Since 16e80b5ae, <body> no longer has overflow, thus no scroll. As a
consequence, htmx no longer is able to scroll up <main> when it changes
due to the default, implicit `show:true` applied to the request: is
calls <main>’s scrollIntoView, however there is nothing to scroll to.
I probably could fix it by changing the target of `show`, or even add
a `scroll` directive to all boosted links, but at this point i think it
is better no not boost links at all, as they do what i want—show the new
page from the top—with less markup, plus the browser now show a loading
animation, and it is not that slower, too.
This is mostly the same subsection as payments is for expense, added in
4f646e35d. In this case i call it “collections”, but it is actually
the same payments section.
This is the same as a payment, but the user is the payee instead of the
payer.
I used a different relation than payment because i do not know any other
way to encode the constraint that only invoices can have a collection,
while expenses have only payments.
Besides the name and the fact that they are related to invoices, a
collection is pretty much the same as a payment.
With Oriol we agreed that to add new payments to expenses we should
direct users to a separate payments section, much like the general
payments but centered around the payments of the given expense.
In fact, the only thing i had to do is extract the expense from the
URL, and then adjust the base URI to keep things always within the
correct section; the rest of the code is shared with the general
section.
I am using an htmx-infused button to remove the payment, but that
button can not have the CSRF token as value, thus i have to send it in a
header.
The removal of payments warrants a functions, instead of just DELETE
(and CASCADE) as i do for payment methods, because i have to adjust the
status of expenses too. Since i already have functions for everything,
it is not worth using triggers just for that.
This actually should be the “payments and receivables” section, however
this is quite a mouthful; a “receivable” is a payment made **to** you,
therefore “payments” is ok.
In fact, there is still no receivables in there, as they should be in
a separate relation, to constraint them to invoices instead of expenses.
It will be done in a separate commit.
Since this section will be, in a sense, sort of simplified accounting,
i needed to introduce the “payment account” concept. There is no way,
yet, for users to add them, because i have to revamp the “tax details”
section, but this commit started to grow too big already.
The same reasoning for the attachment payment slips as PDF to payment:
something i have to add, but not yet in this commit.