This provides a hook for users to get to these /help/ pages, which contain
details on exactly how these notifications/settings work, as well as
troubleshooting advice.
Fixes: #23369.
Instead of using "these people", we use "these users".
Note that the "pm-with" single user case has already been updated
to show the user's full name instead of "this person".
Due to incorrect heights set for user-group creation and stream
creation body we had a UI bug because of which bottom part of
user group and stream creation forms were slightly visible
through the bottom.
It was due to somewhat fussy css height rules and incorrect
height calculations for that UI.
This function is only called to calculate the size of stream and
user list. Using 250px as minimum height for these blocks gives
them enough space to be usable regardless of their height ratio.
If the buddy list is displayed in the left sidebar, height of
both these blocks needs to be changed to accommodate for the
changes.
The fixes the bug that stream list and user list don't fill
left sidebar and have 80px height regardless of viewport height.
When building search suggestions for stream topics, instead of
assuming that the user has access to the stream's topic history
from the server, we check whether the user has access to the
stream's topics.
Updates the check in compose validate for the organization's
policy on sending private messages to use the code/value in
settings_config, instead of the number value.
Private messages between a user and a bot are not restricted by
the organization's policy setting for sending private messages.
So, for the empty banner text, we set the default title for
a single bot for the "pm-with" narrow.
Group private messages that include a bot are restricted by
this policy setting, so those messages stay the same.
Also, since bot's aren't people, we update the text for valid
"pm-with", "sender" and "group-pm-with" operands to include the
user's full name in the title.
When there are multiple people in the "pm-with" narrow, we still
send a generic "these people" message instead of listing all the
users in the narrow.
Finally, we make the default message end in a period instead of
an exclamation mark.
For narrows that focus on private messages ("is:private", "pm-with",
"group-pm-with"), we want to check the organization private message
policy and set an empty narrow title that matches that policy.
For these narrows with invalid users, we prioritize that message
for the empty narrow title, instead of the private message policy
message.
Fixes#21889.
A user could trigger a "pm-with" narrow with an invalid user by moving
back/forward in the session, which would trigger the compose box to
open via a hash change. Updates the check to pass in any "pm-with"
narrow with an invalid user.
Also, if the compose box was active/started in the previous view, but
without any content, then we want to actively cancel/close it in the
invalid user "pm-with" narrow.
If an organization has disabled sending private messages, we do not
want to load the compose box automatically for "pm-with" narrows.
We still open the compose box for private messages narrows with a
single bot user as this is not limited by this organization setting.
Also, if the compose box was active/started in a narrow with a bot
user, but had no content, then we want to close/cancel that in a
new narrow with a person or group.
Fixes#23332
Check if col we are trying to focus exists for the row inside
`set_table_focus`.
We call `revive_current_focus` after `topics_widget` is defined
since it can be used inside it.
Fixes#23331
Combine checks for last row between `vim_dowm` and `down_arrow`.
Check for the presence of unread counter in `set_table_focus`
directly so that it can be used in other cases as well. This is
especially useful when marking the last row in the table as read.
We used to hide and show topic rows in the DOM when topics are
updated. This resulted in incorrect calculations in the length of
visible topics. As a consequence, focus is sometimes set to hidden topic.
Removing hidden topics from DOM helps us keep
the calculations correct.
The fixes bugs related to focus being lost when trying to mute
or mark as read the last row.
Instead of topic filter box being a part of the list when keeps
updating, we move it out and fix its position.
This should reduce rendering time of topics list and provide
a smoother experience to users when waiting for topics list to
load.
This lets us provide a hook to where we've written some advice both on
what makes a good stream description, and also what Markdown formatting
is supported there.
Fixes#23376.
In the message actions popover menu, adds an additional check for
whether the mark as unread option should be displayed based on if
the message is a stream message and if the user is subscribed to
the message's stream.
The previous check looked at whether the settings overlay as a whole
was open, not whether the specific panel we're going to update was
rendered.
The other code paths calling from server_events_dispatch into this
module already correctly check meta.loaded.
We added this logging statement in
8d33a62eca, and we now have the data to
suggest this will happen in normal operation.
I left this as a blueslip.log, since it may be useful to see in the
leadup to another exception.
The message we are trying to remove from unread mentions might not
have been fetched locally.
Fortunately, the `unread_topic_counter` data structure is designed to
support exactly this kind of lookup.
This way, if the maintainer isn't able to update `main`,
the push doesn't add the shared-VERSION tag either.
That avoids ending up with a tag that potentially doesn't
get included in the history of the main branch.
The Git docs warn that servers might or might not support this
feature, but GitHub does -- indeed they boasted about it when it
first came out, in Git 2.4 back in 2015:
https://github.blog/2015-04-30-git-2-4-atomic-pushes-push-to-deploy-and-more/
The emoji matcher uses this property in is_unicode_emoji.
It doesn't quite make sense to be talking about "reaction types"
here -- we might use this for a message-reactions UI, but we might
just as reasonably use it for emoji UI in message composing. Ah,
well: I guess that's just a bit of messiness that we can deal with.