In an interleaved view when composing a message we fade messages
which the user is not replying to, to reduce the chance they send
a message to a recipient they didn't intend to.
Also, it reduces the visual/cognitive processing required
to figure out where their message is going to go.
But, it's not necessarily clear to users that what the
fading means, so this commit adds a one-time compose banner
to explain what's going on the first time this comes up.
Fixes part of #29076.
In a non interleaved view when composing a message to another
conversation we fade messages which the user is not replying to,
to reduce the chance they send a message to a recipient they didn't
intend to. Also, it reduces the visual/cognitive processing required
to figure out where their message is going to go.
But, it's not necessarily clear to users that what the
fading means, so this commit adds a one-time compose banner
to explain what's going on the first time this comes up.
Fixes part of #29076.
Commit 50f5cf9ad8 (#30227) changed
message_helper.process_new_message (called by
message_events.insert_new_messages) to return a newly created message
object rather than mutating the object it was passed. So
echo.insert_local_message needs to use this new object, fixing a
regression where we’d fail to replace a locally echoed message when
the server-rendered message came in.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
For onboarding banners, we replace the close button with
"Got it" button.
Also, the banner is marked as read for the user only after
the "Got it" button is clicked. Earlier it was marked as read
as soon as it was displayed.
To achive this the `stream_header_colorblock` div was removed from
`dropdown_widget_with_stream_colorblock.hbs` template. this change made
the file name irelevenet so it was necessary to rename the file to
`dropdown_widget_wrapper.hbs`. After removing the html strcuture for
colorblock from templates the css for colorblock was also removed.
followed by the javascript which was used to add colorblock to the
stream picker. After removing javascript tests were updated.
Fixes: #28796.
Now we show the number of drafts that are addressed to the current
recipient selected in the compose box, if any, in the Drafts button
within parentheses (whether it is next to the Send button, or in the
Send options popover), and explain that it is the number of drafts for
this conversation in the tooltip.
Fixes: #28696.
The `upload_objects_by_message_edit_row` map object was being exported
to handle the uploads during the editing of a message. To improve the
abstraction, we move the logic being used to access
`upload_objects_by_message_edit_row` and itself into `upload.js`.
Similarly, the `compose_upload_object` constant which was being exported
to handle the cancelling of compose uploads. This commit removes this
export and instead defines a new method `compose_upload_cancel` to
handle the same.
Now whenever we initiate sending a message, we save / update its draft,
which is deleted on a successful send. Earlier, we did this only for
locally echoed messages. Hence a non locally echoed message's draft
would remain, if created in the timeframe between initiating send and
receiving the same message from the server, which can be significant
for slow connections.
For spectators, the chunk of page_params that originates from
do_events_register isn’t assigned until ui_init.js. That means the
TypeScript type of page_params is mostly a lie during module load
time: reading a parameter too early silently results in undefined
rather than the declared type, with unpredictable results later on.
We want to make such an early read into an immediate runtime error,
for both users and spectators consistently, and pave the way for
runtime validation of the page_params type. As a second step, split
out the subset of fields that pertain to the entire realm.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
For spectators, the chunk of page_params that originates from
do_events_register isn’t assigned until ui_init.js. That means the
TypeScript type of page_params is mostly a lie during module load
time: reading a parameter too early silently results in undefined
rather than the declared type, with unpredictable results later on.
We want to make such an early read into an immediate runtime error,
for both users and spectators consistently, and pave the way for
runtime validation of the page_params type. As a first step, split
out the subset of fields that pertain to the current user.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Needed for typescript, because we want to preserve
types, so instead of mutating a message object,
we can instead calculate return these values
for a message object before it's created in full.
This commit also renames apply_markdown
to render, see this comment
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/28652#discussion_r1470514780
For compose state variables `last_focused_compose_type_input` and
`message_type` that are assigned non-boolean values on user interaction,
`undefined` is the semantically better choice than `false` for
initialisation, to avoid incorrect boolean implications.
Some files already were using `noop` in place of `() => {}`.
It's both clearer what it means and is easier to type.
This updates all test files to fully use `noop`, and
adds a shared import from the test lib file.
When we send a message and that causes a topic to be automatically
followed or unmuted due to the automatic visibility policy settings,
we tell the user via a post-send-message compose banner.
The "notify_unmute" banner is not shown when the topic has already
been unmuted or followed due to these policies.
Fixes part of #26900.
This commit also limits `stream_bar.decorate` to only
be able to be called for stream messages, since it's
an undefined string_id is no longer a sign that
you're dealing with a DM.
Buttons which change the content in the compose textarea were so far
enabled even in preview mode, and would work, but those changes would
not be reflected in the visible preview. This is extremely confusing,
and can lead to the possibility of a user accidentally changing the
content of the compose textarea while previewing, and sending that.
Now we disable those buttons in preview mode, both when composing a new
message and when editing an existing one. We still show the tooltips,
but grey them out and make them unclickable.
Fixes: #20962
This should cause no functional changes.
This is part of a multi-step effort to move away
from using stream names to reference streams, now
that it's impossible for a user to write a message
with an invalid stream name (since switching to
the dropdown).
Since this is based off of the id now and doesn't try
to get a stream from a name (because stream is now
selected by a dropdown and not a free-form input field),
we can also remove the error handling for when the
stream name doesn't correspond to any streams.
This commit cuts the dependency on `compose.js` module for
`compose_actions.js` module by introducing a hook system for
registering different hooks from external modules.
Previously this dropdown was only for selecting streams, but
soon it will also be for switching to a private message. This
name helps it be clearer that the dropdown is more general
purpose.
We now show a banner on opening the compose box and changing the
stream in dropdown, if a user is not allowed to post in a stream.
The "Send" button is also disabled if user is not allowed to post
in the stream.
This commit also moved the CSS for disabled modal button in dark
theme below after the other CSS for modals as we are using the
same CSS for the "Send" button as well in disabled state.
This commit refactors show_compose_spinner and hide_compose_spinner
functions to use class of the button instead of ID to select the
appropriate elements such that we can use the same function to show
and hide spinner in "Schedule" button in further commits. For this
purpose, we add a new class compose-submit-button to the "Send"
button and this class will be added to "Schedule" button as well
in the next commit.
This commit converts the dynamic closed_compose_box
tooltip to template-based tippy.js tooltips. The functions in
the compose_closed_ui.js file are refactored to dynamically change
the 'data-tooltip-template-id' attribute according to the situation.
The title parameter is removed from the functions in
compose_closed_ui.js so that we can change the tooltip within the
caller functions themselves, according to the situation. Since there
is no way to match the title in existing functions with different
languages to change the tooltip attribute dynamically, it is better
to change the tooltip attribute within the caller function according
to the situation, rather than passing the title as a parameter.
In the case of the reply button, we disable it when direct messages
are not allowed. However, tippy.js tooltips do not appear in the
case of disabled elements, so we have to use the container element
around it to show the tooltip. This approach is used in the case of
the reply button, where the span element wraps the button.
We used to have two titles for the reply button: one is the usual
'Reply to selected message', and the other is for the disabled state.
However, in the case of recent conversations, it makes more sense
to have a new tooltip title: 'Reply to selected conversation'.
To ensure that the tooltip content changes dynamically, it is
required to destroy the tooltip instance and then reinitialize it
every time.
Fixes: #25096
This helps reduce the amount of import cycles we have in the compose
code path following the migration to a fancier stream input.
`compose_closed_ui.initialize()` was moved further down in the
initialization order because it relies on the dropdown widget
to be defined.