Its likely that we would implement new hotspots that aren't
a part of the tutorial hotspots, in the future. For instance,
a hotspot to advertise new features. Hence, grouping them into
categories like INTRO_HOTSPOTS would be a good start. We also
have an aggregate of all types of hotspots we may add in the
future, under ALL_HOTSPOTS.
This reverts commit 6fba17599f (#16898).
@chrisbobbe reported this crash:
Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'stream_id' of undefined
at starred_messages.js:43
at Array.filter (<anonymous>)
at Object.e.get_topic_starred_msg_ids (starred_messages.js:40)
at stream_popover.js:221
at HTMLSpanElement.<anonymous> (stream_popover.js:358)
at HTMLUListElement.dispatch (jquery.js:5429)
at HTMLUListElement.v.handle (jquery.js:5233)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Fixes#17238.
In process_new_human user, the queries were wrong, revoking all invites
sent to the email address, even in other realms than the one where the
new account just got created.
The textarea in Settings/User Profile was overflowing in
smaller width devices.
This commit fixes that issue by adding appropriate media queries.
Fixes part of #16817.
This reverts commit 34ada11448.
That commit traded a minor visual glitch for a major usability
regression at my most common browser width (960px).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, exact matches could be pushed off the typeahead list in the
case where there were more prefix matches that happened to rank first,
which is confusing to the user: if an emoji, for instance, falls into
this category, it will never show up in typeahead, which is easy to
confuse with the emoji not existing.
This isn't a perfect fix — there are still cases where it's hard to find
emojis because the prefix-space is very crowded, but it does fix a
category of surprising and frustrating behaviour.
This doesn't come completely without downside - it means that the exact
match emoji will jump to the front of the list, which changes what is
currently conceptually a "filtering" operation to a "filtering and
sorting" operation, but it seems on the whole to be a more ideal
experience. This is particularly notable in the non-typeahead emoji
picker, which uses the same codepath, but this change seems somewhat
desirable even there, since it allows the user to type the name of an
emoji and press enter and have that emoji show up, without having to
visually confirm that they aren't inadvertently selecting a
prefix-matching emoji.
A better solution to this in the long term might be ordering emoji
results by shortest-first as a tiebreaker for alphabetical ordering,
since that should provide the same behaviour while keeping the mental
model as "filtering" (since the sort order won't change as the user
types), but this seems like a reasonable first pass, and changing to
shortest-first ordering after making this change won't break any muscle
memory for existing users.
We change the text. This is an attempt to make the text space occupied by
the col header of last message timestamp smaller so that
it doesn't overflow to next line in some languages.
Also, add some extra padding.