There's no advantage to doing a small batch size towards current here,
since latency isn't an issue at this point, and performance on the
server side generally favors larger batch sizes.
This also will make it significantly harder to start getting 429 rate
limiting errors when loading when far behind current.
A formal date string will be assigned to the title attribute of the
recipient_row_date and date_row elements.
e.g. Wednesday, April 5, 2017.
Fixes#4663.
This is system unfortunately has a rather complicated calculation to
compute the offsets correctly, but the net effect here is that the top
section of the Zulip window is much more space-efficient.
Shrinking the tab bar underpadding, part of this change, fixes#4444.
We only need the underpadding to be as tall as the space above the
floating recipient bar, which is definitely less than 10px, so I don't
anticipate regressions caused by this.
When you create a stream, there was always an "Announce stream"
option that would be enabled for public streams.
We are about to make it so that we never send PMs to announce
new streams to folks, so the only mechanism will be sending a message
to the realm's notification stream. If a realm has no notifications
stream, the decision is moot, so we hide the option.
The regex we were using didn't cover all the unicode blocks
to which our emojis belong. This commit fixes the regex to
include all the unicode blocks and also updates the
corresponding JS regex in marked.js.
Fixes: #3460.
If you were narrowed to an unpinned stream, and then pinned it,
we were mostly redrawing the sidebar correctly, but we weren't
setting the active-filter class. Now we accomplish this by
calling maybe_activate_stream_item(), which also reduces some
code duplication. (The new code introduces a bit of extra logic
to do `stream_li.addClass('active-filter')`.
This commit changes the key for recent_topics to be a
stream id. For streams that have been renamed, we will now
get accurate data on recent topics and active streams as
long as stream_data.get_stream_id(stream_name) returns a
valid value.
This commit changes stream_data.in_home_view() to
take a stream_id parameter, which will make it more
robust to stream name changes.
This fixes a bug. Now when an admin renames a stream
you are looking at, it will correctly show itself to
be un-muted. (Even with this fix, though, the stream
appears to be inactive.)
Some callers still do lookups by name, and they will
call name_in_home_view() for now, which we can
hopefully deprecate over time.
Rather than having get_stream_li() look up stream id using
stream name, we force the callers to pass in the stream id.
This adds an extra line to most of the callers for now, but
this will eventually change as we fix some of the callers to
have their callers pass in stream_id.
In places where we now call stream_data.get_stream_id() to
get the stream id, we will be more resilient toward stream
renamings, at least until the next reload, since
stream_data.get_stream_id() can resolve old names that
are stored when we process stream-rename events.
We no longer have get_stream_li() delegate to get_filter_li(),
which simplifies the logic in get_filter_li() and makes
get_stream_li() more direct.
We also move the two functions closer to each other in the file.
There's no correct contact that we can list here unconditionally;
previously, we had people emailing zulip-devel@ because their server
was misconfigured.
Addresses #696 enough that it's no longer a priority issue.
Using get_name() is more robust for stream name changes. This
fixes, for example, the situation where you narrow to a stream,
edit it via the sidebar, and then close the modal, and the message
redraw logic thinks you have unsubscribed.
Fixes#4686.
This change fixes a few small things related to stream
renames, such as what happens if you hit the back button
to go to a narrow where the stream had been renamed. You
will now get the correct behavior in terms of filtering
and searching. Unfortunately, this will only last until
you reload.
We now use stream ids to filter messages in narrowing
situations, instead of doing stream name comparisons.
This partially fixes certain stream-renaming scenarios, since
we will be able to match the stream id for an out-of-date
stream operand, but it doesn't fix some other stuff, such
as the query that the server gets.
This is not a user-facing change, but it starts us down the
path to having the JS client be able to look up old stream
names for situations like people clicking old external links
or for live-update scenarios.
This commit addresses to issues with the left sidebar:
The cursor flickering when hovering over topics, and
the cursor not becoming a pointer when resting just right
of a topic's name (in a clickable area).
This is a follow-up to #4675.
Can be added to the landing pages via:
+ {% include 'zerver/compare.html' %}
+
I'm avoiding adding that include into the landing pages until we have
time to do a bit of tweaking of the styling to integrate better into
/hello/ (primarily color-wise).
Most of the work for this was done by Brock, huge thanks to him!