This is definitely a micro-optimization, but avoiding
creating an extra object speeds up page loads by about
20ms per 1000 streams.
It's slightly sketchy to mutate the value in place, but
the original value never gets used again.
We now let color_data keep its own state for
unused_colors, so that we longer have to pass in
a large list of unused_colors every time we want
to assign a new stream color.
This mostly matters at startup, where we might
be cycling through 5000 streams. We claim all
the unused colors up front.
Each operation now has an upper bound of expensiveness,
where the worst case scenario is basically popping
off the first element of a list of <= 24 colors.
The algorithm is now deterministic, too, to make
it easier to test. It's unclear whether random color
assignment ever had much benefit, and it made unit
testing the algorithm difficult. Now we have 100%
line coverage.
Fixes part of #10902.
When there is some error in connecting to server(more specifically to the
tornado server) the "Unable to connect to Zulip" connection error message
gets cleared as Django server could send the response of "get" request of
old messages and hence get_old_messages_success hides the error message
even though the connection is not properly established.
Fixes: #5599.
This commit fixes bug: When user clicks on remove-user-pill-btn,
it closes the parent modal instead of removing user pill from input.
This happens because button has class `exit` and there is click
event listener on all `exit` class buttons, which closes modal.
Fix this by adding `e.stopPropogation` to remove-user-pill listener.
While we don't actually need another tooltip on /stats right now, this
provides a clear approach for how to do that. We've since added
tooltips in various other parts of the webapp, and that code is pretty
copy-pasteable, so I think it's reasonable to say this closes#4612.
Cleaned up by tabbott to remove a bunch of unnecessary changes.
This code prevents the password bar from being incorrectly clear after
the sign up form is rendered again after invalid data is submitted
(generally due to forgetting to agree to ToS).
Fixes#10868.
I think this will fix a Casper flake where there was a race
window with multiple temp DOM elements holding copied text.
I also add a comment to the code I think causes this race
for the tests.
Previously, because the parens were added via CSS, copy-pasting the
EDITED notices resulted in junk like this:
Iago 3:51 PMEDITED
edited message content
Now, you get:
Iago 3:51 PM (EDITED)
edited message content
Status messages were incorrectly not selectable, due to a bug in how
we setup the no-select hierarchy (for making copy-paste not have weird
whitespace issues).
Fixes#10456.
For many years we have been excluding the current user
from the buddy list, since their presence is kind
of implicit, and it saves a line of real estate.
This commit removes various user-is-me checks
and puts the user back for the following reasons:
* explicit is better
* newbies will be less confused when they
can see they're actually online
* even long-time users like myself will
feel more comfortable if it's just there
* having yourself in the buddy list facilitates
things like checking your presence or sending
yourself a message
* showing "me" reinforces the meaning of the
green circle (if my circle is green and I'm
active, then others with green circles must
be active too)
* If you're literally the first user in the
realm, you can now see what the buddy list
looks like and try out the chevron menu.
The biggest tradeoff here is the opportunity cost.
For an org with more people than fit on the screen,
we put the Nth person below the fold to show "me".
I think that's fine--users can still scroll or
search.
This commit doesn't do anything special with the
current user in terms of sorting them higher in the
list or giving specific styling.
Fixes#10476
We reduce nesting of code by just early-exiting
for the `is_current_user` check.
This also forces us to be a bit more thorough
with our tests if we want to maintain line
coverage.
For message groups, I just changed the internal name
to "topic_links".
For uses of "subject_links" that are tied to how the
server names fields, I introduced these wrappers:
* util.set_topic_links(obj, topic_links)
* util.get_topic_links(obj)
These can be used for either messages or events.
Previously, messages were a string of disconnected regions. Modeling them as a list brings several benefits:
* Quickly jump to the message list by using a screen reader's list navigation hotkey.
* Quickly jump between messages by using a screen reader's list item navigation hotkey.
* Quickly jump to the beginning or end of message lists in screen readers that support it.
This is a nice performance optimization for the rare case where the
user does quote-and-reply on a message, aborts the compose, and then
re-does the quote-and-reply.
We split out two new functions and call them
everywhere that we used to call add_display_time():
- `update_group_time_display`
- `update_timestr`
We also make some of the local vars more consistent,
as well as doing more explicit clearing of vars than
`delete`.
Splitting these functions will allow us to muck with date
dividers without affecting the `update_str` functionality.
Change wording of public stream description to
"Any member of the organization" from "Anybody"
to indicate that guest users can't subscribe even
public stream of organization.
Previously, when a new stream was created on a client other than the
current one, the browser would first receive the "stream_created"
event, and make up a client-side display color at that time to use in
the "stream settings" view (it doesn't yet know the color that was
selected when the user was actually subscribed, because it doesn't
even know yet that the user is being subscribed to this stream), and
then moments after it'll receive a "susbcribe" event letting the
client know that the user is subscribed (and specifying the color to
use).
However, due to an argument not being passed through properly and a
missing rerender, we were not properly updating either the data
structures or doing a stream colors rerender in order to show the new
color.
This fixes the issue reported in
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/48-mobile/subject/stream.20colors/near/660170
This moves the deactivate account which was previously placed under
"SETTINGS / YOUR ACCOUNT" -> "Deactivate account" to "SETTINGS / YOUR
ACCOUNT" -> "User settings" for making it more visible.
Use the placeholder `[Quoting…]` when quoting and replying before the
quote has been added to the message. Also, add tests to the
`compose_actions` Node tests for the new behavior.
Fix#10705.
Guest users can't access subscribers of any(public or private)
non-subscribed streams. Therefore, hide subscribers list
of all non-subscribed streams from guest users in UI.
Fixes#10749 (the previous parts were fixed already).
This will change the hash of the URL when a new tab
gets selected. Vice versa when the billing page is opened
the appropriate tab is selected according to hash of
the URL. This means when the card gets updated the
page would be reloaded correctly to show #payment-method
tab.
When a user clicks the compose `+` button, create a popover at the
bottom right of the screen including buttons for opening a new stream
message or a new private message.
Use CSS to display a `+` button on mobile but keep the more verbose
buttons on desktop. In the future, this button will be used to display
a popop for a new message.
Guest users can't subscribe themselves to streams, so we shouldn't
display the subscription button at end of stream message view.
Fixes part of #10749.
Guest users can't subscribe themselves to any stream, so we hide the
"Subscribe" button. Previously, it was showing Subscribe button after
a guest user unsubscribed from a stream.
Fixes part of #10749.
The "notification settings" page previously advertised support for
mobile push notifications via checkboxes, even if the server hadn't
yet been registered for push notifications. This was a frequent
source of onboarding pain for new Zulip organizations.
We fix this by providing a clear warning and disabling the relevant
inputs on the settings pages.
Modified significantly by tabbott to correct some tricky logic errors
as well as some copy-paste bugs.
Fixes#10331.
We want to avoid `blueslip.error` in cases where
the root cause could just be bad data that is
human-entered.
There are a few callers here who **should** be
sending good data all the time, but hopefully
they either have good test coverage, other
obvious failure symptoms, or, ideally, just
do what the user would mostly expect in the
face of bad data.
This supports guest user in the user-info-form-modal as well as in the
role section of the admin-user-table.
With some fixes by Tim Abbott and Shubham Dhama.
This is the natural behavior that most users will
probably expect. If you need to go to All Messages when
topics are zoomed in, you can just hit ESC twice.
