Use less technical subjects, and make them good examples of actual
topics you'd want to discuss (previous examples like 'jQuery' might
leave people wondering "jQuery is a technology, not a topic, why is
that a subject?")
(imported from commit 23b74fe145ed2d325daa94a46e63c42c005b1459)
Require POST method for /accounts/logout. This has the side effect of
automatically enabling Django's CSRF protection.
(imported from commit 44b1b6ebaadc1c03006e21ae54ac768e31234801)
The typeaheads take some time to open and changing focus on keydown
sometimes prevents them from doing so before the focus is changed.
(imported from commit a8153704e60f3d6c34af55a3de5bd43071a15baf)
This is in response to the following bug report by Evan Broder:
FYI, it looks like if I accidentally tab to the "Formatting" link and
hit enter, it erases the message (and replaces it with a reply to
whatever the selected message is, I think?)
This is subtle and here's why: Suppose you have the focus on a
stream name in your left sidebar. j and k will still move your
cursor up and down, but Enter won't reply -- it'll just trigger
the link on the sidebar! So you keep pressing enter over and
over again. Until you click somewhere or press r.
Net-net though, I think it's a change worth making, because
it's good for keyboard accessibility.
(imported from commit b65bcc0abbc751718bb03d418c03961b9ed9e42b)
I.e. if you sent a stream message, Tutorial bot will reply to that
stream, and if you sent a PM, Tutorial bot will reply with a PM.
(imported from commit 05b7d1848f6eb1f70dcd5fb365fba9daee52a5dd)
This simplifies a bunch of fragile resizing logic in our code,
and also addresses the Chrome Canary bug where clicking in the
searchbox causes the navbar to get huge.
This fixes Trac #764 and Trac #1039
(imported from commit fc8c3995109de384b71dfba2b986a8500ff7f08d)
I figure it's worth giving people time to read the message and click
the "Report error link" before we redirect the page away; 60 seconds
is still short enough that if the person wasn't at their computer,
it'll still fix itself.
(imported from commit 577193cf8dca0a646933741a50769378ddd824bb)
The new message list system can rerender the message list on scroll,
but did not properly re-highlight any messages which were highlighted
at the time the scrolling was initiated due to an open compose box,
this time due to a bug where the meaning of "this" changes when we
moved the rendering code into the message list library.
(imported from commit 26d9716811b56a6f89ae22e68038ad560dcfee64)
The new message list system can rerender the message list on scroll,
but did not properly re-fade any messages which were faded at the
time the scrolling was initiated due to an open compose box.
(imported from commit 4bc7c172e8bb55acfaacc5e5460eb6a2ef9aebe2)
Now when the font increases, so will the size of the emoji. (1.4em
seems to be 20px at our default settings, so this doesn't change the
size of the emoji for any of our existing people).
(imported from commit edb0b590f00bfbad0355a41b1f995335cf0e9e07)
Previously we did the equivalent of a $('.message_comp').child('input'),
which does not search beyond the first level.
In addition, using a comma in a selector is essentially an AND, which
means the narrow search only applied to elements of the 'input' class.
So when debugging we saw a bunch of elements being selected and that hid
the bug for a bit.
Now we do a .find instead which will ensure we blur the correct
elements.
This closes trac #1045.
(imported from commit f44383ee9fc93406d031589ef914f5a003334ea7)
This now adds you to a special `tutorial-username` when you begin,
we send tutorial messages there, and we remove you from it when
you're done.
(imported from commit a93a90b9347a4f72536e96331ddfd1d47727ce71)
But only allow them to send to tutorial-<<your username>>.
The idea being that this helps reduce potential abuse from this JSON
call. (Because otherwise, anyone could call into this endpoint and
have the tutorial bot send random messages to random peoples's
streams.)
(imported from commit 471d4348d7ad43858b5df240e4f1dceba006aab6)
Prior to this commit, at 800px, e.g., the Google button
is smushed into the login form.
(imported from commit 422d1b677439460785f6b31ea2fe2c819e23e259)
Previously, we blurred all input/text boxes, including e.g. the search
box. This probably won't impact normal operation, but this can be a
problem for our automated frontend tests which tend to have different
timing than real life.
(imported from commit ea84312bea2aae99d51b48cede0746e7a5b6e76e)
We had a bug where if the selected message had the same subject as the
target message, but a different stream, narrowing by subject would
narrow to that subject plus the selected message's stream rather than
the target message's stream.
(imported from commit 4b196342318a06d8aeea46bf05e3d7416ecb6c5b)
Previously if you narrowed to
"pm-with:wdaher@humbughq.com,jbarnold@humbughq.com", you'd always get
no results because our filter was comparing your query against
message.reply_to, which is sorted in alphabetical order.
(imported from commit 40dc78640f3b010f11312176cfcf3c331fdf3337)
The most expensive part of adding the display time to messages is
calling time.toLocaleDateString() and time.toLocaleTimeString().
Most of the time, this information never gets seen, so we now delay
calculating it until just before the user would see it. This cuts
the time to render a chunk of messages from >1s to ~200ms.
