`.select2-hidden-accessible` is the CSS class that is added to the original `<select>` element (that Select2 is initialized on) to hide it.
In cases where the original `<select>` has other style declarations assigned which conflict with those of `.select2-hidden-accessible`, the latter styles may be overridden, possibly resulting in the original `<select>` element not being properly hidden.
Similar to what https://github.com/select2/select2/pull/1549 did for Select2 v3's CSS, this adds the `!important` rule to all style declarations for `.select2-hidden-accessible` to make it exponentially harder to override them.
This adds back the `dropdownAutoWidth` option, so the dropdown can
have a width that is automatically determined by the browser. This
works best for smaller dropdowns that contain options with large
amounts of text.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/3103.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/pull/3113.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Brown <kevin@kevin-brown.com>
The old functionality where classes were directly copied to the
container can be done by setting `dropdownCssClass: ':all:'` when
initializing Select2.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/2879.
This improves a regression added in b9b55cec44
that reduced performance for large number of options when using a
jQuery collection object to append multiple options instead of
using a bare array containing the jQuery elements.
As `$.fn.add` is only required for jQuery 1.7.x, we can use a
utility function that only falls back to it for that specific
version of jQuery, and uses `$.fn.append` with an array for all
other versions.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/3230.
Since Select2 methods should not be called on an element where
Select2 has not yet been initialized, this raises an error when it
happens. This does not silence the original error, but it does
provide the user with some more context about why they are seeing
a TypeError.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/3173.
We now check that the `abort` method actually exists before aborting
the request, as JSONP does not include the `abort` method because
a JSONP request technically cannot be aborted.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/3217.
This adds back keyboard support, so you can now clear a selected
item using either the backspace or delete key. This only work when
the container is closed, to prevent issues with the selection being
clear while a user is searching.
This was a regression in accessibility from 3.x.
This closes https://github.com/select2/select2/issues/3224.