Before this change, if you hit ESC, then hotkey
code would call search.clear_search, which would
call narrow.deactivate(), which would then use
`$('#search_query')` to clear a value, but then
let search.clear_search blur the input and
disable the exit button. It was all confusing.
Things are a bit more organized now.
Now the code works like this:
hotkey.process_escape_key
Just call narrow.deactivate.
$('#search_exit').on('click', ...):
Just call narrow.deactivate.
narrow.deactivate:
Just call search.clear_search_form
search.clear_search_form:
Just do simple jquery stuff. Don't
change the entire user's narrow, not
even indirectly!
There's still a two-way interaction between
the narrow.js module and the search.js module,
but in each direction it's a one-liner.
The guiding principle here is that we only
want one top-level API, which is narrow.deactivate,
and that does the whole "kitchen sink" of
clearing searches, closing popovers, switching
in views, etc. And then all the functions it
calls out to tend to have much smaller jobs to
do.
This commit can mostly be considered a refactoring, but the
order of operations changes slightly. Basically, as
soon as you hit ESC or click on the search "X", we
clear the search widget. Most users won't notice
any difference, because we don't have to hit the
server to populate the home view. And it's arguably
an improvement to give more immediate feedback.
If you zoom into "more topics" for a stream that has
a LOT of topics, and then scroll down to the bottom,
and then zoom out by selecting "All messages" or
similar upper-left-sidebar options, we now try to scroll
the more recently active stream back into place after we scroll
out.
Before this change, it was possible for your lower left
sidebar to appear empty, as it would keep the
scroll offset from "more topics".
If our topic list isn't zoomed in, avoid calling
stream_list.zoom_out_topics().
This commit also introduces `zoomed_in` to track
our topic zooming state.
This small modules nicely breaks down the
responsibilities of topic_list and stream_list
when it comes to zooming in and out of topics
(also known as hitting "more topics" or "All
Streams).
Before this, neither module was clearly in
charge, and there were kind of complicated
callback mechanisms. The stream_list code
was asking topic_list to create click handlers
that called back into stream_list.
Now we just topic_zoom set up its own click
handlers and delegate out to the other two
modules.
This fixes a regression from here:
88b4a9f2d7
The fix didn't account for how huddles are
represented as comma-delimited strings.
We also simplify the logic by extracting a
function and doing early-exit for simple
cases.
Internally we generally omit our own id and email
in data structures related to PMs, except when we
are the sender, but if we receive "perma links"
we will need to filter out our id.
This reflects the newly selected value of role in "role" column under
active-users section and deletes the redundant admin-icon updation code(
As we already removed bolt admin-icon)
New user avatar width is not maximum when user upload
new image. Because wrong html element is accessed for
setting value of image src attribute.
This commit removes these code from success of ajax call,
cause we already handle this in event `user_events - avatar_url`.
This deduplicate code for the checkboxes which are dependent on other
parameters and it makes no sense changing them when that parameter is
false. For example, changing `message_content_in_email_notifications`
makes sense only when `enable_offline_email_notifications` is true.
There is need for such a helper because `unless` executes to be true even
when we haven't passed the context variable on which we are checking the
conditional statement.
We drop support for usage of `icon-vector` as base class when
including icons from font awesome icons package.
Now on, only icons as specified in font awesome v4.7.0 can be used
in the code base.
We now ask compose_pm_pill to give us a list of user
ids that we are PM'ing to, and we only convert user
ids to emails right before we put requests on the wire.
We also let the "pill system" tell us whether we
have unconverted data.
It also sets up for an upcoming server change where we
can just send user ids to the server.
This change should be transparent to the majority of users.
For Zephyr users we are slightly less aggressive about
sending typing indicators, since we now require valid
user ids.
This module makes it really easy to create are-you-sure
dialogs for dangerous operations.
Basically it's one function with five parameters. You
give three chunks of HTML, a callback function, and
a parent container.
The first use of this will be in settings_user_groups,
coming up in a couple commits.
This removes some unnecessary code duplication in the CSS classes for
Google and GitHub authentication social auth buttons.
This will, in turn, help us avoid extra work every time we add a new
authentication backend.
Changes -
a) Updated the border-radius to 4px for all the buttons.
b) Increased the margins between the labels and inputs.
These changes affect the login and register page's styling.
Previously we only added the active class to the Date uploaded
column, thinking it was already sorted by upload date by default.
However, it wasn't, so now we explicitly make a call to sort it by upload
date to fix an issue with broken sorting.
Fixes#10518.
I don't know how long this has been broken, but it seems
some re-design of our message feed moved the Subscribe
button out #zfilt, so we use a different parent selector
now to turn on the click handler.
Hopefully this was a pretty obscure bug. To reproduce
it go to "Manage Streams" and then select a stream you're
not subscribed to (from "All Streams"), and don't actually
subscribe, but then hit "View stream".
The user experience here is still a bit confusing, but
this is just a quick fix.
Previously, if someone updated his/her name from accounts page and closed
the modal and then reopen the modal, the page still had the old name as
we use `page_params.full_name` in `accounts-settings.handlebars`. This
commit fixes this bug.
Fixes: #10529.
Since now we have email notifications for streams messages too, so
there is no direct dependency of
`message_content_in_email_notifications`checkbox on
`enable_offline_email_notifications` setting and neither we can say it's
dependent on `enable_stream_email_notifications` as well because we may
have email notifications set for individual streams. So removing this
checkbox dependency is the best solution here.
I used line-height: 22px and font-size: 16px in .message-content to take the
screenshots. Requires some additional fiddling for the LaTeX picture, inline
code block, and maybe a few others.
We have a body-level click handler that closes
all modals if you click outside a modal. This
code is a bit brittle, because we need to first
check that the element we clicked is not in a modal,
and our markup there isn't entirely consistent.
This is a quick fix that just adds `#user-profile-modal`
as one of the selectors to look for.
Fixes#10500
We don't use input.create_non_editable_pill() in our
code yet. If we add this back, we'll want to have node
tests on it.
Removing this unused code brings us to 100% line
coverage for input_pill.js.
This directly reverts 5c11ab85 with the small addition
of adding input_pill to our list of fully covered
modules.
This commit exposes the function is_duplicate_full_name()
that can be used to discern if we cannot identify a user
just by their full name in the interface and have to use
his user id as well to distinguish them from other users.
* Eliminate unnecessary div element wrapping around the icon and
change jQuery selectors accordingly
* Set initial position through CSS instead of JS
* Set color to inherit to prevent night mode issues.
This is largely inspired by requests from people not liking the
Google's new emojiset. A lot of people were requesting to revert
back to old blobs emojiset so we are re-enabling this feature
after making relevant infrastructure changes for supporting google's
old blob emojiset and re-adding support for twitter emojiset.
Fixes: #10158.
When we nudge up the feed to prevent the compose box
from obscuring it, we now have 20 pixels of separation
instead of 5. Before this fix, it was hard for users
to know whether they had any messages being covered.
Wrap all inputs tabs and inputs in `.contributors-list`, and increase
the width of that `div` to be 80px larger than the width of the other
content in order to fit each tab.
Instead of rendering tabs upfront, initialize them to a `Loading…`
indicator and then render them when clicked.
Use a `rendered_tabs` object to cache rendered HTML strings instead of
re-loading a tab (e.g. if it is selected, another tab is selected, and
then it is selected again).