(imported from commit 6167e7a8e1c3b4ca77471fa346292be4ffa67ec8)
Adding the display times to messages is very expensive (> 1s for 400
messages in Chrome on my machine). This commit doesn't directly
address that issue, but does mitigate its affects on scrolling speed
when rendering the next chunk of the message list. After this
commit, rendering a portion of the message list for the second time
only takes ~300ms.
(imported from commit b22badb5dcce69be297f6403b1cb40950e46376e)
Long-term we probably want to pick the render window size and
re-render threshold based on the user's window height instead of
arbitrarily.
When we re-render we probably also want to ensure that the newly
selected message appears in the same location as it would have
before the re-render.
(imported from commit f044b7f2200822e8e6e8dba7108d087a69016134)
One of Matt Goldstein's comments is that we often make you look
like you're not at your computer, even when you are, just because
you haven't checked Humbug for a while.
While it's important to have this be accurate, right now I think
we err on the side of showing you as not present. So I increased
some of the timeouts in an attempt to fix that.
(imported from commit 9fd8f432e6684ec1b33d1d932f37caa99c627959)
This might need to change after we merge zev's message list branch, but
it fixes the bug and performs well and isn't a lot of code.
And it has the nice property that it'll only fade messages within the
neighbors range, so there's no need to update the unfading code to
support this.
(imported from commit c562d7335bc5635c960321e1451e4ba0f4452ee9)
It's not quite what the CUSTOMER4 person wanted, but
I think it scratches the itch.
This fixes Trac #1023
(imported from commit 9186499c8f6bacb230a2d1ed6d5ca7ffa7416ac3)
To be fully responsive, we can basically never specify the width of
our container in a fixed number of pixels; otherwise we'll run into
the situation where there's an inordinate amount of wasted space on
our left and right.
So everything needs to change from, e.g. row to row-fluid,
and that has a whole cascading series of changes that that implies.
(imported from commit 7e2771d916f429548c65c0a00fc4c11397054656)
Previously we defaulted to current_msg_list.selected_id, which was
fine if you were narrowing from the home view, but if you navigated to
a narrow with no messages in it and then clicked something in the left
panel or used the search bar, it wouldn't work.
Fixes trac: #870.
(imported from commit 5ee480d8d2b1fb300fccbe75e04135d977a1fc07)
The first change might somewhat address users asking "does it matter
which one I click on?" by not being specific that one should click on
_this message_.
The latter I think addresses a small confusion I've seen where people
try try to hit tab before starting a reply.
(imported from commit 708acdf4d4c80713795b96b1a59d681a88604670)
This is the fix for https://trac.humbughq.com/ticket/958 (Narrowing
moves the pointer) proposed by jhurwitz. Currently on master,
narrowing can cause you to end up wildly out of place.
This branch is not a perfect fix -- you do end up with the pointer on
the expected message after the narrow, but that message is centered on
the screen; better would be for that message to not move at all.
(imported from commit b89e4e2c896add20eceb609db46c46dc025fdce2)
If this is not the case, then you can't actually click the
"Press Enter to send" checkbox in the composebox (or anything
in the space occupied by where the popup will go).
This actually is not a perfect solution because that area still
remains unclickable for anything else. (In particular, for example,
scroll a message's "Info" link and then try to click on it -- you
can't! The click is captured by the #notifications-area div.)
http://www.vinylfox.com/forwarding-mouse-events-through-layers/
proposes an alternative more general way of dealing with this,
but it seems like a real pain.
This fixes Trac #1017.
(imported from commit 9cfde1cfff63ab32ae7d129980c47567e221eac3)
This import strips other icons we aren't using from the CSS definitions and
fonts.
Licensed under MIT.
(imported from commit 02cc2681a1cf44107444b6fe70420afca6950ae2)
In Safari only, if you narrow to something and scroll all the way back
up to the top and then unnarrow, your position actually remains all
the way at the top!
We explicitly call a "scroll_to_selected" as the final step of
deactivating a narrow, which brings this message into view.
This doesn't seem to be an issue on Chrome and Firefox, but I'm not
quite sure why; something about the sequence of events.
(imported from commit fc73640351be03c02eb2f3c8a23de3327723f002)
By splitting up all_msg_list and home_msg_list, we can properly add/remove
streams from the home view without having to jump through hoops.
(imported from commit 92767197759f7519197dfc58be951b60fa823fbb)
If we have removed a stream from the home view, and our pointer
that we load from the server refers to a message that is no longer
visible, we don't want to error out but rather select the nearest
message to our previously selected one.
(imported from commit d212f1fba7b06836d1d916b43042991625b6f41e)
Messages are now selected on a MessageList, which triggers a
message_selected event that other parts of the code can listen for.
(imported from commit 1da9e4121425c0ac4461b41b7aea169072e1512b)
Previously we would select the first message in the block. Now, we
only do that if a message that is selected will not be in the
resulting narrowed view. If the selected message will be in the
narrowed view, we select that message once narrowed.
(imported from commit 4da5a3a0b597b58c2e028f1b29ac20ae3808a4d1)
I kind of expect this to work, and hopefully this'll help with
people getting stuck on the "Settings" page in the tutorial.
