This commit was automatically generated by `tools/lint --only=eslint
--fix`, after an `.eslintrc.json` change.
A half dozen files were removed from the changes by tabbott pending
further work to ensure we avoid breaking valuable PRs with merge
conflicts.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Hovering over user names (and user circles for PM List) now displays
Name, Status Message and Last online time in a js tooltip.
Hovering over group names displays the names of all group members.
Unavailable users are shown as "Last active: Today".
Hovering on a user circle in the Buddy List results in a js tooltip
with Active/Idle/Offline/Unavailable for
green/orange/white/white-with-line.
Resolves#11607.
When strings are tagged for translation using `tr this`, the strings
were passed into the frontend i18n as-is (including new line and tab
characters that are not functional in the text, existing just to
format the HTML files reasonably).
This did not match the algorithm used in `manage.py makemessages` for
extracting strings for translation, which (correctly) removed that
whitespace to provide a good experience for translators. The fix is
for the `tr this` implementation to use that same whitespace-stripping
algorithm.
Tested manually by checking if those strings that were not translated
earlier were translated, and also fixed an automated test that had the
wrong result, which should help prevent regressions.
Fixes#13389.
ES6 and TS modules don’t insert themselves into `window`, so our tests
shouldn’t insert them either. Since the test `window` behaves like
`global` now, we can rely on legacy modules that do insert themselves
to do it themselves.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
These should work consistently with how the individual user setting
works; see the last commit.
With changes from tabbott to fix real-time sync.
Fixes#12553.
This commit was originally automatically generated using `tools/lint
--only=eslint --fix`. It was then modified by tabbott to contain only
changes to a set of files that are unlikely to result in significant
merge conflicts with any open pull request, excluding about 20 files.
His plan is to merge the remaining changes with more precise care,
potentially involving merging parts of conflicting pull requests
before running the `eslint --fix` operation.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Because of the separate declarations, ESLint would convert them to
`let` and then trigger the `prefer-const` error.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Even though this variable was only assigned once, it was accessed
before its initialization, so it couldn’t be converted directly to
`let` or `const`. Use `let` with an explicit `null` to make it
clearer what’s going on and satisfy ESLint. (Why not `undefined`?
There’s an ESLint rule against that too.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This feels a bit more semantically appropriate: it more clearly says
"here's some information: there is no (relevant) recipient", rather
than "no information available". (Both `null` and `undefined` in JS
can have either meaning, but `undefined` especially commonly means
the latter.)
Concretely, it ensures a bit more explicitness where the value
originates: a bare `return;` becomes `return null;`, reflecting the
fact that it is returning a quite informative value.
Also make the implementation more explicit about what's expected here,
replacing truthiness tests with `!== null`. (A bit more idiomatic
would be `!= null`, which is equivalent when the value is well-typed
and a bit more robust to ill-typing bugs. But lint complains about
that version.)
It'd already been the case for some while that calling `stop` had the
same effect as calling `update` (previously `handle_text_input`) with
a falsy recipient. With the API changes in the previous few commits,
this becomes quite natural to make explicit in the API.
This was named after when it gets called from the UI, rather than
after what it can be expected to do.
Naming it after what it's meant to do -- and giving a summary line to
expand on that -- provides a more helpful semantic idea for reasoning
about the function. Doubly so for using the function in a different
client with its own UI, like the mobile app.
The main motivation for this change is to simplify this interface
and make it easier to reason about.
The case where it affects the behavior is when
is_valid_conversation() returns false, while current_recipient
and get_recipient() agree on some truthy value.
This means the message-content textarea is empty -- in fact the
user just cleared it, because we got here from an input event on
it -- but the compose box is still open to some PM thread that we
have a typing notification still outstanding for.
The old behavior is that in this situation we would ignore the
fact that the content was empty, and go ahead and prolong the
typing notification, by updating our timer and possibly sending a
"still typing" notice.
This contrasts with the behavior (both old and new) in the case
where the content is empty and we *don't* already have an
outstanding typing notification, or we have one to some other
thread. In that case, we cancel any existing notification and
don't start a new one, exactly as if `stop` were called
(e.g. because the user closed the compose box.)
The new behavior is that we always treat clearing the input as
"stopped typing": not only in those cases where we already did,
but also in the case where we still have the same recipients.
(Which seems like probably the common case.)
That seems like the preferable behavior; indeed it's hard to see
the point of the "compose_empty" logic if restricted to the other
cases. It also makes the interface simpler.
Those two properties don't seem like a coincidence, either: the
complicated interface made it difficult to unpack exactly what
logic we actually had, which made it easy for surprising wrinkles
to hang out indefinitely.
All these cases are meant to simulate having a user actually typing a
message to some actual recipients, so the `conversation_is_valid`
parameter would be true.
We make this change so that in an upcoming change that eliminates this
parameter, the adjustments to the test cases can be highly regular and
we don't have to introduce a new wrinkle to correspond to these values
being false.
The real purpose these two callbacks serve is exactly what an ordinary
parameter is perfect for:
* Each has just one call site, at the top of the function.
* They're not done for side effects; the point is what they return.
* The function doesn't pass them any arguments of its own, or
otherwise express any internal knowledge that doesn't just as
properly belong to its caller.
So, push the calls to these callbacks up into the function's caller,
and pass in the data they return instead.
This greatly simplifies the interface of `handle_text_input` and of
`typing_status` in general.
