Use the results of commit #73d26c8 to remove the method
`render_stream_description` in static/js/stream_data.js and instead
use the rendered_description attribute now being sent by the backend.
This will be a valuable optimization and a step towards removing the
need for the marked.js markdown parser and speeding up the client end.
This fixes an annoying bug where clicking to subscribe to a stream
would change the color shown in the "manage streams" UI immediately
after you click.
Fixes#11072.
This commit takes away the ability for non-admin members to create
streams where only admins can post messages by hiding the option from
them.
Fixes#11290.
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.
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
This function used to be called initialize_from_page_params(),
and we called it indirectly through `subs.js`.
Now we call it directly from `ui_init.js`, which gives us a
bit more control over how things are initialized. In fact,
this sets us up for the next commit, where I fix a recent
regression I introduced.
Before this commit, we would sometimes have
the toggler handle clicking or arrowing to
the All tab, but then also rewrite the hash
which caused us to re-process the event.
Now we only call update_browser_history()
in the callback handler from the toggle widget.
There's a bit of refactoring to make this happen,
but the call stacks end up being this:
call toggler.goto(...)
# callback is dispatched
call subs.switch_stream_tab
actually_filter_streams
update_browser_history
While they can share some code, opening the edit panel
for a stream and clearing the panel are pretty different
actions, so we simplify the API for each thing.
You no longer have to pass in booleans, and for the clear
case, you don't have to pass in a bogus node that just
gets ignored.
This fixes a bug where hitting the "n" hotkey was
causing double work related to the hashchange system.
The code is now organized like this:
do_open_create_stream() does the GUI piece
We call the above directly for hash changes.
For in-app actions, whether clicks or hotkeys,
we call open_create_stream(), which delegates
most of the work to do_open_create_stream() but
also updates the hash.
When you unsubscribe a stream by clicking on the
checkmark, we don't want it to disappear right
away, but we also don't need it to stay around
once you start searching for new streams.
Note from Tim: This commit removes some complex code that was just a
workaround for the fact that this widget used to automatically
re-filter immediately after clicking to unsubscribe a user.
Since we've since fixed that original issue, we don't need this.
Earlier, on opening the subs modal, the "Subscribed" tab would be selected
by default when the components.toggle was created for tab switching.
This would change the hash to `#streams/subscribed`, and then extra work had
to be done to change it back to `#streams/all` leading to a longer open times.
With this change, `#streams` and `#streams/subscribed` both take you to
the "Subscribed Tab", and `#streams/all` takes you directly to
the "All Streams" tab.
This pulls the essential bucketing/sorting logic out
of filter_table().
The diff isn't quite as clean as I'd like, but some
of the code that got added back to filter_table() can be
eliminated in the future. Basically, all the stuff
related to hidden ids can just be zapped if we go
to an approach of just re-building the DOM cleanly
whenever our filters change.
We replace two calls to stream_matches_query() with
a single call to triage_stream(), which prevents us
from doing the same is-subscribed checks twice.
We probably should have done this a while ago, even
though these functions are pretty tiny. The goal here
is to make it easier to have more consistent search
semantics.
Our first use case is subs.js. In this case we
are able to decouple a bit of generic string
matching from the subs-specific code.
We move some data code from subs.js to stream_data.js.
It's not clear we have been using the optimal sort for
dealing with locales, but this change preserves the
current behavior. The only subtle change here is that
we look up subs using a Dict now instead of a plain
JS object.
We now render the "skin" part of "Stream Settings" before
adding in the actual streams. The new function
populate_stream_settings_left_panel() takes care of adding
the streams. It uses a new template called
`subscriptions.handlebars`.
Splitting out this function will give us more flexibility
for various improvements.
First, we can decide to render the list after we open the
overlay, just to avoid the problem that users don't know why
the modal's opening. (And we could add a loader spinner as
needed.)
Second, we can improve our filter features so that we do
filtering in the data instead of moving DOM rows around,
which is expensive.
Third, we can eventually introduce progressive rendering.
Finally, having the function broken out will make profiling
more precise about where bottlenecks exist.
This behavior was originally implemented in commit 6993f89, but due to not
specifying a toggle option, the Subscribed/All streams switcher tab was
focused after the input was focused, leading to the input's loss of focus.
Fixes#9981.
This commit prepares the frontend code to be consumed by webpack.
It is a hack: In theory, modules should be declaring and importing the
modules they depend on and the globals they expose directly.
However, that requires significant per-module work, which we don't
really want to block moving our toolchain to webpack on.
So we expose the modules by setting window.varName = varName; as
needed in the js files.
This cleans up some leftover js and css from the effort of
redesign the rows of the #subscriptions table. Redesign happened
in commit 368b5859 and but we forgot to clean up these js and css
pieces.
squash to subs.js.
When admin user create new private stream, widget for changing privacy
of stream doesn't render. Because we render subscription-settings
template partially on subscription-add event, so this case wasn't
handled.
Fixes#9469
We now initialize most modules in ui_init.js, which
isn't the perfect place to do it, but at least now
we have a mostly consolidated entry point.
All the new foo.initialize() methods introduced in
this module run the same order relative to each
other as before this commit. (I did some console
logging with a hacked version of the program to
get the order right.) They happen a bit later than
before, though.
A couple modules still have the `$(function() {`
idiom for miscellaneous reasons:
archive - is a different bundle
common - used elsewhere
list_render - non-standard code style
scroll_bar - no exports
setup - probably special?
socket - $(function () is nested!
transmit - coupled to socket
translations - i18n is a bigger problem
ui_init - this bootstraps everything
This is preparation for enabling an eslint indentation configuration.