These repositories (`zulip-ios-legacy` and `zulip-android`) are
deprecated, and as such should not have their own tabs, but still
should be included in the total contributions count.
This adds a feature in the "Notification" section of "Settings" tab,
which lets user enable or disable login emails notification.
Tweaked by tabbott to simplify the test.
Fixes: #5795, progress towards #5854.
We now have a callback for whenever the compose
box gets autosized by our old vendored version
of the autosize widget. It calls code to
scroll up the message feed if we are newly
covering it.
Use the placeholder `[uploading file]()` when uploading before the
upload has completed. This behavior prevents an image from being
improperly placed when typing after starting an upload. This is based
on GitHub's handling of image uploading.
Also, add tests to the `upload` Node tests and update existing tests to
account for the new behavior.
Fix#10305.
Empty "person picker" fields appear with a much smaller width than all
other custom fields. Increase the `min-width` of the field that it
matches the widths of other text boxes.
Fix#10414.
This is general fix that makes sure that we
apply all message-modifying events after we
apply the events for the initial incoming
messages.
The particular scenario that was reported here
was when you would have two tabs for Zulip,
with one of them open and in a PM view, and
with the open tab being at the bottom of the
feed, such that incoming messages would be
immediately visible.
Now suppose the other person in that PM
conversation sent you a message.
The open tab would properly immediately
mark the message as read, and notify
the server. The problem was that the closed
tab would not process the main message event
until it "woke up", by which time the flag-update
event was bundled into the same event batch
as the main message event. We'd then process
the flag-update first, which essentially was
a noop, since the actual message wasn't in
the message store yet. The user would then
see unread counts increment in the closed tab,
while the open tab didn't increment. This
was confusing.
Now `server_events.js` processes the actual
message first and does the flag-update as part of a
`post_message_events` loop.
We include events for updating message flags,
deleting messages, and attaching submessages
to messages in the `post_message_events` array.
This bug was a bit difficult to simulate in a dev
environment, since you needed your "open" tab
to be in focus to simulate the race, but as
soon as you tab to another place to deliver
a message (whether from the browser or otherwise),
the open tab is no longer in focus.
I did this in the console of my "open"
tab to work around it:
unread_ops.process_visible = unread_ops.mark_current_list_as_read;
This problem was easy to reproduce, but it wasn't
entirely consistent. I often needed to send
several messages in succession to trigger event
batching and force the race condition. (This wasn't
precisely a "race", as events actually arrive in the
correct order; it was having them arrive in the same
batch that triggered the bug.)
This commit fixes multiple invite-user-email sent to user.
In invite-user-form, submit-form click handler is getting
called multiple times on submit-invite-user-form event, which
results in multiple invitation mail to user.
Because, we registered same submit click handler multiple times.
Submit form click handler is registered when user opens invite-user
modal. If user opens modal multiple times, click handler get
registered multiple times.
We should register this click handler on `exports.initialize`
function instead of `exports.launch` function. This modal is unlike
other modal, where we append html when user opens modal. In this
case, we append modal on initialization. We only show modal when
user opens. So on initialization, modal element already exists,
register click handler on submit-btn element, on intialization
not when user open modal.
Fixes#10354.
If a caller passes undefined to go_to, it is
almost certainly a programming error, so we
shouldn't silently ignore it just because
the current key is undefined.
We also avoid setting curr_key until we
validate the incoming key.
When non-admin users visit the custom profile fields settings page,
the `Sortable` error
Uncaught Sortable: `el` must be HTMLElement, and not
[object Undefined]
is thrown, with `undefined: undefined | No stacktrace available` being
shown in the browser. Fix this by only using `Sortable` if the user is
an admin.
Fix#10403.
In commit c293bb82c4 we changed
id_realm_invite_by_admins_only and realm_invite_required checkboxes to a
single dropdown so these lines are redundant now.
In user type custom field, field value is list of user ids. We weren't
converting list to json object in update event payload. This throws
error in frontend, cause we store stringify representation of custom
field value. Therefore, after update event is recieved field-value-
type gets updated to array from string which throws json parsing error.
On mobile devices, the search bar appears as too tall for the rest of
the top header. Fix this by setting `#search_query`'s height and
vertical alignment properties.
Fix#10373.
These buttons are displayed with a lighter background than other
buttons. Update their borders and background colors (along with the
border on the search box) so that they match the night theme.
Fix#10301.
Expect div-input element in every pill-container even though pills are
not editable. This is correct, because `input_pill.js` appends pills
before the div-input element.
Modify structure of template data used to render
`user_profile_modal.handlebars`.
This is preparatory commit to display user pills in user profile
popover instead of user names in user type custom fields.
This commit add FIELD_TYPE_CHOICES_DICT to page_params and replace
FIELD_TYPE_CHOICES.
FIELD_TYPE_CHOICES_DICT includes all field types with keyword, id
and display name. Using this field-type-dict, we can access field
type information by it's keyword, and remove all static use of
field-type'a name or id in frontend.
This commit also modifies functions in js where this page_params
field-types is used.
This fixes the mis-sized text in the bulleted lists on /for/
working-groups-and-communities (and some other pages), by ensuring
p tags inside li tags don't get font-size styling applied to them
twice.
This line full of non-breaking spaces dates back to before Zulip being
open sourced (ca4e6a0ff), so we can assume it was a fix that we don't
need anymore.
If `TEXT_EMOJISET` is currently selected emojiset then fallback to
`GOOGLE_EMOJISET` for displaying emojis in emoji picker and
composebox typeahead. We should pre-load the spritesheets in`emoji.js`
even in case of text emojiset otherwise on slow networks emoji picker
will appear empty initially.
This fixes a UI bug where if a user had a lot of recent private
message threads, they'd take over the entire left sidebar.
This was caused by not setting the max height of users list in private
message container.
Fixes: #5384.
This commit add checks in frontend to remove null values of choices
from json data. This allows user to successfully create/edit choice
custom field, even if there is blank input in choices.
This commit
- Remove `add-btn` in choices, to create new input
for choice
- Add logic which create blank input for choice at
the bottom if user start typing into above input choice.
This commit add following logic in delete-btn of choices, so
user can not delete all choices of custom field.
Show `delete-btn` in all choices, but if there exist only
choice hide `delete-btn` of that choice.
Hide `delete-btn` of first choice in create-new-custom-field and
edit-choice-type-field form, so user can not delete all choices
and have to submit at least one choice.
This commit remove this logic of choice-field-delete-btn from
both settings.
This is preparatory commit of adding new logic in `delete-btn`.
Fixes#10124.
Users in the waiting period category cannot subscribe other users to
a stream. When a user tries to mention another unsubscribed user, a
warning message appears with a subscribe button on it to subscribe
the other user.
This commit removes the subscribe button and changes the warning text
for users in the waiting period category.
Instead of displaying a fixed error message inside the yellow bar itself,
now the yellow bar disappears on error and a red compose_error is shown.
The error message is the one returned from the server.
Fixes#9803.
The compose box closes on any click in the document outside the compose
box except for an element with an anchor tag or in its parents.
This commit adds an anchor tag as parent of the keyboard shortcuts
icon.
When the icon or the text of a menu item in settings dropdown was
clicked, already open compose box was closed. Clicking on the empty
area of that menu item i.e the area where the icon or text was not
present did not close compose box. This commits check whether the
target itself is an anchor tag or of any of its parent contains the
anchor tag.