Users generally don't expect wildcard mentions in muted streams and
topics to be treated as a mention, either for the purposes of desktop
notifications or the unread mention counts.
This fixes the unread mention counts part of the issue.
Fixes part of #13073.
This adds the general machinery required, and sets it up for the file
`typing_status.js` as a first use case.
Co-authored-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
When a user performs a search that might contain historical public
streams messages that the user has access to (but doesn't because
we're searching the user's own personal history), we add a notice
above the first search result to let the user know that not all
messages may have been searched.
Fixes#12036.
This ensures that typing '```java' and pressing enter would result in
getting dropped into a java codeblock instead of javascript codeblock.
We implement this by pushing the exact match of a query to be pushed to
the top of the returned matches in `sort_languages`.
With some comments added by tabbott in the tests explaining the
current reasoning.
Fixes#13109.
This changes the availability icon for bot users to user_circle_green;
previously it was accidentally defaulting to user_circle_empty, making
it appear that bots were never available.
Fixes#13149.
As it turns out, our rerender_the_whole_thing function (used whenever
we were adding messages and discovered that the resulting message list
would be out-of-order) was just broken and scrolled the browser to a
random location.
This caused two user-facing bugs:
* On very fast networks, if two users sent messages at very close to
the same time, we could end up with out-of-order message deliveries,
triggering this code path, which was intended to silently correct
the situation, but failed.
* In some narrows to streams with muted topics in the history but some
recent traffic, the user's browser-cached history might have some
gaps that mean the server fetch we do after narrowing discovers the
history is out-of-order, again triggering the
rerender_the_whole_thing code path.
The fix is to just remove that function, adding a new option to the
well-tested rerender_preserving_scrolltop (which has explicit logic to
preserve the scroll position) instead.
Fixes#12067. Likely also fixes#12498.
This brings us in line, and also allows us to style these more like
unordered lists, which is visually more appealing.
On the backend, we now use the default list blockprocessor + sane list
extension of python-markdown to get proper list markup; on the
frontend, we mostly return to upstream's code as they have followed
CommonMark on this issue.
Using <ol> here necessarily removes the behaviour of not renumbering
on lists written like 3, 4, 7; hopefully users will be OK with the
change.
Fixes#12822.
Fixes#13134 as the last commit in the series for this issue.
Solves the "The (?) should just be a target=_blank link to
/help/message-a-stream-by-email." part of the issue.
As a result, a bunch code managing the email hint popup can be deleted,
together with a node test for that.
There was a bug where the success banner stuck
around even after the export completed. We now
nicely fade and remove the banner upon a successful
population of the export in the table.
Fixes: #13045
Add ability to search entire message history of all public streams at
once. It includes all subscibed, non subscribed public streams messages
and even historical public stream messages sent before user had joined
an organization or stream.
Fixes#8859.
If a user was active within the last 90 days,
show number of days (23 Days ago).
If the user was active more than 90 days ago and in the same year,
then show MMM DD (Mar 15).
In any other case show MMM DD YYYY (Nov 10 2018),
Change timerender.js test to accomodate changes.
Delete trailing newlines from all files, except
tools/ci/success-http-headers.txt and tools/setup/dev-motd, where they
are significant, and static/third, where we want to stay close to
upstream.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This reverts commit 76e50af78e.
Empirically, this caused weird issues with the cursor jumping around,
so more investigation is required into the right way to fix it.
Although SimpleBar automatically sets itself up on elements with a
`data-simplebar` attribute, sometimes we try to set event listeners
before that happens. Create the SimpleBar early in that case.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
When you press enter on a typeahead and start typing, your cursor is
placed at the end of the textbox, whereas we want it to be placed at
the end of the typeahead immediately. This causes some characters to
appear at the end of the message before you again get to typing from
where you left off.
To fix, we use the change event triggered on typeahead completion to
reposition the cursor instead of using a setTimeout().
Fixes#12621.
We implement 3 changes:
1. Partial Stream Typeahead
In addition to regular stream completion, we do partial completion
of stream typeahead on pressing '>'. We use our custom addition to
typeahead.js: this.trigger_selection to start topic_list typeahead.
Implements: `#stream na|` (press >) => `#**stream name>|`.
2. Topic Jump Typeahead
'topic_jump' typeahead moves the cursor from just ahead of a
completed stream-mention to just after the end of the mention
text and is triggered by typing '>' after the stream mention.
This typeahead merely uses the regex matching and event hooks of
the typeahead library instead of displaying any text completions.
Implements: `#**stream name** >|` => `#**stream name>|`.
3. Topic List Typeahead
'topic_list' typeahead shows the list of recent topics of a stream
and if your current text doesn't match one of them, also shows you
the current query text, allowing you to create mentions for topics
that do not exist yet.
Implements: `#**stream name>someth|` => `#**stream name>something** |`.
At the end of this commit, we support the following mechanisms to
complete the stream-topic mention:
1. Type "#denmar|".
2. Press Enter to get "#**Denmark** |".
3. Press > to get "#**Denmark>|".
4. Type topic name and press enter.
OR
1. Type "#denmar|".
2. Type > to get "#**Denmark>|".
3. Type topic name and press enter.
Both result in the final inserted syntax: "#**Denmark>topic name**".
Documentation is still pending.
Fixes#4836.
In this refactor, we extract two functions in unread.js. Which one to
use depends on whether res has already been fetched or not.
This also adds node tests to maintain coverage of unread.js.
Tweaked by tabbott for cleaner variable names and tests.