In #23380, we are changing all occurrences of uri with url in order to
follow the latest URL standard. Previous PRs #25038 and #25045 has
replaced the occurences of uri that has no direct relation with realm.
This commit changes just the model property, which has no API
compatibility concerns.
We used "btn-primary" class only in integrations dev panel page
and this commit re-adds the CSS applied by this class in
integrations_dev_panel.css. We also remove the btn-primary class
since this is a bootstrap-specific class and we no longer
need it.
We now use micromodal in the modal on dev server emails page to
make it consistent with other modals in the app and this is
preparatory work for moving away from bootstrap as well.
Previously, we had an architecture where CSS inlining for emails was
done at provision time in inline_email_css.py. This was necessary
because the library we were using for this, Premailer, was extremely
slow, and doing the inlining for every outgoing email would have been
prohibitively expensive.
Now that we've migrated to a more modern library that inlines the
small amount of CSS we have into emails nearly instantly, we are able
to remove the complex architecture built to work around Premailer
being slow and just do the CSS inlining as the final step in sending
each individual email.
This has several significant benefits:
* Removes a fiddly provisioning step that made the edit/refresh cycle
for modifying email templates confusing; there's no longer a CSS
inlining step that, if you forget to do it, results in your testing a
stale variant of the email templates.
* Fixes internationalization problems related to translators working
with pre-CSS-inlined emails, and then Django trying to apply the
translators to the post-CSS-inlined version.
* Makes the send_custom_email pipeline simpler and easier to improve.
Signed-off-by: Daniil Fadeev <fadeevd@zulip.com>
This commit adds "bootstrap-focus-style" class to the select
elements such that we can add CSS rule for focusing a select
element at single place only using this class.
Removes the `btn-direct` class in `portico.css` that was only
being used for dev login buttons.
Adds `dev-button` class for general CSS rules for buttons on the
dev login page. Adds `dev-login-button` and `dev-create-button`
classes for CSS rules specific to the two types of buttons on the
page.
Adds links to the documentation about management commands in the
API documentation for creating users, as well as the `/devtools`
documentation, the GDPR compliance article and the incoming
webhooks tutorial.
Prep commit for creating demo organizations in the development
environment with a blank email address for organization owners.
Changes the input element for organization owners into a button
element, so that text other than the input value can be displayed.
Renames and cleans up some of the CSS rules for the `btn-admin`
class that is used in the dev login page for input elements.
Confirmed via git-grep that this class is only used on the dev
login page.
Previously, CSS rules were added inline for emails page in
dev server. This commit adds a new file which contains
CSS rules for the emails page in dev server. This will
also help us in adding focus for the radio buttons in
the page, which cannot be added inline to the elements,
when we remove the use of bootstrap for this page.
Adds HTML title elements to templates that extend either `base.html`,
`portico.html` or `portico_signup.html`, and that are not website
portico landing pages that will use the `PAGE_TITLE` variable to set
the HTML title element (see following commit in series).
Also, updates some templates for missing translation tags.
As a general rule, we want the title element (and page content)
translated. Exceptions that are updated in this commit are templates
used in the development environment, analytics templates that are used
by staff and templates related to Zephyr.
I rewrote most of tools/lib/pretty-printer.py, which
was fairly easy due to being able to crib some
important details from the previous implementation.
The main motivation for the rewrite was that we weren't
handling else/elif blocks correctly, and it was difficult
to modify the previous code. The else/elif shortcomings
were somewhat historical in nature--the original parser
didn't recognize them (since they weren't in any Zulip
templates at the time), and then the pretty printer was
mostly able to hack around that due to the "nudge"
strategy. Eventually the nudge strategy became too
brittle.
The "nudge" strategy was that we would mostly trust
the existing templates, and we would just nudge over
some lines in cases of obviously faulty indentation.
Now we are bit more opinionated and rigorous, and
we basically set the indentation explicitly for any
line that is not in a code/script block. This leads
to this diff touching several templates for mostly
minor fix-ups.
We aren't completely opinionated, as we respect the
author's line wrapping decisions in many cases, and
we also allow authors not to indent blocks within
the template language's block constructs.
In cases where an opening tag is so long that we stretch
it to 2+ lines of code, we should try to use block-style
formatting in the template code.
Unfortunately, we have lots of legacy code that violates
this concept, so this is a timid fix.
There are also legit use cases like textarea where we
probably need to keep the ugly template syntax for things
to render properly.
For users who are not logged in and for those who don't have
'prefers_web_public_view' set in session, we redirect them
to the default login page where they can choose to login
as spectator or authenticated user.
This reverses the policy that was set, but incompletely enforced, by
commit 951514dd7d. The self-closing tag
syntax is clearer, more consistent, simpler to parse, compatible with
XML, preferred by Prettier, and (most importantly now) required by
FormatJS.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>