This is a dramatic redesign of the look and feel of our missed-message
emails, designed to decrease the feeling of clutter and just provide
the content users care about in a clear, visible fashion.
This cleans up the reply_warning feature in favor of a more coherent
explanation of whether or not one can reply.
(Also, critically, it now advertises the ability to enable
missed-message email replies with some administrative configuration
work.)
For storing HTTP headers as a function of fixture name, previously
we required that the fixture_to_headers method should reside in a
separate module called headers.py.
However, as in many cases, this method will only take a few lines,
we decided to move this function into the view.py file of the
integration instead of requiring a whole new file called headers.py
This commit introduces the small change in the system architecture,
migrates the GitHub integration, and updates the docs accordingly.
In the GitHub integration we established that for many integrations,
we can directly map the fixture filename to the set of required
headers and by following a simple naming convention we can greatly
ease the logic involved in fixture_to_headers method required .
So to prevent the need for duplicating the logic used by the GitHub
integration, we created a method called `get_http_headers_from_filename`
which will take the name of the HTTP header (key) and then return a
corresponding method (in a decorator-like fashion) which could then be
equated to fixture_to_headers in headers.py.
The GitHub integration was modified to use this method and the docs
were updated to suggest using this when possible.
Previously, our Github authentication backend just used the user's
primary email address associated with GitHub, which was a reasonable
default, but quite annoying for users who have several email addresses
associated with their GitHub account.
We fix this, by adding a new screen where users can select which of
their (verified) GitHub email addresses to use for authentication.
This is implemented using the "partial" feature of the
python-social-auth pipeline system.
Each email is displayed as a button. Clicking on that button chooses
the email. The email value is stored in a hidden input above the
button. The `primary_email` is displayed on top followed by
`verified_non_primary_emails`. Backend name is also passed as
`backend` to the template, which in our case is GitHub.
Fixes#9876.
Using this system, we can now associate any fixture of any integration
with a particular set of HTTP headers. A helper method called
determine_http_headers was introduced, and the test suite was upgraded
to use determine_http_headers.
Comments and documentation significantly edited by tabbott.
We also document support for user IDs in the pm-with narrow operator.
Edited by tabbott to document on /api rather than in the /help page.
Fixes part of #9474.
Change the display from `block` to `flex` in order to be able to
arrange the elements as wanted. Reset the css of the header elements
only for the description view. Add `font-size: 1.2em` because the font
doesn't need resizing in this case, it needs resizing only when the
title is in the box.
Removed the `padding-bottom` from the `nav` on mobile because it
overlaps the new header and you cannot click the back button from the
integrations.
Fixes: #12365.
We remove the title from `errbot` integration documentation so that
all documentations have the same style. See
https://github.com/zulip/python-zulip-api/pull/515 for a similar
change to integrations where the docs live elsewhere in version control.
We also remove the `margin: 0` from the instruction tip because where
the tip is followed by a list, there is no space between the two; this
change doesn't mess up the other places where the tip is used.
* There is only one word inside the buttons and that too was wrapped
inside `span.text` which was unnecessary. This is removed. All
corresponding properties (font-size) are moved to `.button`.
* Since the only `a` inside image actions are these buttons, all
the properties are transfered to `.button`.
* Similarly, properties for `.icon` are moved to `.button` and it is
also removed from the template.
* Font size was redundant for `.icon`
* display property is moved
That we are working to fix the caveats is implied by the (beta) label.
More generally, for /help articles, explanations, apologies, etc can go in a
section at the top, but the rest of the text should be a straightforward
description of the current state.
We're not sure this feature is the best solution to this category of
problem, in that use of this feature might cause spam to stick around
longer, vs features that encourage immediate deletion.
This makes it a lot more useful for understanding how our flag update
endpoints work.
With significant edits by tabbott to explain what these are.
Fixes#12092.
For non-admins some organisation settings tabs are 'collapsed' by default.
A button at the bottom of these settings can be used to toggle
show/collapse for these settings tabs.
Resolves#12313.
