This is more performant, along with accepting a parameter for
filtering only streams that are subscribed to if the toggle is set to
subscribed only.
Also, it now does substring matches, rather than just matching if an
entire word matches the search query.
Fixes#2141.
From subs.js we don't redundantly try to remove an element
from ths sidebar; we just trigger the event.
In stream_list.js we continue to remove the element from
the DOM, and we also remove the widget from our internal
Dict of sidebar rows, so that if we re-subscribe, we know
we'll automatically re-build the widget from the template
and the latest data from stream_data.js.
We now use stream_id as our key to rename streams, which
should prevent a few race conditions long term. (We are
still possibly contending with other events that use
stream_name as a key, so this is not perfect.)
We don't want to prepend new subscribers to our list of
subscribers in the settings page when they hit enter; we
want to wait till we get the event from the server.
This is a fairly new regression that was added when we
live-updated peer subscriber changes.
This fixes and issue where the change_stream_privacy template had its
own duplicate copy of the data-stream-name attribute, which wasn't
updated when streams were renamed.
Fixes#2016.
I make server_events slimmer by not handling a specific
property when subs.update_subscription_properties() should
do all the dispatching (and mostly did).
And then since update_subscription_properties() has
a "sub" already, I can call directly to stream_list code
and remove a function from subs.js. Since I lose the
wrapper function in subs.js, I rename the stream_list
function as part of this commit.
The only code that gets slightly heavier here is that
we have two lines in the 'pin_to_top' case instead of one.
All of the eventual callers to prepend_subscribers()
and format_member_list_elem() call people.get_by_email()
anyway, so now we do it one place. The one exception
was using page_params.fullname, which is awkwardly
different than what we call that variable elsewhere
(fullname vs. full_name).
The startup code in subs.js used to intermingle data
stuff and UI stuff in a loop inside a called function,
which made the code hard to reason about.
Now there is a clear separation of concerns, with these methods
being called in succession:
stream_data.initialize_from_page_params();
stream_list.create_initial_sidebar_rows();
The first method was mostly extracted from subs.js, but I simplified
some things, like not needing to make a copy of the hashes
we were passed in, plus I now garbage collect email_dict. Also,
the code path that initialize_from_page_params() mostly replaces
used to call create_sub(), which fired a trigger, but now it
just does data stuff.
Once the data structure is built up, it's a very simple matter
to build the initial sidebar rows, and that's what the second
method does.
This function will make it easier to unit test upcoming
changes related to stream counts.
This was mostly moving code, but one change is that we
don't call create_subs() in subs.js any more (which would
have been kind of circular dependency), since the only thing
that it did besides calling a more appropriate function
in stream_data.js was to generate a trigger that was
subsequently ignored and possibly a UI trap, as we don't
want to be messing with the stream sidebar when we go into
the stream settings page.
We now simply call exports.create_sub_from_server_data() for
newly encountered unsubscribed streams (which don't belong in
the sidebar anyway.)
This function used to live in subs.js. It's mostly a code move,
but I simplified the logic to determine whether it's subscribed
not to do a lookup into the same data structure that the sub
already came from.
I also added some tests.
This moves these functions from subs.js to stream_data.js:
receives_desktop_notifications
receives_audible_notifications
This makes notifications.js no longer dependent on the
bloated subs.js.
Filter behaves similarly to filter in left sidebar, see PR #684. Added
stream input field to the stream creation modal along with other settings,
for clarity.
Fixes#455, #563.
The API uses this endpoint /json/streams/<stream_name> to update
stream information such as description, since the stream_name is
part of the URI it should be encoded to escape unsafe characters.
Fixes#1986.
This fixes a bug where the .subscribers property of a subscription
object in stream_data wasn't being properly updated to remove the
current user when the current user unsubscribed from the stream.
Fixes#1667.
This adds a preview button to the subscriptions page to allow a user
to check out the stream without having to subscribe.
The button’s default state is hidden but on subscription row hover it
shows itself.
The preview button updates its text from "Narrow" to "Preview" and
back when a user subscribes and unsubscribes from a stream.
Fixes: #1519.
From the popups that appear when clicking the down-arrow in the left
column's streams, you can now unsubscribe from that particular
channel. This runs on the same function that unsubscribes you from
streams in the "Subscriptions" tab.
Fixes: #1554.
[tweaked by tabbott to fix some errors]
The ‘for’ attribute is not valid HTML in the case of this because the
emails are invalid character sets and the input has no ID with the
email.
This changes it to a data-name which is still searchable but doesn’t
interfere with typical input behavior.
The checkboxes no longer float-left, fixing an issue with the
subscribe buttons leaning right in narrow windows.
Fixes: #1491.
There are no modern browsers that do not have built in JSON parsing
abilities. We do not need $.parseJSON as it now just serves as a call
to JSON.parse.
Attr now returns “checked” instead of true and “” instead of false in
higher versions. This fixes those issues.
The attr(“data-*”) have also been covered to data() as well.
Following strings are marked translatable:
- All strings which are passed to `button.text` or which affect the
text of buttons.
- All strings passed to `placeholder`.
- All strings passed to `compose_error`.
Fixes#969
Previously, we were checking if a particular user was the current user
in dozens of places in the codebase, and correct case-insensitive
checks were not used consistently, leading to bugs like #502.
Move recenter_pointer_on_display, suppress_scroll_pointer_update,
fast_forward_pointer, furthest_read, and server_furthest_read to
a new pointer module in pointer.js.
Previously, the Zulip subscriptions page's error bar would always be
at the very top of the scrollable view, and thus would likely be out
of view when an error happened. This fixes it by having the error bar
always placed below the search box (and thus visible regardless of
where in the scrollable streams view we are).
Fixes: #515.
[commit message and comments expanded by tabbott]
This includes removing GET support for the endpoint, which is unused
and doesn't map well to this being a bulk endpoint.
(imported from commit 348ff9dfa84be1661368c6d7d35aebf2ae2a9ae0)
This helps the common case of not liking our default of having audible
and desktop notifications enabled, and not making users adjust the
settings on every existing stream to fix it.
(imported from commit be75edb2c1385d1bd9a289416e2dffd8007f5e0a)
Splitting out subs.mark_sub_unsubscribed gives the calling
code flexibility to track down the "sub" as it sees fit.
(imported from commit 4052f5a2a0f6fd58a2177f2b5961ce72f052cf94)
Before this change, we were using sequentially generated ids
on the client side to identify streams. Now we just use
the ids from the server. The goal here is to reduce the
confusion of having two different ids attached to a stream.
Also, not that it matters a ton, but this also means that
the browser basically has an immutable id for each stream
that is future-proof to reloads, multiple create_sub calls, etc.
It also a bit easier to grep for ".stream_id" than ".id".
(imported from commit 057f9e50dfee127edfe3facd52da93108241666a)