Now the button area is owned by the 3-pane layout, rather than the message view
fragment.
Bug 3327153
Change-Id: I9c262086c5a001cfe6e81b788c27d05d490c9830
UI Changes:
- "Move", "Delete" and "Mark as unread" became action bar commands.
- The message view bottom panel now only has "newer" and "older" buttons,
with the current position in the message list. (shown as POS of TOTAL)
- The buttom panel is now shown only on portrait
Non UI changes
- MessageOrderManager now keeps track of the current cursor position
as well as the total message count.
- Fixed the "move_action" string, which was wrongly marked as non-translatable.
Bug 3169454
Change-Id: I599543f9e11000a4ee283d31fbd407b2ab53ac44
Moved the buttons to the header. All other buttons below the message view
go away, so I just hid the old buttons.
Also now we stop trying to hide these buttons when entering contextual mode,
which fixes bug 3044284: Message view buttons get disabled when closing
quick contact
Assets were temporarily copied from gmail.
Change-Id: Ib178c6221dfab02832a10d0c0441044e4969fb70
Create a custom view containing the bottons below MVF
(delete, move, reply, etc) and let MVF own this.
These buttons used to be owned by the XL activity itself, because
the UI for these commands will most likely be totally different
from the tablet UI, so the fragment having them looked wrong.
However, this made it harder to make changes suggested by the latest
mock, such as "put reply/forward in the message header".
I think the buttons are semantically part of the message view anyway,
so the fragment owning UI for these commands is probably the way to go.
(And let's worry about the phone UI later.)
Reason for the use of a custom view is that it will make it easier
to make non-trivial UI changes, e.g. "combine reply, reply-all and
forward and make it dropdown."
Also removed obsolete TODOs from MessageListXL.
Change-Id: Ibf93f4c70fe07bdbbe33d2adb6bbd2b96812830d