Previously, we used Integration.name as the recommended stream
in our macros. Now, we have a dedicated attribute set in the
Integration class (that WebhookIntegration and GithubIntegration
inherit from) for the recommended stream name in cases where
the stream name is different than the name of the integration
itself.
For almost all of these, the verbose support offer clause is almost the same
as the non-verbose version. The distinction carries extra carrying cost when
coming up with new copy, testing new email designs, etc.
Previously the rendering code in test_emails.py did not match the rendering
code in send_email.py. This commit removes the duplication to reduce the
chance they drift in the future.
This commit also changes test_emails.html to ensure that we always display
both the HTML and text versions of an email.
This removes the old base button style which was a blue button and
kills the unnecessary .white class which was essentially just acting as
the new button base.
This then removes all references throughout the settings/subscriptions
pages to those button styles.
This also fixes the strange button styles that changed the :hover and
:active opacity to 0.05 which led to unpredictable results on various
backgrounds.
Now that this page redirects to upstream, make our own links
to it point directly upstream. This saves a redirect, and
makes it more transparent where the link points if the user
examines it before following.
This macro is an alternative to git-webhook-url-with-branches.md,
which contains the full URL with a `branches` query parameter at
the end. This macro is for when we just want to specify that this
can be done but the URL to append to can be variable or is unique
to a particular integration (and thus, doesn't warrant its own
macro and a full URL example).
Make sure 's, &s, and other characters are not HTML-escaped in subject
lines and plain-text emails.
Hack so that this isn't blocking the release of Zulip 1.6. A more robust way
to do this would be to have two different template Engines, one that renders
HTML, and one that doesn't.
Fixes#5088.
The realm avatar icon on the login and registration pages was
being set as a background image, which could vanish in high
contrast mode in many browsers. Converted it to an img tag and
verified that it is still styled correctly. I think the empty
alt attribute (to remove it from the audio description) is
appropriate in this context, since the realm name and description
are already provided immediately afterwards in the page content.
Fixes#4889.
The settings dropdown was marked as having the "menu" ARIA role,
but contained no items with the "menuitem" role. I assigned this
role to the focusable link elements, and gave the intervening "li"
elements (and other "li" elements used as separators and such)
the "presentation" role to allow those to be gracefully ignored
when appropriate. Some of the links previously had the "button"
role, which I think was a holdover from a previous UI layout.
Fixes#5000.
This makes it possible for Zulip administrators to delete messages.
This is primarily intended for use in deleting early test messages,
but it can solve other problems as well.
Later we'll want to play with the permissions model for this, but for
now, the goal is just to integrate the feature.
Note that it saves the deleted messages for some time using the same
approach as Zulip's message retention policy feature.
Fixes#135.
The check mark which appears for valid input in assorted forms
(such as login and registration) didn't have alternative text
for better accessibility. Added "Valid" as the alt text in all
places it's used.
Fixes#4876.
The label element for the registration form's email field was
missing a "for" attribute to link it to the input field. Added
the missing attribute.
Fixes#4896.
The label element for the bot name editing field was trying to use
a "for" attribute to link it to the input field, but the field had
no ID for it to associate with. Added the ID value which it
was trying to use.
Fixes#4999.