Use information from the server to figure out if we should prompt for
bankruptcy, rather than trying repeatedly inside load_more.
(imported from commit ccb8cb1ce482b8bf3d343e7324fef7981880282d)
We instead implemented the ~desired functionality here using the
API and a bot to make a totally read-only, static, slowly-updating
view into the Zuliverse.
This is the moral equivalent of reverting deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9
(imported from commit 9d743fe82f197b37f005e5a038f77cc4b8566024)
1) The class Filter now lives in its own module.
2) The function canonicalized_operators() is now a class method on Filter.
3) The function message_in_home moved to filter.js and became private.
4) Various calling code had to change, of course.
5) Splitting out Filter helped simplify a few tests.
(imported from commit e41d792b46d3d6a30d3bd03db0419f129d0a2a7b)
* We now clear the validation errors when the input box is de-focused
* We make the left sidebar height accommodate the validation error messages
(imported from commit 4b39bfd3e8e8dd707722492a3f98967ee4ccf0ab)
To get to the bottom of the too-much-fading regression,
it was necessary to clean up the code, which was overly
complicated by multi-purposed functions.
The API for compose_fade now has these functions:
set_focused_recipient
start_compose
clear_compose
update_message_list
update_faded_messages
Internally there is now a notion of "normal display",
so e.g. when you want a normal display, we call
_diplay_messages_normally() internally, which removes the
faded/unfaded classes from all messages.
(imported from commit 7eb2b0a163f29d9ebae26661f432fecc7c331e4c)
Previously we would just discard the results of get_old_messages,
which meant that any messages sent either while you were doing the
tutorial or that you started out with (as in the case of the CUSTOMER3
experiment) would be lost until you reloaded.
(imported from commit f5280c091ab6ed7c2af6eb8fe49c0fa6b997ac97)
This makes fade/unfade start sooner (good), but it might
re-introduce some typing sluggishness (bad).
(imported from commit 4e3112ed1ac931f2931182f91b60567ef2d72695)
When starting a compose, call compose_fade.set_faded_messages,
which will immediately do fade/unfade logic, whereas before
the code path went thru debouncing logic.
(imported from commit 7d0b30435be32a7132dbf05bf064b03b925a2d42)
Move code from compose.update_fade() into
compose_fade.set_focused_recipient(), which makes it
so that we only have to send the msg_type.
(imported from commit c17665d9f34f525bdedcd36d39d3a112fa36a914)
The code in unfade_messages() is O(N) over the number of
messages, but a simple flag allows us to track the fact that
all messages are unfaded, so we can short circuit the O(N)
logic in many cases.
A typical scenario now would be that you start typing a
stream while the topic is still empty. Modulo debouncing,
every keystroke now leads to a call to unfade_messages(),
but this change only does real work the first time.
(imported from commit da07cf408bbdbf5b381ff3ec33a5e05e34eef5b5)
The compose_fade has three public exports:
set_focused_recipient
unfade_messages
update_faded_messages
All code was pulled directly from compose.js, except for the
one-line setter of set_focused_recipient. The focused_recipients
variable that used to be in compose.js was moved to compose_fade.js,
hence the need for the setter.
(imported from commit 462ca5d0d0bd58612d0197f3734a8c78de8c6d30)
"Kiosk mode" is a "read-only" Zulip suitable for embedding into
an iframe on another site. I say "read-only" in quotation marks,
because the account is still a fully-fledged active account on
the server, and we just tear out a bunch of stuff in Javascript
(that a malicious user could easily re-enable).
So in that sense, it's not actually safe in security-sensitive
environments -- malicious users logged in via kiosk mode
can do anything the kiosk-mode user can do.
(We need this functionality for the customer3 realm specifically;
we'll possibly just tear this code back out once that experiment
has run its course.)
(imported from commit deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9)
This fixes Trac #1567.
This is kind of a big hammer approach, though. If we did support
spellcheck on other platforms (without doing more work), this might
actually potentially disable it.
But we don't, so this is mostly a non-issue for now.
(imported from commit 74dcb42b19c37e1e8d1e9a2b265e1e6ae0cc2c67)
There are also one or two places we don't need to use it for security
purposes, but we do so for consistencey.
(imported from commit aa111f5a22a0e8597ec3cf8504adae66d5fb6768)
util.enforce_arity takes a function and returns a new version which
throws an error if an incorrect number of arguments (as determined by
the function prototype) are passed.
(imported from commit 20e69a6dc7b6f8455726ab4fae8d5b7b04dc4103)
This fixes trac #1357, which says that some users get annoyed
when the system keeps generating the same color for them, which
would happen if they didn't like #76ce90 and kept picking a
new color for their streams.
(imported from commit 0fdb726aad4009332cc056a5e98bb39e01ef414c)
Instead of splicing up a cloned copy of stream_assignment_colors
every time somebody uses a color, we just rebuild a hash
of used_colors from our subscribed streams when we need to assign
a color, and we avoid calling into stream_color.pick_color() when
a stream already has a color.
This change has a slight functional impact in the situation where
a user unsubscribes some streams during their session, because
we weren't "reclaiming" colors before on unsubscription, but the
simple approach gets that for free.
(imported from commit adf360365bdf1ae9db99c533a0bde62d91f5dfe8)
This is a pure refactoring that mostly just moves code from
subs.js to the new stream_color.js and updates module references
accordingly. In order to prevent introducing some exports,
update_stream_color was given an additional "sub" parameter
and update_stream_sidebar_swatch_color was given an "id"
parameter.
Killed off unused initial_color_fetch var.
(imported from commit b7644ce67f50d31fb46f564d758d661eea776aa6)
Fixes the blueslip error on "i" in empty narrow.
Also removes a then-uncessary check from do_narrow_action as suggested
by acrefoot.
(imported from commit 10b1f702b535b4eef54e500ccef93b6a5280e953)