Previously we were doing quadratic work in the number of streams
because we had to iterate over all <li> elements every time we added
a new one.
(imported from commit 60cb97f77d161e9d8c3072157fa9c57c58f7af52)
We were previously calling sort_narrow_list after each stream was was
added. Because it is linear in the current length of the sidebar
list, we were doing quadratic work on page load. When we enabled the
streams sidebar on the MIT realm, this became problematic because of
the number of subscriptions Zephyr users have.
(imported from commit d60ddc638f0a81fbce08eecd6671e9ea6ca38515)
Messages are now explicitly condensed by our JS, which means that if
we run into some bug where our JS doesn't run, you still see the whole
message (rather than getting a clipped message).
(As of this commit, this can happen when you, e.g. are on the
Settings page and someone sends you a message.)
(imported from commit f3bec97800ea1852c80203e73552ee545fcc7e8a)
Previously, we were having this problem where:
* You narrow to something
* That causes message_list.js:process_collapsing to run on all of the
elements in the view, which changes some of their sizes
* That causes the pane to scroll and either push the content up or
down, depending (since stuff on top of where you were is now a
different size)
* That triggers keep_pointer_in_view, which moves your pointer
Moving process_collapsing into narrow.activate doesn't obviously
fix any of this, but it does seem to mitigate the issue a bit.
In particular, we (a) process it less frequently, and (b) process it
immediately after we show the narrowed view table, which seems to
reduce the raciness of the overall experience.
This does, however, introduce a regression:
* If you receive a long message when you're on
#settings, e.g., and then go back to Home,
the message does not properly get a [More] appended
to it.
(imported from commit b1440d656cc7b71eca8af736f2f7b3aa7e0cca14)
This shouldn't have any effect in normal realms, but for realms like
mit.edu that have large numbers of inactive streams, it will sort all
the streams that have had a recent message at the top (aka those that
aren't effectively inactive).
(imported from commit 027ce258d04b6fd58705e49f769dec7e0639bb38)
Changes include:
* New markup for the button in compose.html
* A hidden file input field in compose.html
* Added reference to the file input field in filedrop
initialization in compose.js
* A feature test and a click event binding for
the "Attach files" button in ui.js
* New paperclip icon reference in fonts.css
* New general hidden display classes in zephyr.css
* New composition pane button classes in zephyr.css
Fixes to the "Attach files" button commit e673bda...
Changes include:
* Fixed the feature test for (new XMLHttpRequest).upload so
it works in Firefox.
* Renamed .button to .message-control-button
* Removed stray newlines
(imported from commit c1f0834b74fd7120ec27db64ec380ffb3fa34633)
Previously, we were calling util.same_stream_and_subject on a pair of
messages, one of which was a private message, which is not valid. We
should have instead been calling util.same_recipient, which checks the
message type as well.
(imported from commit bc5715807036bff1fd4f214dafad00e33678e91d)
* renamed the 'icon-star' style to 'icon-vector-star' to keep backwards compatibility for icon-* classes
* changed relevant styles in zephyr.css; added FontAwesome assets
* changed relevant CSS classes in base.html, left-sidebar.html, ui.js, message.handlebars
* added new fonts.css to start consolidating all font-based assets
* added fonts.css to PIPELINE_CSS in settings.py under 'portico' and 'app'
* modified the stars test suite to reflect new star icon class name.
(imported from commit 3116fcfd4b5fb4edecd457da554fea616bb7081b)
This is a V1 of this feature. For now, the only way to expand is by narrowing
to the stream---future revisions may add a manual toggle if it is found to be
useful.
Additionally, showing per-subject unread counts will be coming in a future revision
as well.
(imported from commit fb5df0d27e928fa3b0f32b9ff2c1c508202cf7e5)
And scroll there on any error (previously, we would scroll only if we end up
submitting the form).
(imported from commit 63597c4da78ac92cd5c2314d6d174d178b1caaf3)
This allows blueslip to catch exceptions from the event handlers on
these elements in addition to the other benefits that not using
inline handlers provide.
(imported from commit 2bdcb2496c6c08fa7228a20ce6164b527cf64e41)
We previously had 2 mechanisms for narrowing used by the left sidebar
-- the top few links used the hashchange mechanism, while the streams
links used a custom click handler. Both were buggy -- the hashchange
one hadn't been updated to just select the first unread message,
whereas the click handler didn't change tabs.
Fixes#1141.
(imported from commit 8a8af974e78cc5c33937ac0078f04a9b5452b94a)
This appears to have been caused by our code for preventing the
viewport from being recentered if you move the pointer away from the
edge of the viewport from a position near the edge, which was being
run even when it was not triggered by a scroll event.
(imported from commit 0a4b3dcca75a6e5dbf1beb77a5249bd6a9c61341)
...rather than embedding them into index.html.
This is only acceptable for dev, but the next commit adds an alternative
mechanism for prod.
