Adds `want_advertise_in_communities_directory` to the realm model
to track organizations that give permission to be listed on such
a site / directory on zulip.com.
Adds a checkbox to the organization profile admin for
organizations to give permission to be advertised in the
Zulip communities directory.
Adds a help center article about the Zulip communities directory
and uses a shared intro documentation file to create sections in
the articles on creating an organization profile and moderating
open organizations.
Co-authored-by: Alya Abbott <alya@zulip.com>
We change the generic message copy while we're at it.
Also, show login_to_access modal when a spectator tries to access
a stream that either does not exist is is not web-public.
The changes in the last few commits changed the semantics of the
organization default language to no longer be the primary source of
information for a user's language when creating a new account.
Here, we change the settings UI and /help/ documentation to reflect
this.
This'll be shown only when in a different narrow from what
you're composing to.
Takes care of updating display of the button on moving from
one narrow to another and also on changing inputs. This is
what contributes to majority of js code in this commit.
We are not displaying this for private messages since we do not
have a consistent design for both stream and private compose areas.
See https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/101-design/topic/narrow.20to.20topic.2Fpms.20when.20composing/near/1318548
Thanks to Vlad Korobov for the icon and for proposing various
designs.
This commit attemts to fix the sorting of wildcard mentions by moving
them below the silent mentions in case of PMs.
It adds a condition in compare_people_for_relevance function to check
for private message type and sorts the wildcard mention below the silent
ones.
It also adds test for sort broadcast mentions and compare_people_for_relevance
function in case of private message types.
Fixes: #21643
Adds a drop-down menu for updating the organization type in the
`organization_profile_admin` page. Implements front end for
this setting to work / update like other organization profile,
notification and permissions settings.
One special note about this dropdown is that the listed options
should change once an organization has successfully set a type
other than 'unspecified' in the database. To accomplish this
the initial settings overlay build checks the realm_org_type
value in the page_params to select the correct options list,
and when the dropdown value is reset, either for update events
or for discarding changes, the page_params value is again used
to check for whether the 'unspecified' value should be present
as an option in the dropdown menu.
Adds basic node test for the `server_events_dispatch`.
Also adds a new help center documentation article for this
organization setting that is linked to in the UI.
Fixes#21692.
This commit also adds 'subgroups' field to the user_group present
in the event sent on creating a user group. We do not allow passing
the subgroups while creating a user group as of this commit, but added
the field in the event object to pass tests.
Instead of setting `disable` attribute to the elements, we make
them look like disabled and remove interactions with them. This
helps us keep the hotkey handling logic for navigation easier
to manage.
Fixes#21279
We already correctly treat spaces equivalent to underscores here.
But we don't do so when we then go on to sort the same results.
(We'll be fixing that shortly.) So it seems worth testing for it
explicitly.
For example, if a user's name is "Simon Peyton Jones", we'll already
match that name on the queries "Pey" or "Peyton", as well as on
"Simon P". We should do so on "Peyton J" or "Peyton Jones", too.
Similarly, if the user is looking for an emoji of a face in the moon
and they start by typing ":moon", we'll show them both 🌝 "moon face"
and 🌚 "new moon face", along with some other moon-related results.
If they go on to make it ":moon " or ":moon f", though -- as one very
naturally would in order to eliminate things like "waxing moon" and
"moon ceremony" -- then we mysteriously eliminate 🌚 "new moon face".
Instead, the query "moon f" should match both 🌚 and 🌝.
Found this while comparing the web/shared implementation with the
mobile implementation of emoji search. The new behavior here
reflects what we already do for emoji search in mobile, both in the
compose box's typeahead and in the add-a-reaction screen. The
existing behavior here seems pretty annoying, so fixing it will be
part of switching on mobile to the shared code (zulip/zulip-mobile#4636)
without regressing the user experience.
The current behavior was introduced, more or less, in 245d65eb9; then
revised in 5edbcb87f to make the logic more clear, and a fix made in
542f4766d, all 2018. The PR thread was #8286, following issue #8279.
