CUSTOMER16 wants their employee realm to:
* only use JWT logins
* have name changes be disabled (they want users' full names to be the
their CUSTOMER16 user name).
* not show the suggestion that users download the desktop app
(imported from commit cb5f72c993ddc26132ce50165bb68c3000276de0)
Now that we no longer use tables for our message list, we can
more logically group messages together.
(imported from commit 9923a092f91a45fe3ef06f2f00e23e4e3fb62a37)
The tutorial introduces "engineering" messages that might not
be in the user's normal subscription, and they would get a gray
border if we did not override the stream color. Before this change,
we accomplished this by overriding the core data structure in
stream_data.js. Now we are a bit more future-proof; we only
override stream_color.default_color.
(imported from commit 0d0845b72f766912679f5aa7641ae9a60fdbb4ce)
Add try/catch blocks to get_updates_success and send a blueslip error on
errors we catch. This will let get_updates_success return successfully
so that the next call to get_updates will start immediately.
(imported from commit 44d8b85d9d8e930a5552a5fbf4af1d0e5e8c07e8)
Previously we unconditionally showed the "get the desktop app"
banner. Now, if the first user declines to invite people as part of
their onboarding workflow, show the invite banner instead.
(imported from commit f7892fef17c923154a700149b8f5be99e9c03fa0)
All of the buttons in the tutorial now have focus to spamming enter will
get to the end.
(imported from commit dc620a28b2c0c3a316a0e91438baf1e284e29e83)
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)
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)
In a few cases the $.each was doing something imperatively that was
terser and easier to understand by using a different Underscore method,
so a few of these I rewrote.
Some code was using the fact that jQuery sets `this` in the callback to
be the item; I rewrote those to use an explicit parameter.
Some code was using $(some selector).each(callback). I converted these
to _.each($(some selector), callback).
One function, ui.process_condensing, was written to be a jQuery $.each
callback despite being in a totally different module from code using it.
I noticed this and updated the function's args.
(imported from commit bf5922a35f257c168cc09ec1d077415d6ef19a03)