I've intentionally kept a differenciation between a Subscrition
(Inscrição) and a Feed (Fonte) as it makes more sense.
I also attempted to avoid using non-portuguese words like Consumer Key,
Consumer Secret etc. Some specific cases to avoid weird mistranslation I
have kept the original in parentheses.
- Binds the 'R' key to trigger a refresh in the background for all
feeds.
- Updates the locale, using the same description as the link in the
feeds page.
Co-authored-by: Vitor Pellegrino <pellegrino@linux.com>
A new "shareCode" field is generated for each entry, and allows
unlogged users to access the entry through the /shared endpoint.
This feature is particularly useful to share articles from miniflux
to third-party users without having them to visit the original source.
The image proxy is disabled and special cache headers are proposed in
the shared page to avoid denial of service.
This adds the oauth2 provider `oidc`. It needs an additional argument, the OIDC discovery endpoint to figure out where the auth and token URLs are.
Configuration is similar to setting up the Google Authentication with these changes:
* `OAUTH2_PROVIDER = oidc`
* `OAUTH2_OIDC_DISCOVERY_ENDPOINT = https://auth.exampe.org/discovery`
- Unified few keywords.
- Unified all symbols to Chinese Symbols.
- Remove trailing period since it's not commonly used for Chinese on websites.
- Add one space between English words and Chinese words.
After importing old OPML files, you may discover that many feeds are
obsolete or uninteresting. You list the feeds entries and determine that
you want to unsubscribe. This needs three clicks (edit feed, delete,
confirm) and requires moving the mouse to hit the different targets.
This quickly becomes tiring, if you are up to possibly deleting hundreds
of feeds. One mediation, introduced in this commit, is to add an
unsubscribe link to each feed's entry listing view, and also adding a
keyboard shortcut.
The keyboard shortcut "#" is:
* longer than one keystroke (requires shift)
* hard to type by accident
* used in Google products (thanks for the hint @fguillot)
In an effort to try to reduce the number of accidental feed
unsubscriptions.