The old behavior before those changes was pure substring matching,
plus a trailing space was ignored (which is the part the issue was
about.) None of the discussion touches on this question; as far as I
can tell, the fact that "Peyton J" doesn't match "Simon Peyton Jones",
nor "moon " match "new moon face", was entirely an unintentional
side effect of those changes.
Also delete a comment about what properties are used. The comment
isn't true: `sort_emojis` looks at `emoji_code` as well as
`emoji_name`, when identifying popular emoji.
And in any case, over here in a test isn't the right place for an
interface description like that to live, if it were true -- rather,
it should be next to the code itself. That'd make the information
more discoverable when trying to use the code, and would also
increase the chances of getting updated when things change that
would make it untrue.
(For this specific kind of interface information, of course, better
yet would be to be in machine-checkable form right on the code -- in
other words, to be a type annotation.)
This reverts commit a8fd535955.
This reverts commit 944781e873.
In an attempt to introduce code from mobile into web to match literal
emojis, the author inadvertently introduced a buggy and smelly change.
Probably best to leave the implementation of this in mobile where there
is more context about the shape of the emoji object available. Web
doesn't actually benefit from the additional behavior anyway.
See https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/21723#pullrequestreview-937051603
This commits adds an wildcard_mention_array which would contain the
mention tokens according to the message type. In case of PMs, it uses
only "all" and "everyone" mentions.
Fixes part of #21643.
This commit attempts to fix the suggestions typeahead for wildcard
mentions in case of PMs by using a conditional which checks for the
current compose_state and changes the string in parentheses accordingly.
In case of PMs, it uses the "(Notify recipients)" string instead of
"(Notify stream)".
There is no guarantee that the code passed into parse_unicode_emoji_code
is valid unicode. In the case that it is not, it might be better to
return undefined instead of throwing an exception: to represent a
non-parseable code.
For context, mobile currently returns custom emojis as emojis with
string names in their code property, instead of actual unicode.
Change the logic for rendering PM threads in PM section to
be in the same as that of topics view --
In default view, only recent 5 PM threads would be shown
and append the active conversation as the 6th one at last
if not present in those 5.
In PM section with unreads, a maximum of 8 conversations
would be shown and rest of them would be hidden behind
the 'more conversations' li-item, clicking on which takes
to the zoomedIn view of PM section where all the present
PM threads would be visible.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
This PR implements checking for a literal emoji match in emoji
typeaheads. In other words, if you paste or type panda face into an
emoji typeahead, panda face should be presented as an option to choose
from.
This behavior is currently present in the mobile app, adding it to
shared will enable both platforms to utilize this logic.
marked.js provides a helpful error message asking for bugs to be
reported upstream, but since we're running a fork, we should redirect
such support requests to us.
We can triage as necessary.
This makes parse() more re-entrant.
This also drives out a change to the linkifiers
test, where I no longer couple the linkifiers
logic to markdown concerns. I probably should have
done this in an earlier commit, but better late
than never. I didn't bother to split out a commit
for the test stuff, since it's just tests and
the commit is still fairly atomic in nature.
It has always been pretty arbitrary what we did inside
of setup() vs. parse(), and we want to avoid unpredictable
results from other platforms neglecting to call setup().
On my machine you can parse a simple message in about
25 microseconds, based on a trial of a million messages
with the content of "**bold**". Whatever portion of
that time is related to setup-related things like
compiling regexes should be negligible from the user's
perspective, since we never run parse() in a loop.
The zcommand code was calling directly into the "marked"
library, which was extremely misleading, since you don't
get a vanilla parse of the markdown due to the fact
that markdown.js calls setOptions at initialize time.
This commit shifts the responsibility to markdown.js
as well as adding a bit of test coverage, but it is
otherwise just a pure code-move refactoring.
The next commit will tweak things further.
The mobile app was never able to use the shared
version of emoji.js, because, among other problems
with our code organization, the emoji.js module
is strongly based on a mutate-the-data paradigm
that doesn't play nice with React. The way
that we mutate data and violate encapsuation
here is something that we would mostly want to fix
without even trying to shared code with mobile, so
subsequent commits will try to extract some pure
functions into a shared module.