There isn't actually a manual deployment step here. However, this commit won't
work on staging / prod without the next one (since we don't serve
zephyr/static/templates in prod).
(imported from commit dce7ddfe89e07afc3a96699bb972fd124335aa05)
A ticket is filed and this error is not fatal to the UI but rather
a warning to investigate, which we will now do
(imported from commit 3f67ec2b503e91b3921e33b89febd97790e389f1)
Before this commit, if you try to arrow around when the selected
message is outside the pointer threshold for recentering, you get a
big jump, even if you are arrowing towards the center of the viewport.
(imported from commit 5c15d5ccccdf027a8bfa8b79bf519fccbfa971d8)
We made this change for performance reasons that don't exist now that
we only render a small portion of your messages, and it causes a
distracting flicker when you scroll through messages slowly.
(imported from commit 33379320f6b90d93ec8beac17323b287f8bb2485)
If the user scrolls super fast, our scroll handler might not catch
the user passing by some messages.
(imported from commit 14cebffcd1321f02443971ac5e1c922db19648ab)
The issue, prior to this fix, is that the presence list actually
gets drawn *on top of* our "more messages" popup, which is ugly.
(Toggling the z-index on either or both of them did not seem
necessarily to matter, but that's probably because z-index
is subtler than I understand.)
This fixes Trac #1078.
(imported from commit a255aadb1884cf6c659085b26a36d378f680e83e)
The jQuery .data() documentation says: "Every attempt is made to
convert the string to a JavaScript value (this includes booleans,
numbers, objects, arrays, and null) otherwise it is left as a
string. To retrieve the value's attribute as a string without any
attempt to convert it, use the attr() method."
(imported from commit f47c1cbb94cb5a98ea9842b00f45c35cd21873f9)
We now add the my_fullname class to the entry for you in the sidebar so
that we can automatically update this element when changing your name.
This closes trac #979.
(imported from commit f1473d6bb6f18810311d42c85d4b57aab9966498)
This code also has the side effect of making it no longer possible to
click to the right of a name to start composing a message to them.
Fixes#931
(imported from commit 80e995ccc8ead18b80a39181c47cc94d6063f0f6)
We had a bug where if the selected message had the same subject as the
target message, but a different stream, narrowing by subject would
narrow to that subject plus the selected message's stream rather than
the target message's stream.
(imported from commit 4b196342318a06d8aeea46bf05e3d7416ecb6c5b)
The most expensive part of adding the display time to messages is
calling time.toLocaleDateString() and time.toLocaleTimeString().
Most of the time, this information never gets seen, so we now delay
calculating it until just before the user would see it. This cuts
the time to render a chunk of messages from >1s to ~200ms.
(imported from commit 6167e7a8e1c3b4ca77471fa346292be4ffa67ec8)
To be fully responsive, we can basically never specify the width of
our container in a fixed number of pixels; otherwise we'll run into
the situation where there's an inordinate amount of wasted space on
our left and right.
So everything needs to change from, e.g. row to row-fluid,
and that has a whole cascading series of changes that that implies.
(imported from commit 7e2771d916f429548c65c0a00fc4c11397054656)
Messages are now selected on a MessageList, which triggers a
message_selected event that other parts of the code can listen for.
(imported from commit 1da9e4121425c0ac4461b41b7aea169072e1512b)
Previously we would select the first message in the block. Now, we
only do that if a message that is selected will not be in the
resulting narrowed view. If the selected message will be in the
narrowed view, we select that message once narrowed.
(imported from commit 4da5a3a0b597b58c2e028f1b29ac20ae3808a4d1)
I kind of expect this to work, and hopefully this'll help with
people getting stuck on the "Settings" page in the tutorial.
(imported from commit 1159d884dcd331bcfb74864a0176fa293e8c3714)
Here I have a sketchy but functional framework for dealing with
all of the async stuff that a tutorial requires, and an early
draft of what such a tutorial might look like.
I could probably go and remove the first-run message, but I'll
keep it around for now in the unlikely event that something I
haven't anticipated goes wrong in starting up the tutorial.
(imported from commit de9779a66a1b3fe790082decb324c90ec180b39b)
We don't typically have these (see message type, etc.) and removing
them will allow simplifying the code.
(imported from commit fbefb08ee9b08c73f32c8150a6fa1060957aa8ad)
That way it is visible more consistently when arrowing through
messages (arrowing causes scroll events).
(imported from commit ba629b907e4e593032a61a10b04f00e592fe8427)
I experimented briefly with window.getSelection to try to determine if
any text was highlighted (and then we could've done something like
"Don't popover if text is highlighted"), but I couldn't quickly get it
to work in a robust way, so for now I am removing the feature.
(imported from commit 76048b8fd070675b480a2d29e2c8d7d6018633ec)
The previous commit stopped the mousewheel event at .bottom_sidebar,
which means it was never getting to our individual scrolling lists.
