Users can preview their profile from user settings. If user
open preview profile modal from user settings, then closing
preview profile modal should redirect them to settings modal
again (since probably they want to keep editing).
This commit fixes above issue.
This adds the same style of "Saving"/"Saved" loading spinners we use
elsewhere in our settings.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to fix issues with the notifications
being on the wrong screen for reactiving/deactivating users; this was
done by introducing the get_status_field helper function and using it
everywhere.
The legacy "Updated Successfully" message shown after saving changes,
is removed, and replaced with our standard "Saving" spinner and
animation.
Fixes: #11177.
This code will correctly render emoji to the message textarea based on
whether emoji was selected from message composition form or message
edit form.
Fixes part of #11188.
AFAIK I should this never fail, hence the blueslip.error line. But it
is failing in practice when rendering user groups after looking them
up by ID, and the error handling should definitely be softer.
Our recent work on inviting users as guests accidentally set the
invite_as argument in a way that would fail for non-admin users.
Fixes#11283, fixes#11255.
We do this because now we send a message to stream if a reminder
is set and won't need the notification above the compose box saying
that we set a reminder. We would still need that notifications for
the send later feature so we make the construct conditional.
In between releases, the following commit introduced
a bug where we agressively scroll to the top every
place we call `ui.update_scrollbar`:
092b73d0b7
The main symptoms were that the left and right sidebars
would go to the top for things like selecting a topic,
getting activity updates from the server, and resizing
the window. It was very jarring.
The recent commit looked innocuous--the root of the problem
was the original API expressed an intent to scroll to the
top, but didn't actually do it, so it was a bug in hiding.
There are **some** occasions where it's actually appropriate
to scroll to the top, mostly around search filtering, and
in those places we now call the new `ui.reset_scrollbar`
function.
This is a bit of an emergency fix, so particularly with
the settings stuff, we may get more reports of glitches here.
The important thing here is that you almost never want to
reset the scrollTop for sidebars.
This seems like a small change (apart from all the
test changes), but it fundamentally changes how
the app finds "topic" on message objects. Now
all code that used to set "subject" now sets "topic"
on message-like objects. We convert incoming messages
to have topic, and we write to "topic" all the way up
to hitting the server (which now accepts "topic" on
incoming endpoints).
We fall back to subject as needed, but the code will
emit a warning that should be heeded--the "subject"
field is prone to becoming stale for things like
topic changes.
We recently added a feature to warn users that they
may need to scroll down to view messages that they
just sent, but it was broken due to various complexities
in the rendering code path.
Now we compute it a bit more rigorously.
It requires us to pass some info about rendering up
and down the stack, which is why it's kind of a long
commit, but the bulk of the logic is in these JS files:
* message_list_view.js
* notifications.js
I choose to pass structs around instead of booleans,
because I anticipate we may eventually add more metadata
about rendering to it, plus bools are just kinda brittle.
(The exceptions are that `_maybe_autoscroll`, which
is at the bottom of the stack, just passes back a simple
boolean, and `notify_local_mixes`, also at the bottom
of the stack, just accepts a simple boolean.)
This errs on the side of warning the user, even if the
new message is partially visible.
Fixes#11138
We now have two functions:
add_new_messages
add_old_messages
This is a lot easier on the eyes, and it will also
prevent us from exceeding line length in future commits.
We also remove an unneeded stub in the narrow_activate
tests.
This commit makes it a bit more explicit about
why we're updating 2 or 3 message lists every time.
It looks funny now to repeat the home-list updates
in both sides of the conditional, but this will be
more obvious in a subsequent commit, where we want
to capture return values from rendering.
In a recent commit we allowed for `scroll_amount`
to be zero (as an indirect consequence of letting
`scroll_limit` be zero without early exiting).
See 0f75be3e8e
We want to short circuit the call to
`system_initiated_animate_scroll`, partly to save
unnecessary computation, but in particular to avoid
invoking the suppress-pointer-update logic.
It's convenient to have visible_bottom as well
as top/height, and the extra computation is
trivial (it's just arithmetic, no extra jQuery
involved).
