We had skipped these in #14693 so we could keep generating a friendly
error on Python 3.5, but we gave that up in #19801.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This will allow Zulip release announcements to credit contributions
made to Zulip projects beyond the server in our release announcements.
Fixes#19044.
Specifically, this desupports:
android 4.4.3-4.4.4
baidu 7.12
ie 11
kaios 2.5
op_mini all
although we’ve already been blocking IE 11 since 3.0 (#14662).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The most notable change here is that when you are adding
subscribers to a stream as part of creating the stream,
you can now use the same essential pill-based UI for
adding users as we do when you edit subscribers for an
existing stream.
We don't try to exactly mimic the edit-stream UI or
implementation, since when you are adding subscribers
during create-stream, we are just updating a list in
memory, whereas in the edit-stream UI, we immediately
send info to the server.
Fixes#20499
Removes `LEGACY_PREV_TOPIC` which is no longer needed due to the
message edit history migration.
Also remove additions to the linter exclude list that were added
earlier in this commit series.
We fix the mutation of caller and other bad patterns, as well as
adding explicit typing to make the code readable.
We also update the OpenAPI documentation for previously
undocumented `prev_strem` field in the `/get-message-history`
endpoint for API validation testing.
Co-authored-by: Lauryn Menard <lauryn.menard@gmail.com>
These types will help make iteration on this code easier.
Note that `user_id` can be null due to the fact that
edit history entries before March 2017 did not log
the user that made the edit, which was years after
supporting topic edits (discovered in test deployment
of migration on chat.zulip.org).
Co-authored-by: Lauryn Menard <lauryn.menard@gmail.com>
Changes in a529dc8 to raise exception for invalid file name
has removed support for passing full file paths.
This commit fixes it.
Thanks to Steve Howell (showell) for reporting this.
We are going to move to this code organization for
managing streams:
stream_create.js
stream_create_subscribers.js
stream_edit.js
stream_edit_subscribers.js
The modules stream_create.js and stream_edit.js historically
manage the entire process of creating and editing stream
data (respectively).
Going forward both will delegate most of the subscriber-specific
pieces to either stream_create_subscribers or stream_edit_subscribers.
The stream_*_subscribers modules will be somewhat similar in
nature, but the way that we manage subscribers at creation time
is a bit different than how we manage subscribers at edit time.
This is mostly a pure code move. A few small tweaks:
* The create() function is new.
* The new module doesn't assume a `pill_widget`
global.
This module represents the truly re-usable code
that can be shared during these two user actions:
* edit-stream subscribers (now)
* create-stream subscribers (future)
In both situations the input pill has (or will have)
essentially the same behavior, and the next commit
will tighten up the abstraction.
(The two processes will both also use fairly similar
ListWidgets, but the mechanics of managing the list
are going to be different, so we do not intend
to keep around stream_subscribers_ui in its current
name. More on that later.)
This simplifies some of our dependencies.
As an example, we really don't want compose.js
to depend on stream_subscribers_ui.js, since
the former doesn't use any actual UI code from
the latter.
We also rename the two functions here:
invite_user_to_stream -> add_user_ids_to_stream
remove_user_from_stream -> remove_user_id_from_stream
(The notion of "inviting" somebody to a stream is
somewhat misleading, since there is really no invitation
mechanism; you just add them.)
Apart from naming changes this is a verbatim code move.
Finally, we eliminate a little bit of test cruft--the
`override` helper already ensures that a function gets
called at least once during a test.
These tests have been historically difficult to maintain.
We have pretty good direct test coverage on the
components used by stream_edit.
The code tested here was mostly glue code and jQuery
code, which the node tests are particularly poorly
suited for testing.
Note that we lose 100% line coverage on
stream_settings_containers.js, but that module
is literally a single-line function to describe
a jQuery container, and the node tests for that
would be more convoluted than helpful.
We save the preferred theme in localstorage so that user doesn't
have to re-select the theme on every reload. Users on slow
computers might see flash of a theme change, if it happens.