Previously, a map could not be destroyed if it included a permalink control without an "element". In addition, a permalink control could not be destroyed if it didn't have a reference to a map.
Having to call two methods to get complete feature information (id and data) is cumbersome. The `getFeatureInfo` method returns an object with both feature id and data.
The tile now has responsibility for resolving feature ids and fetching feature data given x, y pixel offsets with getFeatureId and getFeatureData methods. The layer has corresponding getFeatureId and getFeatureData methods that take a map location, lookup the appropriate tile, and delegate to the tile for the rest of the work.
I think it should be the job of the layer to retrieve data for a given location (instead of the control). The first part of this change creates a `getData` method on the layer and updates the control to use this method.
The second part of this change removes the assumption that the data returned will be an simple object representing feature attributes. The UTFGrid specification doesn't say anything about the structure of property values in the optional data member. The examples given in the spec use string values. The default callback previously assumed that the data could be rendered in a two column table. I think it would make more sense not to make this assumption. With this change, the user must always provide a callback to do anything with returned data.
When the list of event types became unconstrained in 501b42228a, we lost the documentation for events that are triggered. This change adds the list of events triggered to the API docs for events properties.
With the buttonclick event, we can also handle clicks on layer names and checkboxes/radiobuttons when they get the olButton class. To make this work on iOS, we have to add a check in buttonclick.js to handle the case where the event occurred on a text element (nodeType === 3).