This is going to be painful to represent due to how the push API allows
mixed types (strings or objects) and mixed top-level keys ("content" rule kind
allowing "pattern" as a top-level key). We may wish to re-visit the design
of this API for v2.
Also display "required" text on required JSON body request params. Also
increase the size of the request param column to support longer param names
present in the pushers API.
Edit content-repo.yaml to include examples and headers.
Restructure content module to conform to the module template.
Adjust the HTTP API template to give 1 more char to the response
param to fit "Content-Disposition" correctly.
Edit the templating system to support displaying enums for
swagger APIs (before it was just JSON schema). Also add support
for introspecting headers from swagger. Finally, replace - with
_ when forming the {{ template_var }} else things whine.
For cases where event schema specify `patternProperties` it would be nice
to give that pattern a "human-readable" form rather than a raw regex. This
is now supported by specifying `x-pattern` in the value part of the specified
pattern e.g. `patternProperties:{ "^.*":{ x-pattern: "$THING", ... } }`
Templating had limited record type descriptions limited to value primitives
e.g. `{string: integer}`. It now supports inspecting the values recursively
if the value is `object`.
Updated `m.receipt` to take both these points into account to make it read
better. Tweak receipt module text.
The CSS for `nature.css` was such that it was preventing `p` tags from
having sufficient vertical whitespace. This meant that you couldn't insert
any kind of spacing between lengthy sections (they just appeared as new lines).
This PR fixes this so you can actually have some whitespace between paragraphs.
As a result of this change, some parts of the spec appeared to have too much
whitespace. These were often sections which shouldn't have begun a new
paragraph anyway (e.g. a single sentence being an entire paragraph, `TODO`
blocks resulting in new paragraphs). This PR fixes the most offending areas
where we shouldn't have been inserting new paragraphs.