These two blocks of code has incorrectly placed or implemented
conditionals for the rare corner case of Zepyhr mirroring
organizations.
Longer-term, we'll want to refactor this further to directly reference
can_render_subscribers, making the logic more general.
Long labels like "Yes, Unsubscribe this stream" can
be confusing for translators and it can also create bad
strings that can end with like 4 long words in German.
It is better to have the simple options like "Confirm"
and "Cancel". This commit fixes this issue by changing
the text to "Confirm".
Fixes#17926.
This extra commit adds support for creating user group pills
in cases that do not use typeahead like, pasting the group
name, copying it from the user group pill.
This completes the remaining work required to support
addition of all members of a user groups to stream.
Fixes#15186.
We update the pills typeahead logic to also include user group
results and pass the "user_group" key in `opts` to enable this
option for Add subscriber form.
The changes includes:
* Exporting the `query_matches_name_description` function, to
deduplicate the typeahead `matcher` logic.
* Creating a `people.is_known_user` function, to deduplicate
the typeahead `sorter` logic.
* Add a new `user_group_pill.js`, to allow adding user group
pills in input widgets that support pills.
This has been tested manually as well as by adding some new
node tests.
This reduces the complexity of our dependency graph.
It also makes sub_store.get parallel to message_store.get.
For both you pass in the relevant id to get the
full validated object.
This change should make live-update code less brittle,
or at least less cumbersome.
Instead of having to re-compute calculated fields for
every change to a stream message, we now just compute
the fields right before we render stream settings UI.
This is mostly a pure code move.
In passing I remove an unneeded call to
update_calculated_fields in the dispatch code,
plus some tests that don't need them.
We now unconditionally enable backgroung events when 'hidden.bs.modal'
event is triggered on closing of modal. We do not need to handle them
separateley for closing modal by close_modal, data-dismiss or escape.
We handle this by single handler for modals in settings and subscription
overlay.
Fixes#16688.
This commit changes the code to not remove the modal element from DOM
after closing the modal for the deactivation stream modal and stream
privacy modal.
This is a prep commit for enabling background mouse events
unconditionally using 'hidden.bs.modal', because removing element
using '.remove' remove all events attached to it and this will also
remove the 'hidden.bs.modal' event which we do not want.
This remove behavior is inconsistent as we remove some of the modals
but do not remove some, so for now we are not removing the modal
after closing but it is anyway removed before opening a modal to handle
case of having two elements of same id and avoids any bugs.
This behavior of when to remove the element from DOM and when to not
remove needs to be discussed and may be modified in future.
We show a modal as a warning when unsubscribing a private stream
because it is a irreversible action and one cannot re-subscribe
tovit until added by other member of stream.
Fixes#9254.
This commit renames the class of both cancel button and the cross
icon to close-modal-btn.
This change is a prep commit for enabling background events on
'hidden.bs.modal' event. As we would enable background events in
furhter commit using the 'hidden.bs.modal' event, we would need to
remove the 'hide.bs.modal' event of deactivation_stream_modal which
removes the modal element from DOM.
When we remove this we would need a e.stopPropagation call to avoid
unexpected closing of subscription settings, which was not a problem
before as the element was removed from DOM before the actual closing
of modal.
So instead of adding a separate `e.stopPropagation' call, we can use
the same handler that is being used for stream privacy modal and this
is the reason the class name of cancel button of privacy modal is
being changed.
This mainly extracts a new module called
browser_history. It has much fewer dependencies
than hashchange.js, so any modules that just
need the smaller API from browser_history now
have fewer transitive dependencies.
Here are some details:
* Move is_overlay_hash to hash_util.
* Rename hashchange.update_browser_history to
brower_history.update
* Move go_to_location verbatim.
* Remove unused argument for exit_overlay.
* Introduce helper functions:
* old_hash()
* set_hash_before_overlay()
* save_old_hash()
We now have 100% line coverage on the extracted
code.
This de-clutters stream_data a bit. Since our
peer data is our biggest performance concern,
I want to contain any optimizations to a fairly
well-focused module.
The name `peer_data` is a bit of a compromise,
since we already have `subs.js` and we use
`sub` as a variable name for stream records
throughout our code, but it's consistent with
our event nomenclature (peer/add, peer/remove)
and it's short while still being fairly easy
to find with grep.
This sets us up to use better system-wide data structures
for tracking subscribers.
Basically, instead of storing subscriber data on the
"sub" objects in stream_data.js, we instead have a
parallel data structure called stream_subscribers.
We also have stream_create, stream_edit, and friends
use helper functions rather than accessing
sub.subscribers directly.
This shows the normal popover instead of extended profile.
We use the standard event handler attached to the body element in
`popovers.js` instead of attaching a new one.