(imported from commit 92d32c21bb596d0e14d887ff779a857223d45342)
This isn't perfect, because if, e.g. the stream list is super short,
it still takes up lots of space that the user list might want to use,
but it's an acceptable first pass solution, in my view.
(imported from commit 669737d769258c089b40ffea4abee3229902e857)
This lets us clean up the HTML a little bit in preparation
for a later change which will cause the stream and people
lists to scroll independently of one another.
Also it feels a bit more fun.
(imported from commit b3b49149d7ec2960fd752fe50b41e55d363c1a98)
This is actually a tricky one, because:
* Later, probably if we display an unread count by the person's
name, the action on clicking them might very well be
"Narrow to PMs with that person"
* But for now, while we don't have that, everything about
historical precedent really does strongly suggest that
clicking that person's name is going to get you a PM with
that person.
So we implement that. For now anyway.
(imported from commit 4d461fd6edec122d542c4a97e23f2e400c31122e)
We now set a CSS class on the hovered message, which is used to
control email address visibility.
(imported from commit 787e24f71f20aa3a6452e57b94f5ca1a4c8bc32f)
The message timestamp is now always clickable, and the popover contains the
full long-form date and time. This addresses one problem from usability
testing (see #470).
(imported from commit ad502dff128ad1c934fc0d3faaf5e2931c91c37e)
Bootstrap ignored this and instead used the title= attribute, containing the
full timestamp, which seems like what we want.
(imported from commit 8442835d61f89bd0bce75c05e17aabe85e0f417c)
This fixes Trac #723 - Message view scrolls to top after reloading on another tab (e.g. settings)
(imported from commit d9134cec6879625d577c43a08d258af3f6dacc5f)
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)
This is needed for the next commit so that the loading indicator is
created while its associated div is visible.
(imported from commit 72d6ccc14158b49e0ea640ab818114869aa548bf)
If you create a spinner in a hidden element and then show the
element, the spinner is placed differently than if you had created
the spinner while the element was visible. This commit makes it so
that we never create spinners while their parent is hidden.
(imported from commit a21e68976d70fcceece30ee35f5e7cf6f9490497)
This allows us to use a uniform style across all our spinners. It
also cuts down on boilerplate HTML.
(imported from commit 9879f38e0f1ca8edd40a937753811e329447262d)
If you narrow to a view that only has one or two message, sometimes
the grey box gets cut off and doesn't go to the bottom of the
page. This fixes that.
(imported from commit 55724d03aa30922d91bd33fab4447d889be78889)
The initial rationale for hiding the floating recipient bar
was that it duplicated information that was in the "narrowbar".
Now that this no longer exists, let's *always* show the
floating recipient bar.
(Yes, there is some duplication of this information in the
search area, but I think the situation is fundamentally
different now and would basically like to see it everywhere.)
(imported from commit 6fd4506c2f48caade9496139e580e6550252ce8c)
CSS height percentage was not working because parent div has an undefined
height, so instead it is set to 40% of the window height on resize (and initial
load) via JavaScript.
Fixes trac ticket #24.
(imported from commit 2c6a8489585c4bf70c44469ce8628264ec3fbc36)
This was a really cute bug where our layout messes up if you resize
the page while "Subscriptions" (or to a less visible extent,
"Settings") is active.
The problem here is that we compute the size of the top navbar
based on the size of main_div -- but when main_div is hidden,
it has a width of zero!
We need to instead look at the width of the pane that *is* active.
Resolves https://trac.humbughq.com/ticket/216
(imported from commit adbef00d190845f90c5cfdb46df4ec7b703635ef)
feedback-bot and zephyr_mirror will need to be updated and restarted
when this is deployed to prod.
(imported from commit fe2b524424c174bcb1b717a851a5d3815fda3f69)
Ironically, I think this might've bee introduced by
commit ca35321c02d5e79e4f9c439a662805c016a333ed,
'Fix "resizing window breaks in Firefox" issue'.
Basically, when the window is 776px wide according to
window.innerWidth, that's the width not including the
scrollbar. However, in Chrome, the media query seems to ignore the
width of the scrollbar, so from the CSS's perspective, the window is
actually ~766px wide, so it goes into condensed mode.
But the rest of our code doesn't, which causes the break.
A bit more on this browser-specific difference at:
http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/201101/media_queries_viewport_width_scrollbars_and_webkit_browsers/
So the issue we have is, to match the CSS's behavior:
* In Firefox, we should be listening to window.innerWidth
* In Chrome, we should be listening to window.width
We fix this hopefully once and for all by using window.matchMedia --
aka the exact same query that the CSS itself uses. As discussed in my
last commit, this feature is unavailable in IE<10, so we provide a
potentially more fragile fallback, i.e. what we did before this
commit.
(imported from commit d8e6425b81c90c8e0fdda28e7273988c9bfd67ec)