If a user is narrowed by `is:private`, `pm-with`, or `group-pm-with`,
change the `New topic` button to say `New stream message` instead for
added clarity.
Also, add to the Casper and Node tests for this behavior.
Fix#9072.
Due to copyright issues with potentially displaying Apple emojisets on
non-apple devices, as well as iamcal dropping support for the emojione
emojiset (see https://github.com/iamcal/emoji-data/pull/142), we are
dropping (perhaps temporarily) support for allowing users to switch
emojisets in Zulip.
This commit just hides the feature from the user but leaves most of
the infrastructure in place so that in the future if we decide to
re-enable the support we will not need to redo the infrastructure work
(some JS-side code is deleted, mostly because we'll want to re-add the
feature using the do_settings_change infrastructure anyway).
The most likely emoji set to add is the legacy "blobs" Google emoji
set, since it seems popular with some users.
Tweaked by tabbott to remove some additional JS code and update the
changelog.
Choice type of custom field, displays index of selected choice by user
instead of value of choice.
Fix this by parsing choice-type custom field to get field value before
rendering user popover template.
Fixes#10239
Previously, we incorrectly setup the click handler on
create-custom-field-btn each time settings overlay opens, which
executes handler multiple times results in more than one HTTP request
to server for custom field creation.
This commit creates an ID for create-field-btn and initializes the
click handler on this button, instead of the form; the side effect of
that change is that we're now no longer double-adding this click
handler every time the page is opened.
This isn't a clean solution; ideally, we'd only call the function to
add the click handler once in the first place.
Fixes#10126.
Function `update_announce_stream_state` is used to update announce-stream
checkbox. If stream is private announce-stream checkbox gets disabled
by this function.
There are unncessary calls to `update_announce_stream_state` fuction.
i.e. it is called
- when user clicks on `copy-from-stream` link to toggle streams-list
- when stream-checkboxes value is changed to copy subs from stream
- when user-filter value is changed to search users
These events does not affect announce-stream value, therefore
there is no need to call this function to update it.
Currently, our edit-field-choice form in custom profile field settings
in admin UI, is rendered when settings modal is loaded not when admin
user clicks on edit-btn.
Admin user open edit-field-form of choice-type-field, do some changes
in choices, discard those changes and close edit-field-form.
When admin user again open this edit-field-form, those discarded
changes are displayed, instead of original choices data.
Fix this issue by re-rendering field choices when admin user clicks
on edit-field-btn.
Admin user must enter at least one choice for choice type fields
in create new custom field form. Admin can not delete all choice
options in form.
Reset delete-btn of choice inputs on choice reordering so that
admin can delete all choice except first choice input option.
Currently, admin user has to add order of custom-field-choice in
input box to create and edit choice-type custom field.
Remove this input boxes and add drag-drop list of custom-field-choices
using Sortable.js.
Fixes#10129
In Chrome, the loading spinners on the Bots and Deactivated Users pages
were not visible due to the `filter` elements having duplicate IDs across
the different pages. (There are multiple `filter` elements with the ID
`uil-ring-shadow` on the page.)
To solve this, when generating a new loading SVG element, we append
the container element's ID to the filter's ID, thus preventing any
duplicates.
Fix#8620.
Admin users can't add private unsubscribed streams to the default
streams list. Therefore, we shouldn't include private streams the
user is not subscribed to in the default stream suggestions.
This commit fixes two issues with the previous implementation:
1. JavaScript's replace replaces only the first instance,
thus we need to use a regex.
2. Handlebars was setting the id of the HTML elements with
spaces in between which broke the delete button; now a
new variable display_name is passed to the template.
This also makes changes to the casper tests to have an emoji
name with multiple spaces in it to ensure this bug doesn't
appear again.
When visiting a narrow like
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/doesnotexist, grey-out the reply
button and add the title `There are no messages to reply to.`
Also, add to the tests for `narrow.js` with
`#left_bar_compose_reply_button_big`.
Fix#8547.
Currently in create new stream form, announce_stream option isn't get
disabled for private stream with public history.
This commit fixes the above issue.
We move remove_deactivated_user_from_all_streams
into stream_events.js. There were some minor changes
to rename variables and also to not rely on using
`stream_info`.
This allows several modules to no longer need
to import `narrow` (or, in our current pre-import
world, to not have to use that global).
The broken dependencies are reflected in the node
tests, which should now run slightly faster.
All of our data related to emojis is in emoji.js.
Now typeahead_helper no longer depends on emoji_picker.
Generally we want typeahead_helper to only depend
on data modules to avoid complicated circular
dependencies (or at least mitigate them).
I think it's a known problem that we don't match
on common aliases for our top N emojis, but I don't
attempt to address that here. I just made the
comments reflect the names we use in our
current data structures.
We don't need util.js to be depending on emoji_picker.js.
The function emoji_prefix_sort is only used
in typeahead_helper, so I just moved the implemenation
to there.
This is part of work to break some of our
nastier circular dependencies in preparation
for our es6 migration.
This commit should facilitate loading leaf-like
modules such as people.js before all of the things
that reload.js depends on.
When you unsubscribe a stream by clicking on the
checkmark, we don't want it to disappear right
away, but we also don't need it to stay around
once you start searching for new streams.
Note from Tim: This commit removes some complex code that was just a
workaround for the fact that this widget used to automatically
re-filter immediately after clicking to unsubscribe a user.
Since we've since fixed that original issue, we don't need this.
We add a padded div to our container for the buddy
list to give scrolling the illusion that we've
rendered every list item, while still letting
the browser do the heavy lifting instead of trying
to fake it out too much.
This new div allows us to split out two concerns:
semantic list of items - remains in #user_presences
widget real estate - controlled by new #buddy_list_wrapper
We will use this for progressive rendering. We want to add
padding to the buddy list without messing with the integrity
of the actual HTML '<ul>' list. (One ugly alternative would
have been to add a dummy list item, which be a pitfall for
any code traversing the list.)
Basically, all the code relating to click handlers and similar
things was left alone. We only change js/css related to
scrolling, resizing, and overflow.
This version of progressive scrolling lazily
renders buddy list items, but it doesn't
provide the browser with any notion of upcoming
list items, so as you scroll down and the size
of the rendered list grows, the scrollbar shows
you being too close to the bottom.
This maintains 100% coverage on buddy_list.js.
Earlier, on opening the subs modal, the "Subscribed" tab would be selected
by default when the components.toggle was created for tab switching.
This would change the hash to `#streams/subscribed`, and then extra work had
to be done to change it back to `#streams/all` leading to a longer open times.
With this change, `#streams` and `#streams/subscribed` both take you to
the "Subscribed Tab", and `#streams/all` takes you directly to
the "All Streams" tab.
This renames Realm.show_digest_email field to
digest_emails_enabled, for greater clarity as to what it does
just from seeing the setting name, without having to look it up.
Fixes part of #10042.
We set the keep=false for the narrow_to_row callack so that it is deleted
once the subs modal is opened. Previously, this callback would cause issues
when you then tried to open the All Streams Settings as it would narrow to
the stream row.
In 47aaa73f96, we fixed one issue, which
is that server_events_dispatch.js was calling `update_starred` with
the wrong arguments, but created a new one (toggle_starred wasn't
updated) and missed another (which is that we weren't ever updating
message.starred, and thus if you toggle a message's star-state in one
browser, and then tried to toggle it back in a second, it would feel
like the click didn't work, because it was trying to toggle
e.g. off->on a second time).