(imported from commit 1159d884dcd331bcfb74864a0176fa293e8c3714)
Most of them are just typos or funny punctuation, but this also adds
the word "above" after "You and Humbug Tutorial Bot" since otherwise
the user might try to click the text in the message body and be
confused.
(imported from commit dccaf4acd24db713acab261440f0a9d03860e0f4)
Right now the MIT realm has pretty bad UI lag with 1,200 messages loaded. We
need to fix the root problem, but this commit at least makes reloading the page
a satisfactory remedy.
(imported from commit 93d47710891cfc4db9fa00beaa5ccd10113aa1c3)
Here I have a sketchy but functional framework for dealing with
all of the async stuff that a tutorial requires, and an early
draft of what such a tutorial might look like.
I could probably go and remove the first-run message, but I'll
keep it around for now in the unlikely event that something I
haven't anticipated goes wrong in starting up the tutorial.
(imported from commit de9779a66a1b3fe790082decb324c90ec180b39b)
This fixes the issue where toggling show/hide on a stream in the home
view scrolls the page, because the removing and adding of rows in the
still-visible message table causes the cursor and scroll position to jump
(imported from commit 7454284a44af26379a0d2e7fce3683d98e3e4c48)
We don't typically have these (see message type, etc.) and removing
them will allow simplifying the code.
(imported from commit fbefb08ee9b08c73f32c8150a6fa1060957aa8ad)
This keeps the name to the right of the bullet even if it overflows
onto two lines.
Fixes#909.
(imported from commit 60528bb30c2d9e29687b773abc76c18369a8a068)
This commit does the actual work of formatting recent dates as weekday
names and updating the format when the date is sufficiently far in the
past.
Also, silence a bogus jslint warning.
(imported from commit 503286fbd9c1e33a81cc7d78cf8d08d5e7f78c1a)
This commit just moves time rendering logic to its own file, and does
not make any functionality changes.
(imported from commit d111d03c6abc8d9550fcf65e4f89eab8056d1ed4)
That way it is visible more consistently when arrowing through
messages (arrowing causes scroll events).
(imported from commit ba629b907e4e593032a61a10b04f00e592fe8427)
This fixes Trac #898.
Prior to this commit, we only changed the tab to #home in
compose.start; i.e. when a compose was not already in progress. This
means that if the composebox was open and we were on the settings
page, clicking one of these buttons would not work.
(imported from commit aa88a605cdcb61d5b6a1ece6292001c5f5a19c66)
This fixes Trac #912.
My guess is that 'overflow: hidden hidden' was just being interpreted
as no setting on the overflow, which is why this was broken.
Regardless, this fix seems to work in Firefox and Chrome.
(imported from commit a08ddc5db97ee1e8a65a278c0d278e823afae65d)
We've been noticing a long delay between switching to a window with unread
messages and the time that those messages actually appear. This got much worse
around the time we added Notificon.
Our hypothesis (supported by some testing) is that the work done by Notificon
in creating a <canvas>, drawing into it, serializing it to PNG, etc. is using
up some quota of background operations that would be better spent rendering
messages.
Switching to precomputed images should mitigate this problem.
Resolves#896.
May resolve#882 to our satisfaction.
(imported from commit a2d98a163486bdd35fdfb5351f96c5529ba5c7e9)
I experimented briefly with window.getSelection to try to determine if
any text was highlighted (and then we could've done something like
"Don't popover if text is highlighted"), but I couldn't quickly get it
to work in a robust way, so for now I am removing the feature.
(imported from commit 76048b8fd070675b480a2d29e2c8d7d6018633ec)
This is accomplished by continuning to have per-conversation PM counts
but then summing them up into a global count.
We may split this off into per-conversation counts in the future.
(imported from commit 311e3b74715c3a01c0b75837e397a386ab65505c)
(And to let you know that it's OK that you have no messages.)
This fixes Trac #850 for the case where you first log in.
(imported from commit 47741856e34f67bfc2cc91bdc21def75ab6fe09d)
The previous commit stopped the mousewheel event at .bottom_sidebar,
which means it was never getting to our individual scrolling lists.
(imported from commit 92d32c21bb596d0e14d887ff779a857223d45342)
This isn't perfect, because if, e.g. the stream list is super short,
it still takes up lots of space that the user list might want to use,
but it's an acceptable first pass solution, in my view.
(imported from commit 669737d769258c089b40ffea4abee3229902e857)
This lets us clean up the HTML a little bit in preparation
for a later change which will cause the stream and people
lists to scroll independently of one another.
Also it feels a bit more fun.
(imported from commit b3b49149d7ec2960fd752fe50b41e55d363c1a98)
This is actually a tricky one, because:
* Later, probably if we display an unread count by the person's
name, the action on clicking them might very well be
"Narrow to PMs with that person"
* But for now, while we don't have that, everything about
historical precedent really does strongly suggest that
clicking that person's name is going to get you a PM with
that person.
So we implement that. For now anyway.
(imported from commit 4d461fd6edec122d542c4a97e23f2e400c31122e)