There's some minor cleanup here too.
Guest users can not add subscribers to subscribed or unsubscribed
streams. Therefore hide add-subs html element if current user
is guest user.
Tweaked by tabbott to use the early-return pattern.
Add explanation in popover on disabled add-subscriptions input elements,
admin can't add subscribers to non subscribed private streams, only
subscribed users can.
Fixes#10593
There's a subtle change here in how we handle the
hypothetical case that the selected message is above
the top of the feed. Instead of early-exiting
from _maybe_autoscroll(), we just treat the limit
as zero, which will have the same effect.
We also change a var name be just `scroll_limit`
instead of `available_space_for_scroll`. A longer
name would be valuable if it were somehow more
specific, but it was needlessly verbose.
The idea is to use this field for storing the best matching alias
to be displayed in search results. In subsequent commits I will
replace the search and rendering logic to use this field instead
of creating new objects on each search.
Since we have already added the `invite_as` field to models, we can now
replace usage of `invite_as_admin` properly with its equivalent `invite_as
== PreregistrationUser.INVITE_AS['REALM_ADMIN']`.
Hence, also removed now redundant `invite_as`.
This couples the behavior of Enter to Save with Enter to Send.
Extracts and exports functions responsible for checking if enter
does send/edit and handling default behavior otherwise.
Changes made in static/js/message_edit.js and
static/js/composebox_typeahead.js
Fixes#10320.
This adds two functions to static/js/composebox_typeahead.js.
should_enter_send(event) checks if enter should actually send.
handle_enter(textarea,event) emulates browser's default behavior
if enter doesn't send.
These two are just straight extractions of portions of the compose box
logic.
It's a bit dangerous for the user to hit escape
to close the feedback widget, since it can
disappear suddenly, but users will try it, and
we should just close the widget.
(Hitting escape should be a noop if the box
is closed, but now it goes to "All Messages".)
We only need these once, not during every show()
call. We actually were only setting up the
click handlers one time, but we had redundant
mouse handlers.
More importantly, we stop a runaway timer
that tries to fade out our feedback widget
every 100ms or ten times per second!
A few things are still hard coded, but the class exposes
show() and dismiss() now.
The show() method is configured with callbacks for
populate() and on_undo().
We calculate a few values higher up in the function.
This reduces a bit of code duplication and removes
a somewhat janky expression that happens against
a mutated list.
I use shorter var names in frb_botom() and do early
return in obscured_recipient_bar().
Also, we always call exports.hide() if we don't find
a valid recipient bar to "float."
There is no reason not to initialize people.js
super early in the process, as it only reads
data from page_params. Also, other modules
are likely to want its data during their own
initialization steps.
This is the preferred way to check that a user
id belongs to the current user.
We have a recent bug where the current user's
circle doesn't turn green right away. It's not
clear this is the fix, though. (It's hard to
repro locally.)
This is mostly for testing purposes. The code
structure here is pretty stable--we will probably
always use level() here to either sort or
group users, and being able to test it directly
is nice, rather than bringing in all the other
machinery.
This makes it possible it include our standard markdown formatting in
one's custom profile fields, allowing for links, emphasis, emoji, etc.
Fixes#10131.
While we're at it, we remove the JSON parsing that was part of the
user field code path, since this function isn't responsible for
rendering user fields.
Apparently, our custom profile fields feature was parsing the "user
list" field type in multiple places, and ignoring the results in one
of them. That code had been causing some confusion; the correct
solution is to just delete it, since the template rendering process
ignores that value for this field type.
Our logic for doing pageup/pagedown calculation inside compose was
written too tightly, and ended up breaking the keys inside message
editing.
Fix this by using generic selectors that don't hardcode compose.
Previously, messages with more than one line did not parse '/me' at
the beginning of the message. Since there's a reasonable way to
render multi-line messages, this commit adds support for doing so.
This change does potentially break with the expected behavior of other
slash commands, but it seems worth providing useful functionality over
a blind focus on consistency.