This was supposed to be suppressed when a reload is in progress,
however, the logic was accidentally checking that
reload.is_in_progress was a defined function, not whether a reload was
actually in progress.
There was previously a race condition where reload.is_in_progress was
set after `activity.js` sent the presence request to the server, but
before we process the response; in that race condition, we still
shouldn't send blueslip errors to the server.
This renames Realm.restricted_to_domain field to
emails_restricted_to_domains, for greater clarity as to what it does
just from seeing the setting name, without having to look it up.
Fixes part of #10042.
Fixes part of #10026.
Typeaheads stopped propogation of keydown and keyup events for any
key except tab and enter. If stopAdvance was true even tab and enter
were not allowed.
advanceKeyCodes option was added to typeahead which allowed to specify
key codes for which propogation of keydown and keyup events should not
stop. advanceKeyCodes does not respect the stopAdvance option.
As the backspace key code is added to advanceKeyCodes in search.js,
the backspace key deletes pill on pressing backspace if input is empty
or only consists of spaces.
This optimize the case when the user-info-form modal is opened
in user-list by not rendering bot_owner_select handlebar.
This bug is before changing form to modal.
This is sort of a temporary fix to bring the state back to how it
was in commit: ef4337edcb. However,
long-term we will need to fix our local echo feature to do merging
of names just like we do on backend.
We don't need to get sorted streams in the "source"
function for typeahead, since we sort them later,
and we don't need to recalculate values.
This preserves the behavior that we include
unsubscribed streams in the typeahead, which is
probably intentional.
This pulls the essential bucketing/sorting logic out
of filter_table().
The diff isn't quite as clean as I'd like, but some
of the code that got added back to filter_table() can be
eliminated in the future. Basically, all the stuff
related to hidden ids can just be zapped if we go
to an approach of just re-building the DOM cleanly
whenever our filters change.
We replace two calls to stream_matches_query() with
a single call to triage_stream(), which prevents us
from doing the same is-subscribed checks twice.
We probably should have done this a while ago, even
though these functions are pretty tiny. The goal here
is to make it easier to have more consistent search
semantics.
Our first use case is subs.js. In this case we
are able to decouple a bit of generic string
matching from the subs-specific code.
We move some data code from subs.js to stream_data.js.
It's not clear we have been using the optimal sort for
dealing with locales, but this change preserves the
current behavior. The only subtle change here is that
we look up subs using a Dict now instead of a plain
JS object.
The values of this dictionary used to be raw DOM elements,
but get_row() wraps them again, so there's not a huge
reason to store them as raw DOM elements internally. It
is slightly easier to reason about the code if everything
stays at the jQuery level.
To preserve the old behavior here, we have to do something
that is kind of ugly, but at least it's explicit now. In
the old code, our cache was DOM elements, and if an id
wasn't in the cache, we would sneakily return $(undefined)
with this code in get_row():
return $(this._rows[id]);
And it turns out that $(undefined) is basically just a
zero-element jQuery object. A lot of our code depends
on this behavior and just works around the zero-element
objects as needed with checks like this:
if (this.selected_row()).length === 0) {
// don't try to get offset
}
For now we just preserve this behavior. We could eventually
be more strict here, or at least have aggressive warnings
on cache misses, but we'd need to retrofit code to be
able to call something like `has_rendered_selection()`
and/or deal with `undefined` as the return value for the case
where the selection hasn't been rendered.
Here is some example code that would cause tracebacks if
we just returned `undefined` for cache misses:
rerender_preserving_scrolltop: function () {
// old_offset is the number of pixels between the top of the
// viewable window and the selected message
var old_offset;
var selected_row = this.selected_row();
var selected_in_view = selected_row.length > 0;
if (selected_in_view) {
old_offset = selected_row.offset().top;
}
return this.rerender_with_target_scrolltop(selected_row,
old_offset);
},
This function is more cohesive and always takes in
a jQuery object containing exactly one DOM element,
and it does all stuff at the jQuery level of
abstraction (no raw DOM).
It's a pretty simple extraction--removing the level
of indentation makes the diff a bit noisy.
We shorten the name of the function and avoid having
all the callers call `.get()`. Now we mostly stay
in jQuery "space", which avoids some confusion about
when we're dealing with raw DOM elements and which
will facilitate unit testing.
Changed search pill padding, `.navbar-search` flex-wrap to match with
the CSS refactoring in 66df4e3e84.
The `height: 100%` changes to `.navbar-search` and `.input-append`
make up for the issue in which the pills overflowed in the mobile
view due to `.navbar-search` height being declared 40px explicitly
while the actual heiight in mobile view was shorter.
Currently on zoom out from stream topics, scrollbar didn't scroll back
to opened stream. Because call to scroll-to-stream func isn't called
after all streams view is displayed. So wrong stream element is
passed to func.
Fix this by calling scroll-to-stream func after all-stream-list view
is displayed.
We use these new functions in the message compose typeahead so that they
can also be used in a PM recipients typeahead with both people and user
groups.
We now render the "skin" part of "Stream Settings" before
adding in the actual streams. The new function
populate_stream_settings_left_panel() takes care of adding
the streams. It uses a new template called
`subscriptions.handlebars`.
Splitting out this function will give us more flexibility
for various improvements.
First, we can decide to render the list after we open the
overlay, just to avoid the problem that users don't know why
the modal's opening. (And we could add a loader spinner as
needed.)
Second, we can improve our filter features so that we do
filtering in the data instead of moving DOM rows around,
which is expensive.
Third, we can eventually introduce progressive rendering.
Finally, having the function broken out will make profiling
more precise about where bottlenecks exist.
Fixes#10059.
In 66df4e3e84,
`display: inline-flex` was added to `.pill-container` but
`flex-wrap: wrap` was missing which forced overflow pills to be on
one line and made the pill text overflow vertically. This was not
observed in composebox pills as `.pm_recipient .pill-container`
already had a `flex-wrap: wrap` rule which has been removed in this
commit to avoid duplication.
We were passing this in before, but having it as
a data member reinforces the idea that we'll want
this to be a first-class concept in the list, since
we depend on ordering for various things.
We now keep track of keys in buddy_list.js, so that
when we insert/remove items, we no longer need to
traverse all the DOM. Instead, we just find out
which position in the list we need to insert the
key in (where "key" is "user_id") and then find
the relevant DOM node directly and insert the new
HTML before that node. (And of course we still
account for the "append" case.)
There's a little more bookkeeping to make this
happen, but it should help reduce some code in
upcoming commits and pave the way toward
progressive rendering optimizations.
This commit should produce a minor speedup
for activity-related events that go through
buddy_list.insert_or_move(), since we are
not traversing the DOM to find insertion points
any more.
This will be useful for lazy rendering, where our
buddy_list widget already knows the keys (aka "userids")
it wants to render as you start scrolling them into
view.
Typing "tim " did not did not produce any match when suggesting person
in composebox typeahead or user group typeahead as the space at the
end of the "tim " string passed by the browser was a
`no break-space (U+00A0)` instead of `space (U+0020)`.
Although there are unicode characters other than `no break-space` which
represent spaces, only U+00A0 is replaced as it was the only space
character encountered when testing this issue manually.
Fixes#10039.
This is a fixup for e1291cf839.
While copying the the rules of `#searchbox` to `#searchbox_legacy`
in the search pills feature, the existing `#searchbox` rules were
missed in the conversion.