90% of these changes are just fixes for indentation errors that have
snuck into the codebase over the years; the others are more
significant reformatting to make eslint happy (that are not otherwise
actually improvements).
The one area that we do not attempt to work on here is the
"switch/case" indentation.
We now have components.toggle simply return an object, without
putting the object into a lookup table. The consumers of the
objects have all been changed to just store the object in their
own module scope.
The diff is a bit hard to read here, but it's mostly de-denting
code and removing these things:
- we don't have opts.name
- we don't have __toggle.lookup
- we don't have keys
- we don't create a sibling object to the prototype object
This commit introduces a helper function called
maybe_select_tab() that goes to the correct tab in the
toggler widget.
It avoids the "lookup" mechanism, which I am hoping to
deprecate, and it handles hypothetical startup issues
by warning instead of crashing.
Before this commit, this sequence would lead to errors:
* Open streams page via the gear menu.
* Go to "All" tab.
* Leave streams settings.
* Re-open stream settings via the gear menu.
After doing this, the tab would show "Subscribed" but the list
would be of all messages.
Now we explicitly goto the first tab.
I added a long comment explaining how subs.js contributed
to this bug--in short, we re-build the widget instead of just
re-opening this.
We may also want the toggle component to simply default the
initial tab to the first tab.
This commit adds a new helper func to check if sub settings tab
is active or not and remove function `add_me_to_member_list`
function from `static/js/stream_edit.js`, cause we don't need to
render subscribers for particular case, as we are already doing that.
Currently, even after unsubscribing from private/public stream
email address of stream is still present in html widgets hidden.
Cause we don't clear email address on unsubscription event.
This clears email address from widget when user unsubscribe
from any stream.
We've had a longstanding bug where the streams settings code
was getting an i18n'ed value in the middle of a callback from
the toggle component, so it would have been broken for
non-English sites. And then a recent cleanup of the toggle
code introduced a bug where the callback-in-the-callback was
getting stale state, so English sites broke too.
This fix just simplifies everything by using the key that
comes into our callback to determine whether we filter or not.
Fixes#8945
This commit is similar to the prior commit, in that we are
more disciplined about setting up handlers. We set them up right
as the widgets get rendered, and the handlers only delegate
up to the container div (id="stream_creation").
We only have one possible email hint, so there's no reason
to create one for each stream row, especially since we don't
clean them out when we close stream settings.
If another user subscribed to or unsubscribed from a stream while the
current user was not subscribed, we previously would attempt to
rerender the subscriber counts for that stream, even though they
weren't rendered at all in the first place; this would trigger
blueslip errors from the expectOne() check in this function.
Fixes#8720.
Even if realm admin can access unsubscribed private stream subscribers,
admin can't add subscriber to stream. Hide the option to add subs to
stream in UI.
This will allow realm admins to access subscribers of unsubscribed
private stream. This is a preparatory commit for letting realm admins
remove those users.
Previously, when creating an invite-only stream, the subscriber counts
were not being rendered properly, in that the "create" event for the
stream had the user not yet subscribed (so can_add_subscribers was
false), and then the rerendering we did when the user susbcribed just
tried to update the number, not actually rerender the thing.
When user click on unsubscribe button, to unsubscribe from private stream
immediately remove unsubscribed stream from all subscribed stream list.
We don't remove public stream immediately on unsubscription, cause
user may want to undo/subscribe back to stream.
Currently, our stream creation do not add stream list to all
stream list. Only subscription-add event add stream list to
stream list. If public stream is created without acting user
subscribed to stream, then newly created stream is not listed
to all stream list.
On stream creation add sub to all stream list table.
This migrates what were effectively data update functions to be called
from the main stream_events handlers, instead of being called from the
view-update code in subs.js.
To re-render stream members on subscription add or remove event,
we are accessing undefined value "active_stream.stream_id" rather
than "active_stream.id", which resulted in falsey value and our
stream members were not updated unconditionally.
This commit prefixes stream names in urls with stream ids,
so that the urls don't break when we rename streams.
strean name: foo bar.com%
before: #narrow/stream/foo.20bar.2Ecom.25
after: #narrow/stream/20-foo-bar.2Ecom.25
For new realms, everything is simple under the new scheme, since
we just parse out the stream id every time to figure out where
to narrow.
For old realms, any old URLs will still work under the new scheme,
assuming the stream hasn't been renamed (and of course old urls
wouldn't have survived stream renaming in the first place). The one
exception is the hopefully rare case of a stream name starting with
something like "99-" and colliding with another stream whose id is 99.
The way that we enocde the stream name portion of the URL is kind
of unimportant now, since we really only look at the stream id, but
we still want a safe encoding of the name that is mostly human
readable, so we now convert spaces to dashes in the stream name. Also,
we try to ensure more code on both sides (frontend and backend) calls
common functions to do the encoding.
Fixes#4713
This will essentially run the code paths to go from whatever you were
at before to /all and back in the case of /new, which will call the
render function three times (!!), so remove this call because it isn’t
really necessary anyways.
Currently the new streams user list will populate twice when you click
the new stream button (or “+”), because it is triggered once directly
by the button click and then once by the hash change to /new, so we
want to ignore the changes by the hash change.
Previously, if you had the streams overlay open (but no active stream
clicked) while another user edited your subscriptions state, we'd
throw an exception handle the get_events call, because the code for
rerendering the subscribers list didn't consider the possibility that
there was no active stream.
When re-subscribing by way of the "Subscribe" button in the right
side settings panel, the row will now be marked as active to
highlight that the row is still selected and being looked at.
Fixes: #6955.