Some organisation settings tabs have been permanently hidden from
non-admins, since they are useful to non-admins and can create
confusion for new users.
We were using these hollowed out arrows characters (⇽ , ⇾) in a few
places, these were inconsistent with the solid up and down arrow
characters (↑ , ↓) we use otherwise. This commit replaces them
everywhere in the codebase.
We're changing our style to always show the scrollbar on the right
pane of modals, because that makes it consistently clear when there
are more items below.
It's not clear why we added this (I didn't notice it in review), and
it seems to have been in error, since none of the previous CSS in
5c36918c17 applied to that overlay.
So reverting that hunk.
See #12435 for the original investigation.
Fixes: #11573.
This moves help_table to informational-overlays.scss, replaces "," with
"or" and "P" with "shift + p" in order to be more clear and legible
this also improves the styling of the text.
This commit also adds a small functionality change where the results of
each webhook fixture message sent is now displayed to the user.
With a small tweak by tabbott to fix a styling bug.
Fixes#12122.
Note: If you're going to send fixtures which are not JSON or of the
text/plain content type, make sure you set the correct content type
in the custom headers.
E.g. For the wordpress fixtures the "Content-Type" should be set to
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded".
With perfectScrollbar, we needed to call a function from JavaScript to
enable a scrollbar on a new element, but simplebar has a much simpler
default API one can do by using data-simplebar attributes in the HTML.
So we can delete all the scrollbar creation/deletion code.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Instead of deleting and rebuilding #private-container every time its
contents need to be updated, just replace its contents. This
eliminates some scrollbar flashing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This commit introduces a simple field where the user can now specify custom
HTTP headers. This commit does not introduce an improved system for storing
HTTP headers as fixtures - such a change would modify both the existing unit
tests as well as this devtool.
Tweaked by tabbott to briefly describe the reason for Zulip's default;
this rough description has been satisfying for many people who've
asked in the past on chat.zulip.org.
Commit db45d220a8 (#3996) disabled
mobile zooming on all pages, with the reasoning that focusing an input
may automatically zoom the page and break content. I’m not sure
whether that was a good reason, but at most it only applies to the app
page. Reenable zooming on all other pages like the portico and
documentation to improve their accessibility.
(Note: the other common reason to disable zooming, which was that
mobile browsers once added a 300ms tap delay to recognize double-tap
zoom gestures, has been obsolete since 2014:
https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2013/12/300ms-tap-delay-gone-away)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This commit adds a new developer tool: The "integrations dev panel"
which will serve as a replacement for the send_webhook_fixture_message
management command as a way to test integrations with much greater ease.
This lets us handle directly in our tooling the user experience that
we document for exporting a realm with member consent (before, it
required unpleasant manual work).
Added a new button at the bottom of the stream list which redirects
users to '/#streams/all' where they can create new streams or subscribe
to new streams.
The button is not visible to guests.
Fixes#11642.
If MAX_FILE_UPLOAD_SIZE is set to 0, then UI elements like the upload
icon in the compose and message edit UI and "Attachments" menu in
"/#settings" are not displayed.
A different error message is also displayed if a user tries to drag and
drop or paste a file into the compose message box.
Fixes#12152.
Jitsi Meet is the correct name for the product we integrate with. There is
one other reference to Jitsi, but it's in the db and will require a
migration.
This adds the same "x" button as we have in "stream search" or "people
search" to the user status modal.
The button is shown if someone types something, or if the status
message was already set (meaning there was already a value in the
input field). If the input field is empty, the button is not visible.
This fixes the follow-up comments from #12179.
- Changed the <p>s to <button>s and modified the css accordingly.
- Changed the css to use scss nesting.
- Changed the line-height from 1.0em to 1.1em, because on Safari the "g" was not fully displayed.
This commit creates a new organization setting that determines whether
a user can invite other users to streams. Previously this was linked
to the waiting period threshold, but this was both not documented and
overly limiting.
With significant tweaks by tabbott to change the database model to not
involve two threshhold fields, edit the tests, etc.
This requires follow-up work to make the create stream policy setting
work how this code implies it should.
Fixes#12042.