Fixes#11025.
If branch for showing the profile details would
not have executed if the subdomain was root ("").
The check was changed to check for select input
instead of checking for subdomain.
This avoids a bunch of potential confusion around users trying to
interact with these UI in situations that don't make sense.
(E.g. showing a menu to start editing the message when the menu is
already open).
Fixes#3802.
We instead get the specific fields from message
that we use. This is particularly helpful
for subject -> topic migration; we no longer
have to account for "subject" fields in
client-side templates.
This continues the effort to isolate "subject" references
to util calls.
Also, we fix a comment.
Finally, we use canonicalized operators in a switch
statement.
As part of giving the stream/topic fields in the
compose box longer ids, I broke the autocomplete
code that handles re-focusing the cursor after
a user hits enter. The worst symptom of this was
that we tried to send a message before compose
finished (although it wouldn't fully deliver the
message).
The new code should be a bit easier to grep for
if we rename these fields again, as we explicitly
use selector syntax.
Previously, we were searching the whole message_row object for emoji,
mentions, etc., which has a bunch of UI elements that can't contain
the syntax we want to modify. This should be a slight improvement in
the performance of message post-processing, which runs a lot of times
and thus is fairly important.
This check caused us to only run the code inside that block if the
message mentioned the current user (since that's when the `mention`
class is added to the main message row).
While this was a useful performance optimization, it probably was a
small one, not worth it for the correctness cost.
This adds a new realm_logo field, which is a horizontal-format logo to
be displayed in the top-left corner of the webapp, and any other
places where we might want a wide-format branding of the organization.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to rebase, fix styling, etc.
Fixing the styling of this feature's loading indicator caused me to
notice the loading indicator for the realm_icon feature was also ugly,
so I fixed that too.
Fixes#7995.
Logic for checking if the last message in the current table is visible was
already written in message_viewport.js; Code in notifications.js is changed
to reduce redundancy.
We are trying to carve room for a more specific
"user_status" concept, which refers to statuses
that users specifically set, like "I'm away".
So we call this function "update_presence_info",
which reflects that it's more about actual
"presence"--i.e. the user really is present
in the browser, even though the actual human
may not want to be disturbed.
The current user gets excluded from all non-empty
searches, even ones that match the user, since
it can look funny when the user's at the top of a
search, and you'd never need to search for yourself
(again, since the current user is at the top of
the buddy list).
Apparently, we didn't have one of these, and thus had a moderate
number of generally very old violations in the codebase. Fix this and
clear the ones that exist..
We move all of its logic into settings_sections.
Note that this is slightly more than a refactor.
We are slightly more aggressive about resetting
sections. For example, if you go into Settings,
then exit the overlay, then go into Manage
Organization, we will now reset sections for both
groups.
We now rely on set_up() methods to call their
own module-specific versions of maybe_disable_widgets()
in the codepath for admin_sections.load_admin_section().
And then for live updates, we just explicitly call
all four modules that support maybe_disable_widgets().
This should make switching between sections slightly faster,
and it also reduces the risk of module A messing with
module B's state. (Granted, we have lots of other ways
that modules can mess with each other's state.)
Bootstrap's typeahead is the main part of the project that we've
forked, and moving it to its own module should help unlock our ability
to upgrade bootstrap itself.
Since we're adding this to a large number of portico pages, there's no
guarantee that these pages actually have a CSRF input.
Though given that the logout template contains a CSRF input,
realistically it should always be present.
We weren't using the actual sorted data to find
the last element. This probably worked by accident
in some cases, but this commit makes it more
deterministic.
We want the return value from this for the next
commit, so we no longer call `format_drafts` indirectly
from `populate_and_fill`, and we rename the latter
to `render_widgets`.
We had an anonymous callback for drafts that was
hard to read. It's much easier to flatten the code,
give functions actual names, and stub them as needed
in the unit tests.
Since we're adding this to a large number of portico pages, there's no
guarantee that these pages actually have a CSRF input.
Though given that the logout template contains a CSRF input,
realistically it should always be present.