Adds a electron_bridge event that takes in message id and reply recived from
the notification reply and sends a message. We do this in webapp so desktop
doesn't have to depend on narrow and channel modules.
We also modify zjunit to reset window.electron_bridge after every run
to avoid leaking it.
Not all our errors actually happen in the contexts we were
wrapping (e.g. `setTimeout` and `_.throttle`). Also this fixes the
neat Firefox inspector feature that shows you where your event
handlers for a given DOM element actually live.
Using this "semi-modern" browser event means that Safari 9 and older
and IE10 and older may not have our browser error reporting active;
that seems fine giving the vanishing market share of those browsers.
https://blog.sentry.io/2016/01/04/client-javascript-reporting-window-onerror
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
It seems like the de facto standard ES polyfill library these days,
and we already depend on it through simplebar.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The minimal syntactic sugar it might provide isn’t worth the
unexpected side effects (including side effects on third party
modules).
For now, we allow zrequire to emulate the previous syntax in the Node
test suite, even though stealing part of the NPM namespace is
confusing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
We now use a Proxy to wrap zjquery elements, so
that we can detect callers trying to invoke methods
(or access attributes) that do not exist. We try
to give useful error messages in those cases.
The main impact here is that we force lots of tests
to explicitly stub `length`.
Also, we can't do equality checks on zjquery
objects any more due to the proxy object, but the
easy workaround is to compare selectors. (This
is generally an unnecessary technique, anyway.)
The proxy wrapper is fairly straightforward, and
we just have a few special cases for things like
"inspect" that happen when you try to print out
objects.
We no longer store handlers as an array of functions,
and instead we assume that code will only ever set up
one handler per sel/event or sel/event/child. This is
almost always a sane policy for the app itself.
We also try to improve error handling when devs write
incorrect tests.
The only tests that required changes here are the
activity tests, which were a little careless about how
data got reset between tests.
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..
Adds box-shadow to `#searchbox` when either `#search_query` or any
of the pills have focus. Uses jquery instead of pure css as the
`:focus` event occurs on `#search_query`, while we want to add
box-shadow to `#searchbox`. This could have been done with
`:focus-within` CSS selector, but it is not supported in IE or Opera.
`#search_query` already had an onfocus/focusout listener, adding
listeners to `#searchbox.pills` for those events wouldn't have worked
as you don't want the focusout event to fire when the focus shifts
from input to pill.
Also adds `focusin`, `focusout` and `css()` to zjquery. `css` is
same as `val`, except it returns an empty object in case of no value
instead of an empty string. I don't think `css()` is valid syntax
in actual jquery.
The reason to add this api is that many times some elements are
already used/cached and then their value interfere/exists in
other tests which gives false results.
This is preparation for our migration of our JS pipeline to webpack,
which includes as part of the process a hack of exporting globals via
the window object.
We have less urgency to test all templates now. The
most common error is probably unbalanced tags, and our
python-based template checker catches those problems
pretty well.
It's still possible to create bad templates, of course,
but the node tests have never been super deep at finding
semantic errors.
This also updates node_tests to use new constructor which is uppercase,
and some properties that are changed to be more clear now, like
jsdom().defaultView which is meant to the window object is now called window.
Ref: https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom/blob/master/Changelog.md
This run_test helper sets up a convention that allows
us to give really short tracebacks for errors, and
eventually we can have more control over running
individual tests. (The latter goal has some
complications, since we often intentionally leak
setup in tests.)