`#searchbox_legacy` has been added beside `#searchbox` in `media.scss`
instead of replacing that as both of them need those rules for the
mobile view.
Currently, if you access an article link with an anchor link that isn't
featured in the sidebar, the main article won't be highlighted. Thus, we
exclude the anchor link hash from the article-searching selector if
the full article pathname wasn't found.
Shrinking the widths enables all five core team profiles to be aligned
on the same line, instead of having four on the first line and one
profile on its own line.
Fix#10008.
To reduce code duplication when creating hotkey deprecation notices,
create the `get_hotkey_deprecation_notice` function. Also, create a
`ui` testing file with a test for the new function.
Fix#10004.
This replaces some old code with calls to topic_data.js.
Now our topic typeahead uses the same data as our
sidebar, stream suggestions, and the "n" key, so any
future improvements to that data will benefit all
features the same.
This is an important piece of #9857.
Now that `emoji_collection` and `emojis_by_name` are global
datasources in the webapp we need to rename things carefully
to reflect their actual meaning. The fact that emoji code is
used as a css class for unicode emoji is one thing but it is
not its sole use so renaming it seems a good idea.
This commit moves the `emoji_collection` datasource in the emoji
picker to emoji.js and renames it to `emojis_by_name`. It is a
mapping from emoji name to object where each object describes an
emoji. This is an effort in the direction of de-duplicating and
unifying the datasets being used by various our widgets(like
emoji picker and composebox typeahead) in the webapp. Migrating
all the widgets to a single datasource will help us in removing
the whole class of annoying bugs which causes some emojis to be
missing from some widgets.
This commit closes a long pending issue which involved moving the
`EMOTICON_CONVERSION` mapping to build_emoji infrastructure so
that there is only one source of truth. This was pending from the
time when this feature was implemented.
Pressing `Esc` did not blur a contenteditable div by default, while
an input field was blurred by default. Due to this when a user tried
to unnarrow using `Esc` key when the searchbox had focus, the focus
remained stuck in the div itself and no further action was taken.
If search pills are not enabled, the text present in the search bar
will be selected on pressing '/' and writing someting without deselecting
the text will clear the search text. Since selecting the pills would
not make sense in this context, the search box is focused instead.
Adds box-shadow to `#searchbox` when either `#search_query` or any
of the pills have focus. Uses jquery instead of pure css as the
`:focus` event occurs on `#search_query`, while we want to add
box-shadow to `#searchbox`. This could have been done with
`:focus-within` CSS selector, but it is not supported in IE or Opera.
`#search_query` already had an onfocus/focusout listener, adding
listeners to `#searchbox.pills` for those events wouldn't have worked
as you don't want the focusout event to fire when the focus shifts
from input to pill.
Also adds `focusin`, `focusout` and `css()` to zjquery. `css` is
same as `val`, except it returns an empty object in case of no value
instead of an empty string. I don't think `css()` is valid syntax
in actual jquery.
After adding search pills, suggestions were based only on the
current input and no validation against the existing pills was done.
operator_subset_suggestions have been removed. Default suggestions
for base_operators have also been removed.
Handle multiple operators:
if `is:starred stream:Ver` was typed without selecting the typeahead
or pressing enter in between i.e search pill for is:starred has not yet
been added, then the description of `is:starred` will act as a prefix
in every suggestion.
Also makes changes re-enabling person suggestions for names with spaces.
This large function will need to be modified significantly as part of
the pills effort, and copying it lets us preserve behavior in
production until we're ready to cut things over.
tab_bar.js becomes redundant after implementation of search pills.
This commit adds a comment to tab_bar.initiliaze, so the event
listeners related to it do not get initiated. This does not remove
any code related to tab_bar.js.
Also adds left and right border around the search icon.
Following points have been implemented in this commit:
1.) Add search pill on selecting typeahead.
2.) Re-narrow after removing a search pill.
3.) Add quiet optional parameter to removeLastPill.
4.) Pre populate search pills in narrow.activate.
5.) Clear existing search pills on narrow.deactivate.
Description of above points:
1.) I tried out using the description from suggestions.lookup_table
to append a pill using appendValidatedData so that the description
had not to be calculated again. But the description in the suggestions
lookup contains html due to highlighting. This html is escaped when
inputed in a pill. An attempt was also made to remove the higlighting
by replacing the tags. But other espaced characters like < also
popped up, so it was better to use append_search_string.
3.) If one wants to refresh the pill using pill.clear and wants to
repopulate them, evaluating the event_handler associated with the
action of removing the pill may not be desired.
4.) Pill population code is added to narrow.activate. Pills are not
populated if the narrow was triggered by search as search handles the
addition and removal of pill by itself. The reason for not handling
search too in narrow.activate is to avoid clearing the pills and
repopulating them. Example of some of the triggers for narrow.activate
include `restore draft`, `topic change`,`sidebar`.
Also modifies tests for search.js
Adds an optional parameter `quiet` to removeLastPill and removeAllPills.
If `quiet` is a truthy value, the event handler associated with the
pill will not be evaluated. This is useful when using clear to reset
the pills.
The letter-spacing was changed last in commit
fc4d80d941 which is about a 5 year old
commit at the point of writing. The change is removed as I did not
notice any visual change on removing it. Changing the letter spacing to
normal lets the text in the pills be seen legibly, otherwise the characters
were overlapping.
Input pills require a contenteditable div with a class named input
to fall inside the pill container. On converting the input tag into
a div, the size of the input decreases which is compensated by a
line-height of 40px. Comment above letter-spacing:normal was removed
as chrome and firefox do not change the letter-spacing to normal
for a div via the default browser stylesheet.
NOTE: Currently writing something into the div will call the action
corresponding to that key in the keyboard shortcuts. The input will
work fine once the pills have been initiated.
For the casper tests, for now, we just use the legacy search code.
When we change that, $.val() cannot be used on contenteditable div, so
$.html() will need to be used instead in select_item_via_typeahead.
Also adds the file to the static asset pipeline.
search_pill_widget.js will be used to access the pills object for
the search query box. It will act in a similar way to
compose_pm_pill.js. Why is this needed: Consider you've initiated
a pills object in search.js for the search query box. Now you want to
also access that pills object to pre-populate pills after a reload in
hashchange.js. search_pill_widget.js makes this easy without the use
of events.
The `tr` block does clones the `options` array (which contains the
entire subscriptions data set) very inefficiently, which leads to the
rendering being very slow.
We don't need a `tr` block here, as there is no dynamic content that
needs to be replaced.
When Pan & Zoom (canvas) is enabled, the `v` hotkey does not work due to
`LightboxCanvas` overriding the `keydown` event. Add `v` as an option in
the new listener.
Fix#9777.
This commit updates the `emoji-datasource` packages to version 4.0.4.
This update brings following changes to emoji infra:
1: Fix for the bleeding sprite sheets.
2: The category of some emojis has been changed. Categorywise breakup of
net gain or loss is as follows:
Travel & Places: 58 (gain)
Symbols: 47 (loss)
Smileys & People: 52 (gain)
Objects: 11 (loss)
Food & Drink: 3 (gain)
Animals and Nature: 46 (gain)
Activities: 9 (loss)
3: There were some changes in the image farm of the package which were
breaking our old emoji farm. I fixed them by modifying the remapped
emoji map.
Fixes: #8235.
This behavior was originally implemented in commit 6993f89, but due to not
specifying a toggle option, the Subscribed/All streams switcher tab was
focused after the input was focused, leading to the input's loss of focus.
