbar's down arrow would misbehave. The
list would pop back up to the top with the first item selected.
We can fix both problems by modifying the focus/blur handling a bit.
1. There is a flag to instruct the control to ignore blurs, but it was getting
cleared too quickly; when the code refocused the input after it was blurred,
IE would send *another* blur event, which wasn't getting ignored and would
close the dropdown. We now wait for the focus/blur pair to process before
clearing the flag.
2. We remove the tabindex from the dropdown menu, which prevents menu's focus
handler from firing. When you focus a menu, it will select the first menu item
if none are selected. Selecting a menu item will scroll it into view if it's
not visible. This combination of behaviors was causing the strange behavior
when attempting to scroll down.
I couldn't figure out a way to write a unit test for this, since it's IE only
and seems to require user interaction. You can verify the previous behavior
(and the fix) on `demos/autocomplete/maxheight.html`
Fixes#9638
Closes gh-1785
Node.js 0.12 loses upstream support at the end of 2016, while Node 6 is in the
Active support phase until 2018-04-18 and will receive security fixes until
2019-04-18.
Closes gh-1767
I was running into a problem with a popup menu control in a dialog; clicks
weren't working (but keyboard was working fine). It turned out that the menu
was getting destroyed before the click event could fire.
Tracked down the issue to the way draggable blurs focused controls; it was
doing the blur before it ran through the logic to figure out if the drag was
actually on the handle. I've moved the blur below these checks, so it'll only
blur things if it actually needs to handle the drag. Otherwise, it asserts no
opinion on what should and shouldn't be focused, which seems like the way
things ought to be.
Also, added a unit test to check for the expected behavior.
Fixes#15046
Closes gh-1730
As of jQuery 3.0.0, hashes are no longer stripped for Ajax requests. This
causes issues in IE <11, so we need to strip this before making the request.
Ref jquery/jquery#1732
Closes gh-1736