There are also one or two places we don't need to use it for security
purposes, but we do so for consistencey.
(imported from commit aa111f5a22a0e8597ec3cf8504adae66d5fb6768)
On a page load or reload, the browser will, at an idle time, scroll to
the top of the page. We can't intercept this browser-induced scroll,
so to make sure it doesn't in interfere with our scrolling to the
correct place in your message feed, we let the browser scroll happen
before the work we do on page load.
(imported from commit f5f441ab90bcdb8404e05caea3c6da81a3a6fc1e)
When you read messages in a narrow and then un-narrow, collapse
adjacent messages read in the narrow into a summary row that can
be clicked to expand those messages.
Scoped to staging with feature flags.
The implementation of this within our current MessageList is rather ugly.
(imported from commit bcb3a39d8c0c334136fe86318f18ead03f0f50bf)
This was introduced in a71867c2435790, intended to fix#1287.
Very subtle bug. The problem was that we were attaching a click handler
to two selectors, a link, and a div that the link is inside of.
Since the link was a descendant of the other selector, clicking the link
created TWO click events, and the second click on a stream box while
already narrowed to that stream jumped you to the end.
We should be careful of this in the future — never attach an event
handler to two selectors, one of which is contained in the other.
(imported from commit f428f593280e80c90b2665d1dfbff1df8a39bd35)
For now, we just get emails about referrals that we have to follow up
on manually.
I don't love using the name "referral" in some places and "invite" in
others, but we already use the verb "invite" to mean something else
and "invite" is a canonical noun.
(imported from commit 0814c18395952fcdef234c1584984f71ca1b6f37)
We always intended to move the pointer up when you were at the
top of the viewport and scrolling up, and we always intended to
move the pointer down when you were at the bottom of the viewport
and scrolling down. We didn't intend to move the pointer up
when you were at the bottom, or vice versa. This commit fixes
that bug, simplifies the code, and inlines the code into ui.js.
(imported from commit 77e2ace9d2fc1025e1349e3be13c76c3a397fd38)
This is a bit wasteful on most systems, but will result in their
looking pretty sharp on Retina displays.
(I also go and actually fix up the size we request for a bunch of
these so that they actually match the size of the gravatar in the
document -- previously we were requesting a size 30 gravatar when we
were displaying it in a size 25 space, which leads to unnecessary
ugliness upon resize.)
(imported from commit 9152e6e128e0ac38d97d893cb8243e3b9185351b)
Code prior to this commit was functionally working, but semantically
flawed — returning false does not short-circuit _.each like it does with
$.each. It now uses _.every, as suggested by Steve.
In addition I renamed the function to be more descriptive, added a
comment, and eliminated needless double negation.
(imported from commit b0666dfa01b2677b4eaf577fe9ced90ed0db2438)
In a few cases the $.each was doing something imperatively that was
terser and easier to understand by using a different Underscore method,
so a few of these I rewrote.
Some code was using the fact that jQuery sets `this` in the callback to
be the item; I rewrote those to use an explicit parameter.
Some code was using $(some selector).each(callback). I converted these
to _.each($(some selector), callback).
One function, ui.process_condensing, was written to be a jQuery $.each
callback despite being in a totally different module from code using it.
I noticed this and updated the function's args.
(imported from commit bf5922a35f257c168cc09ec1d077415d6ef19a03)