Fixes#9981.
The current code for detecting which image to add the `selected` class
to is `preview_source.match(src)`. With the new thumbnails, this no
longer works because thumbnail URLs include a `?`, which has its own
RegEx significance. To solve this, check for equality instead of using
RegExes.
Various pieces of our thumbor-based thumbnailing system were already
merged; this adds the remaining pieces required for it to work:
* a THUMBOR_URL Django setting that controls whether thumbor is
enabled on the Zulip server (and if so, where thumbor is hosted).
* Replaces the overly complicated prototype cryptography logic
* Adds a /thumbnail endpoint (supported both on web and mobile) for
accessing thumbnails in messages, designed to support hosting both
external URLs as well as uploaded files (and applying Zulip's
security model for access to thumbnails of uploaded files).
* Modifies bugdown to, when THUMBOR_URL is set, render images with the
`src` attribute pointing /thumbnail (to provide a small thumbnail
for the image), along with adding a "data-original" attribute that
can be used to access the "original/full" size version of the image.
There are a few things that don't work quite yet:
* The S3 backend support is incomplete and doesn't work yet.
* The error pages for unauthorized access are ugly.
* We might want to rename data-original and /thumbnail?size=original
to use some other name, like "full", that better reflects the fact
that we're potentially not serving the original image URL.
Previous commits have fully implemented the logic for stream email
notifications; this final commit adds support for configuring it to
the UI.
Fixes#6511.
This migrates Zulip to use a dramatically better set of names and
aliases for our emoji set, defined in emoji_names.py (which is in turn
manually generated from our hand-curated CSV file).
This should significantly improve the experience of using Zulip's
emoji picker and emoji typeahead for finding what one is looking for.
This changes the icon indicating that you can drug the custom
profile field rows in settings to be the double rows of dots
typically used to indicate draggability. It also gives those
rows the "move" cursor on hover.
This is essential for using simplebar, since simplebar doesn't account
for parent <div> paddings, which might cause scrollbars to be mispositioned
if not considered.
When you hover above the navbar, the cursor focuses on the page
body and scrolls the entire page, breaking the positioning of the
fixed sidebar and page content.
We disable scrolling on the body but allow the sidebar and Markdown
content page elements to be scrolled to fix this bug.
Fixes#7665
In case of invitation events, 'invites_changed' event without
any real payload is sent to all the realm admins and the user.
The event is handled by reloading the list to view recent changes.
Commit tweaked by shubhamdhama:
* Send an `invite_changed` event when an user accept an invite.
Also, added the test for the same.
* No need to delete the invite list in frontend, current logic
handles the case when the invite data is changed properly.
* Extracted the common logic for sending an event into
`notify_invites_changed`.
It seems to have been there to paper over a styling problem that was
actually caused by slightly mismatched font sizes (em vs. rem).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This commit adds a Markdown tree-processor extension that renders
multi-line code blocks that are nested inside lists with the
formatting. Note that the code block could be nested inside multiple
list levels and would still get rendered correctly.
Tim: This fixes the need for unpleasant workarounds like
f5bfa4e793 and makes nested code blocks
in our documentation look exactly how users would expect them to.
This was used for the very early-stage Zulip "ask for invite" form,
which was built around a stamped envelope concept. The form was
removed from Zulip a couple years ago in
bded0d9d54, but this CSS was missed in
the removal.
We can now theoretically use this for any textarea
that supports our markdown (besides the compose box),
plus we keep the RTL code a bit more self-contained.
This hides the up and down arrows that appear in the year input
of the Flatpickr-provided datepicker. (This is only used in
settings for now, but the arrows will be hidden anywhere Flatpickr
is used.)
The JavaScript click handler for this feature was fragile in a way
that would break with upcoming changes to how we display the X
element. We clean this up with a replacement implementation that
should be much less fragile.
Previously, commit e5d2e95 attempted to change the styling of the user
profile pill containers to match the inputs above it. However, it used
an incorrect selector (#settings_page), resulting in all other pill
containers on settings pages being changed to match it as well
(example: User groups pill containers in Organization
settings). Additionally, its selector's specified background attribute
resulted in problems in dark mode.
To correctly style the user profile pill containers to match the other
input's styling, we apply the uneditable-input class native to
Bootstrap so that we don't need to create an entirely new selector to
style it.
Note that the .custom_user_field .pill-container selector was added so
that it could match the padding of inputs. Also, the
.custom_user_field .pill-container:focus-within selector was added
with attributes straight from Bootstrap's input:focus selectors so
that .custom_user_field .pill-container would have a blue outline
while users were typing in the input pill, just like the other inputs.
Fixes#9842.
Enables avatar images in pills wherever user_pill.js is used.
(e.g composebox, user group settings)
Changes to search_pill.js are not made as search pills haven't been
added yet completely and search_pill.js just contains the preparatory
code right now.
No change to compose_pm_pill.js is not required as it uses
`user_pill.create_item_from_text` in its `create` function.
Adding the 20*20 image inside the pill caused a minor increase in
pill height. Making the image 19*19 causes some increase in the height
under different zoom conditions. I'm not sure about the reason behind
this, so this can be counted as a hack.
Allow passing image link in the item passed to appendValidatedData.
When passing image link via any of the append* functions, make sure
that create_item_from_text for that pill also adds the image link to
the item created.
This commit does not make any visual change to the current app.
Changes to user_pill.js are necessary to enable user avatars for
pills.
We now use narrow_state.filter() everywhere. The
two functions did the same thing, and I slightly
prefer the concise name, which was already in use
in lots of places.
This implements right-to-left message automatic detection support in
the compose box as well as the message feed. Full unit tests and
support in the message-editing UI are for future work (as are
potentially more fancy things like supporting things like
right-to-left multi-word names for users/streams/etc.).
Fixes#3123.
I also removed the comment that said "this is just a workaround".
It is not, it is technically correct for us to do apply different
CSS rules to <p> tags that aren't the first child of the <li>
element in question.
xmlns:svg is an XML namespace declaration that would be valid in XHTML
but not in HTML. Even in XHTML, it wouldn’t be necessary because we
don’t write SVG tags prefixed like <svg:circle>, only unprefixed like
<circle>.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This commit fixes some modules that were erroneously left out while
transitioning app.js to webpack. This commit exposes them using
expose-loader or setting them directly to window.
This commit moves all files previously under the 'app' bundle in
the Django pipeline to being compiled by webpack under the 'app'
entry point. In the process, it moves assets under the app entry
to a file called app.js that consumes all relevant css and js files.
This commit also edits the webpack config to be able to expose certain
variables for third party libraries that are currently required by
some modules. This is bad coding form and should be refactored to
requiring whatever dependencies a module may have; we're just
deferring that to the future to simplify the series of transitions we
need to do here. The variable exposure is done using expose-loader in
webpack.
The app/index.html template is edited to override the newly introduced
'commonjs' block in the base template. This is done as a temporary
measure so as not to disrupt other pages on the app during the transition.
It also fixes the value of the 'this' context that was being inferred
as window by third party libraries. This is done using imports-loader
in the webpack config. This is also messy and probably isn't how we
want things to work long term.
This commit prepares the frontend code to be consumed by webpack.
It is a hack: In theory, modules should be declaring and importing the
modules they depend on and the globals they expose directly.
However, that requires significant per-module work, which we don't
really want to block moving our toolchain to webpack on.
