This change makes most of the logic on set_count() live
on our per-stream topic list widget. We can find the
jQuery object directly now rather than using the
complicated iterate_to_find() method.
We don't want to prepend new subscribers to our list of
subscribers in the settings page when they hit enter; we
want to wait till we get the event from the server.
This is a fairly new regression that was added when we
live-updated peer subscriber changes.
This fixes and issue where the change_stream_privacy template had its
own duplicate copy of the data-stream-name attribute, which wasn't
updated when streams were renamed.
Fixes#2016.
This also brought along:
iterate_to_find (copied, see large comment explaining why)
activate_topic (extracted from a one-liner)
set_count (formerly stream_list.set_subject_count)
For get_topic_filter_li, we now pass in stream_li instead of
stream to decouple parent/child responsibilities between the
components.
Also, I made some s/subject/topic/ fixes.
This creates the new topic_list.js module, and the first
function that we extract is topic_list.update_count_in_dom().
This function needed to be decoupled from some non-topic-list
stuff which was overly complicated.
I make server_events slimmer by not handling a specific
property when subs.update_subscription_properties() should
do all the dispatching (and mostly did).
And then since update_subscription_properties() has
a "sub" already, I can call directly to stream_list code
and remove a function from subs.js. Since I lose the
wrapper function in subs.js, I rename the stream_list
function as part of this commit.
The only code that gets slightly heavier here is that
we have two lines in the 'pin_to_top' case instead of one.
All of the eventual callers to prepend_subscribers()
and format_member_list_elem() call people.get_by_email()
anyway, so now we do it one place. The one exception
was using page_params.fullname, which is awkwardly
different than what we call that variable elsewhere
(fullname vs. full_name).
Previously, all of the callers of message_edit.save() would check if
it returned true, and if so, call message_edit.end(). This resulted
in various bugs in the past, so we switch to the much cleaner model of
just calling .end() inside .save().
message_edit_form.handlebars already has a message_edit_topic that
refers to the topic edit section of message editing, and this made
things very confusing.
This fixes the following issues:
1. Photos are no longer resized larger than their native resolution.
2. Photos with transparency now have a checkerboard behind them to
signal an alpha of less than one.
We get events to delete subscribers for streams we are not
necessarily subscribed to, and it is now important to
process those events to produce the correct UI for showing
the number of subscribers to streams.
Passes the allowed domains for a realm to the frontend, via
page_params.domains. Groundwork for allowing users to add and
remove domains via the admin setting page, rather than via the
realm_alias.py management command.
Because jQuery passes the actual hashchange event to an onhashchange
handler, the `if reload` checks in the `hashchanged` function were
always returning true, resulting in the wrong logic being used for
computing where to send the user in the event that they edited the
hash in the browser to change their narrow.
Previously we showed an "Edit" item in the actions popover menu when a user
could edit the content or topic of a message, and nothing otherwise. We now
show "Edit", "Edit Topic", or "View Source" in the popover menu for every
message, depending on the editability of the message, and present an
appropriate version of message_edit_form when the menu item is clicked.
Finishes #1604 and #1761.
We compute the editability of messages in several places around the
frontend; standardize the definitions and store in
message_edit.get_editability. This commit should not change app behavior.
If you chose the same language as was already selected, the alert would
say “is now the default language!” where it omits the language name.
This is the fix so that the language name appears all the time.
The lightbox will now distinguish between whether or not something is a
photo and a YouTube video by the class name of the message inline
preview. It embeds the YouTube video in the lightbox as an iFrame
rather than previewing the video screenshot.
The startup code in subs.js used to intermingle data
stuff and UI stuff in a loop inside a called function,
which made the code hard to reason about.
Now there is a clear separation of concerns, with these methods
being called in succession:
stream_data.initialize_from_page_params();
stream_list.create_initial_sidebar_rows();
The first method was mostly extracted from subs.js, but I simplified
some things, like not needing to make a copy of the hashes
we were passed in, plus I now garbage collect email_dict. Also,
the code path that initialize_from_page_params() mostly replaces
used to call create_sub(), which fired a trigger, but now it
just does data stuff.
Once the data structure is built up, it's a very simple matter
to build the initial sidebar rows, and that's what the second
method does.
This replaces add_stream_to_sidebar(), which was kind of a misleading
name, and it also adds a couple lines of code that were always
called right after calling add_stream_to_sidebar().
This function will make it easier to unit test upcoming
changes related to stream counts.
This was mostly moving code, but one change is that we
don't call create_subs() in subs.js any more (which would
have been kind of circular dependency), since the only thing
that it did besides calling a more appropriate function
in stream_data.js was to generate a trigger that was
subsequently ignored and possibly a UI trap, as we don't
want to be messing with the stream sidebar when we go into
the stream settings page.
We now simply call exports.create_sub_from_server_data() for
newly encountered unsubscribed streams (which don't belong in
the sidebar anyway.)
This function used to live in subs.js. It's mostly a code move,
but I simplified the logic to determine whether it's subscribed
not to do a lookup into the same data structure that the sub
already came from.
I also added some tests.
This moves these functions from subs.js to stream_data.js:
receives_desktop_notifications
receives_audible_notifications
This makes notifications.js no longer dependent on the
bloated subs.js.
Previously, URLs were being incorrectly treated as unknown search
operators (since they had exactly one ":" in them, just like foo:bar
for an invalid choice of foo).
Fixes#1743.