The function echo.apply_markdown() actually applies markdown to
a message now, instead of simply computing markdown. Passing
in the outer `message` object will allow us to avoid some hacky
post-processing of messages after rendering, because we can
have our parser callbacks update message on the spot in a more
atomic fashion.
This commit doesn't change any behavior yet, but it starts us
down the road of deprecating page_params.email and allowing
people.js to control all access to the current user's email,
which will be important for email changes.
This changes bugdown to use the realm passed in by the caller (if any)
for rendering, fixing a problem where bots such as the notification
bot would have their messages rendering using the admin realm's
settings, not the settings of the realm their messages are being sent
into.
Also adds a test for the notification bot case.
Fixes#3215.
This moves the realm_filter_key variable, primarily used for clarity,
up from Bugdown into the render_markdown function.
We'll need this for the upcoming commits.
A lot of care has been taken to ensure we're using the realm that the
message is being sent into, not the realm of the sender, to correctly
handle the logic for cross-realm bot users such as the notifications
bot.
In order to correctly handle messages sent by cross-realm bots, we
need to specify the realm that the messages are being sent into in the
send message code path. The commit and its successors convert that
code path to include the realm the message is being sent to explicitly.
Makes a number of simplications to the analytics views code. The main one is
that we now return the entire data series, even if the data is eventually
going to go into a pie chart. This was prompted by us wanting several
different pie charts for each stat (one for last 30 days, one for all time,
etc), but I think it is also a more natural API. The total amount of data
being sent for the pie charts now is maybe half of what is being sent for
our single 'hourly' stat, or maybe up to 10,000 ints per year the
organization has been around.
The other big change is that the data being sent back is now always explicit
about whether it is data about the realm (stored in data['realm'], or data
about the user (stored in data['user']).
- Remove `jquery-mousewheel` from `static/third` and fetch it from npm.
- Upgrade `jquery-mousewheel` to 3.1.6.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.5.
- Change some js code to comply with this `jquery-mousewheel` version.
Part of #1709.
- Remove `underscore.js` from `static/third` and fetch it from `npm`.
- Upgrade `underscore.js` to 1.8.3.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.2.
Part of #1709
- Remove `codepointat` from `static/third` and fetch it from `npm`.
- Upgrade `codepointat` to 0.2.0.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.1.
Part of #1709.
- Remove `winchan.js` from `static/third` and fetch it from `npm`.
- Upgrade `winchan` to 0.2.0.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.0.
Part of #1709.
If a new user is auto-subscribed to a stream called "new
members", we will automatically narrow them to that stream
after the tutorial. Otherwise, we fall back to the code's
previous behavior, which is to direct them to the notifications
stream (often called "announce").
This is somewhat experimental. If we try this concept out on
the public Zulip realm and it works well, we will create a nice
realm setting for the "new members" stream.
The script now outputs bullet points to the user when
it fails, and there are some basic comments at the top
of the file. I also fixed the path of the log file.
Fixes#3230
In people.emails_strings_to_user_ids_string, we just warn
for bad emails going forward.
Users can enter bad emails into the search location bar,
for example, and that causes us to compute a browser hash,
which in turn uses this function.
(It's possible that we should adjust the search code not
to compute hashes for narrowing when the narrow doesn't
make sense, but that could be a non-trivial fix.)
This change makes it such that the stream filtering operation will only
run if the subscription overlay is visible, preventing any issues with
the lack of existence of elements or processing something that users
won’t be able to see.
Fixes#3388.
The new subs.close() function should unify all closing events of the
subscriptions overlay. The function also now tracks whether the
subscription overlay is in a closed or open state.