This changes the method of rendering list of alert words in DOM,
earlier it was rendered using 'for' loop over the array of alert_words
which is now changed to render using ListWidget, which gets a array
of objects from get_word_list() in alert_words.js.
The use of ListWidget helps to define a parent_container and $container
in table-body of alert-words-table using which we can now apply sorting over
alert words with the help of handle_sort() function in list_widget.js
Changed the method of adding alert_word_settings_item row in table body
through {{#with}} loop because of rendering through ListWidget, which was done
earlier using for loop over each alert-word in while rendering the list.
this commit also mocks template of render_alert_word_item
while mocking ListWidget.create() function in render_alert_words_ui().
and checks that ListWidget.create() is not called when variable `loaded`
is set as false.
Fixes#21142.
In this 009b7bca24 commit `before_punctuation`
regex was updated to use lookbehind feature of regex.
This caused a regex error in some browsers (reported in
Safari) because lookbehind feature is not yet supported
on all the browsers (https://caniuse.com/js-regexp-lookbehind).
This commit fixes that error by reverting to stable regex which
works on all the browsers.
This prevents the regex from requiring multiple spaces between
adjacent alert words by using lookahead and lookbehind (rather than
the before/after checks each needing to eat a whitespace character) so
that consecutive alert words (if any) can be highlighted.
With a frontend test covering adjacent corner cases by tabbott.
Fixes#17320
ES and TypeScript modules are strict by default and don’t need this
directive. ESLint will remind us to add it to new CommonJS files and
remove it from ES and TypeScript modules.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We add these two functions to the API,
so that we no longer have `alert_words_ui`
using private data from `alert_word`:
alert_words.has_alert_word()
alert_words.get_word_list()
And to initialize the data, we have a proper
`initialize` method that is passed in only
the parameters that it needs from `ui_init`.
(We also move the step of deleting `alert_words`
from `page_params` to the `ui_init` module.)
Because it's a bit less cumbersome to initialize
`alert_words`, we now just it directly in the
node tests for `alert_words_ui`.
This commit was originally automatically generated using `tools/lint
--only=eslint --fix`. It was then modified by tabbott to contain only
changes to a set of files that are unlikely to result in significant
merge conflicts with any open pull request, excluding about 20 files.
His plan is to merge the remaining changes with more precise care,
potentially involving merging parts of conflicting pull requests
before running the `eslint --fix` operation.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
With webpack, variables declared in each file are already file-local
(Global variables need to be explicitly exported), so these IIFEs are
no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This commit prepares the frontend code to be consumed by webpack.
It is a hack: In theory, modules should be declaring and importing the
modules they depend on and the globals they expose directly.
However, that requires significant per-module work, which we don't
really want to block moving our toolchain to webpack on.
So we expose the modules by setting window.varName = varName; as
needed in the js files.
Prior to this we were also performing highlighting inside HTML tags
which was wrong and causing weird behavior. Like, for example, if
someone added `emoji` as an alert word then any message containing
both emoji and alert word was rendered with a jumbo emoji.
Fixes: #4357.
We remove the `page_params.alert_words` since `alert_words.words`
is the sole source of alert words. Use of `page_params.alert_words`
could lead to bugs when alert words are updated since it is not updated.
Previously, we were checking if a particular user was the current user
in dozens of places in the codebase, and correct case-insensitive
checks were not used consistently, leading to bugs like #502.