Telling people to turn to [insert any project from the external community]
for [a feature we used to support but is now openly supported elsewhere] --
sounds amazing to me.

What happened to the goal of "eventually cease to exist"?

On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 11:26 AM, Joe Bowser <bows...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Wed Nov 05 2014 at 8:21:03 AM Andrew Grieve <agri...@chromium.org>
> wrote:
>
> > Here's the ionic plugin:
> >
> https://github.com/driftyco/ionic-plugins-keyboard/blob/master/src/android/IonicKeyboard.java
> >
> > Uses a GlobalLayoutListener. the approach is described here:
> >
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2150078/how-to-check-visibility-of-software-keyboard-in-android
> >
> > Why leave the code in core if we don't have to? I think the majority of
> > apps wouldn't need these events (even if you do, you can listen for
> resize
> > events to do the same kind of detection)
> >
>
> I think this will break more things than it'll fix.  Does the Ionic plugin
> support all the versions of Android that we currently support? Are we
> really going to tell people to go to Ionic for a feature that we once
> supported? Even if this is technically better, this seems like it's a
> support nightmare.
>
>
> >
> > On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 11:05 AM, Joe Bowser <bows...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >> I disagree. We recently fixed this when we went back to adjustResize
> from
> >> adjustPan, and we should just file a bug about the behaviour on the
> Samsung
> >> Tablet.
> >>
> >
> >
>

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