I didn't rename all the files and HTML elements in case we decide we
like the old name better.
(imported from commit d8a8d30662e22e69e60df9cd2b1341a9128a1902)
The fact that the user sees a change (the button changes or a row
appears) makes it obvious that the operation was a success. The
success messages were only serving to make the page scroll
confusingly when you couldn't see the top.
(imported from commit 471b9304f71bb8533c98d208b855d4d75c04a886)
The query fails anyway, so this is not a safety check. This commit
makes it so that MIT users actually see their subscriptions instead
of an error.
(imported from commit ee635943728d7d9823e118d9fa51c402b1cd9bf2)
We now keep around the subscription information for streams that the
user unsubscribed from in stream_info and have a field that
indicates whether the user is currently subscribed.
(imported from commit 973e2f4bd4139157b03d7c1a372db93a1a5130f7)
Trying to add a user to an invite-only stream that already
exists will result in in error
(imported from commit 910750580a122cee92096d7e83457cb0b8cce616)
Previously it was just testing that sending a GET request to our
POST-only URLs returned a 400 error.
(imported from commit a510734271385046bbf29166b38c0ecbd104d2da)
If get_updates requests a message ID that is too old, Tornado will
return a 400, and currently the only way to start caring about newer
message IDs is to reload.
(imported from commit 1638d71868475ffd793162afc7a2731cab14bd75)
Longer-term this should be done in a more sustainable manner, i.e.
including Glyphicons like we currently include Halflings.
(imported from commit 3f405c969352481626614a0d61874bd77f0388b7)
This commit both causes the settings button not to be drawn as
pressed, but also fixes the issue we were experiencing where,
e.g. changing from "Home" to "Settings" and back to "Home" would cause
you to lose your place.
(imported from commit 5084b280a202f6bf8f811834bf9d2734a034c8c1)
This is really the first step of implementing the "Oppa Gmail Style!"
redesign, and is largely an HTML/CSS-based change, with some
slight JS tweaks to deal with things being renamed or being no
longer necessary.
(imported from commit e05adc283ea066f0f90009cf712c4f3657c2485a)
Prior to this commit, at <979px, the .container in a .navbar has
`width: auto`, but a normal .container has width 724px, which causes
the two to drift out of sync.
This fixes that.
(Arguably, it's weird for us to waste ~200px scrunching
this down to 724px at this ratio, but we can solve that
as a separate issue later.)
(imported from commit 1f431ca1e2168db75821ea0be43941d29fd3e6b8)
We always want the navbar to stick at the top, no matter what
the screen size, and we want it to consistently look the same
height, etc. regardless of our page width.
This is possibly also accomplished via position: absolute !important
and other overrides in our own CSS, but this actually seems
slightly cleaner in a way.
(imported from commit 340fafb49bcbc1088a816897d320e252c4615d19)
Some time between the 2.0.4 and the 2.1.0 upgrade, Bootstrap broke in
a way such that clicking on a dropdown did not cause it to close.
Here's the bug thread about it:
https://github.com/twitter/bootstrap/issues/4497
I've implemented this workaround discussed there, though the bug is
fixed in 2.1.1, so when we upgrade this will go away (which is why I
only reluctantly tag it 'third', since the diff will not need to be
carried forward.)
(imported from commit f8d9cf65b33306a426d864c9b503bb3446614111)
Apparently short_name is not consistently the person's username
in our system -- for many MIT people, it's their full name.
(imported from commit d975300a59c7afe5ee20b4a0db1bd51110c3df33)
As of this writing, short_name is the part before the @-sign,
and we already display the realm, so no need to display it
twice.
(imported from commit f5f9b29bff99b36b0c23176348c2869193467c38)