So we expose the modules by setting window.varName = varName; as
needed in the js files.
We remove css which has been dead since convertion of subscriptions
page to an overlay. This should ideally have been dealt with in
commit 1886f0a which actually did the converstion but we forgot to
handle it at that time.
We remove the dead CSS which was introduced in commit 963a93367
back in 2013 and doesn't seem to have any use now. Its probably
the case that we removed the actual html structure which used this
CSS since 2013 and forgot to clean up the css part.
This was killed when the "Deleted Streams" feature was dropped
in commit 7bbe44d7 but we forgot to deal with it at the time.
squash to admin_streams_list
This cleans up some leftover js and css from the effort of
redesign the rows of the #subscriptions table. Redesign happened
in commit 368b5859 and but we forgot to clean up these js and css
pieces.
squash to subs.js.
The error handling for delete/reactivate was broken.
The old code related to appending id_suffix to the ids of
the per-bot error divs did not have corresponding
selectors in the actual error handling.
Things still aren't great, but there's a bit more
encapsulation now, and you'll see errors for the
delete/reactivate cases.
The user can also edit the question after adding it.
The question in the poll can only be added/edited
by the user who started the poll.
The input bar will be disabled for the other users
if the question is not yet added. If the question is
added, the input bar will not be visible to the other
users.
Even when admin removes all custom fields from org, custom
fields header "Profile" doesn't get removed.
Render header "Profile" whenever custom fields data get changed.
This commit fixes a regression which was introduced while
we were removing icon-vector and replacing the same with
font-awesome. We forgot to update the toggle icons from the
JS file.
Fixes#9797.
Clicking on the unread count badge on the right sidebar did not
narrow the selected pm/group-pm. This commit moves the count div
inside selectable_sidebar_block. Also uses flexbox instead of
inline-blocks for user presences selectable_sidebar_block.
The reason for the bug was 71e3f778cc.
This commit makes the width 100% for selectable_sidebar_block only
on the right sidebar, the left sidebar selectable_sidebar_block
width is unset.
Fixes#9822.
fuzzysearch matched query if the query letters appeared in sequence.
Here we use the extracted phrase_match to match query with the prefixes
of words.
This disables `ctrl + shift + [`, while `ctrl + [` will still trigger
an action.
Also, add a test for ensuring that the `ctrl + shift` combinations fall
through.
This disables `cmd-or-ctrl + shift + k` and `cmd-or-ctrl + shift + s`,
while `cmd-or-ctrl + k` and `cmd-or-ctrl + s` will still trigger
actions.
Also, add tests for ensuring that the `cmd-or-ctrl + shift`
combinations fall through.
Fix#9779.
Adds search_pill.js to the static asset pipeline. The items
for search pill contain 2 keys, display_value and search_string.
Adding all the operator information i.e the operator, operand and
negated fields along with the search_string and description was tried out.
It was dropped because it didn't provide any advantage as one had to
always calculate the search_string and the description from the operator.
The slash in command is stripped in the backend,
rather than in the client to make the client code
cleaner.
This would make client code cleaner in the slash
commands which include parameters.
NOTE: To test this locally I've used Google Chrome input tool.
This change will not affect users who don't use input tools.
Here is the algorithm used to deal with this case and other important
points:
* Here I've used `compositionend` event which is triggered
as soon as an input tool completes a word or user press "enter"
to get the suggested text. (There was a situation where it is
triggered even when input tool wasn't closed, that is when we
press space, but it also triggers another `compositionstart`
event simultaneously so our logic can't be affected by this.)
* We are using a variable `is_using_input_method` which sets to
`true` when `compositionend` event is triggered.
* Basically our searching is initiated by `keyup` event which
is triggered by the same keypress which triggers `compositionend`
event to get the text, so our main goal is to suppress the searching
triggered by this key pressing.
* Observation shows that `compositionend` is triggered before the
`keyup` and calling of callback `narrow_or_search_for_term`
used by typeahead.
i.e. chronological order of triggering of this event is
`compositionend` > calling of `narrow_or_search_for_term` > `keyup`.
* So the main logic is to set `is_using_input_method` to `false`
by default and if used the input tool then when we press enter
to get the suggested text we set it to `true` which indicate
further events triggered after it to skip the searching and
finally in `keyup` we set it to default `false` so when pressed
enter again we have it set to false and we have a successful
search.
Fixes: #9396.
Whenever a link is clicked, the page link changes, and the content
of the `.markdown .content` node updates, preventing the old
listener to catch any future anchor link clicks.
We attach the listener to the document instead and only activate
it when the target element is a proper anchor link heading.
Fixes#9767.
This makes sure that CSRF token is available while initializing
Socket, irrespective of the order of execution of deferred callbacks
after document becomes ready.
This is part of #9416.
This updates the unread pills in the left and right sidebar
to look better at a wide range of zoom values. (It doesn't change
their appearance at all.)
Set the initial visibility of the page content to hidden via
the stylesheet, and allow any data fetching and rendering to
complete before making content visible.
Adjust the conditional logic within `render` to first check for
the case in which a user goes to a doc link, the case in which
we asynchronously fetch data prior making content visible.
Fixes#9577.
For other users' profile, keyboard navigation worked only upto 2
items as the third item with '.mention_user' could not be focused.
This was due to href missing from the anchor tag. $.focus() requires
href to be defined, even if it is '#' to focus the anchor tag.
actions_menu_handle_keyboard now only gets the action menu items
and passes them to the newly added popover_items_handle_keyboard.
popover_items_handle_keyboard takes the key and menu items as its
parameters. The function can be used when handling keyboard input
like user profile popover. Similar refactor has been carried out in
focus_first_action_popover_item. This refactor is a part of adding
the missing support of keyboard navigation to user profile popover.
The function `settings_account.add_custom_profile_fields_to_settings`
called twice, which resulted in two templates objects being
rendered.
The function also didn't check whether settings overlay was open or
not when processing new events, and thus would throw an "undefined"
error if a custom profile field was editing while the overlay was not
open.
Fixes#9668.
Explaining the problem a bit: When we narrow to a stream/private message
using `q+Enter`/`w+Enter` compose box opens which isn't desirable here.
The bug here was the propagation of event after getting handled in
`keydown_util.handle` to `hotkeys.process_enter_key`.
Fixes: #9679.
We should only open the default article heading which is "Guides",
if the user is on the index page i.e. /help/. For non index pages
we don't need to open this heading.
This commit adds a minor improvment in clicking
the left sidebar behaviour. So if you click on
an article heading then other opened headings will
be closed automatically. This makes the toggle
experience better.
This is less than perfect, but for most settings hitting
the enter key will now take you to the first element in
the right panel.
The two exceptions are below. They have checkboxes with
kind of strange markup:
Notifications
Authentication methods
If you toggle between Settings and Organization now, it
will remember where you were the last time (not counting
reload). Likewise if you go in and out of settings.
The old code always put you in the first section, which I
think was an accident of implementation. Of course, we'll
continue to default to the first row if you haven't gone
anywhere else.
This is mostly a code move, but because things are more
modular now, we don't need the two conditionals to find
out what kind of panel menu we're inside of, and our
selectors are less brittle.
The list with the options for normal settings now has
the class normal-settings-list.
The list with the options for org settings now has
the class org-settings-list.
The new markup helps us avoid code like this:
$(".settings-list li:not(.admin)")
We also have funny hacks in our key handlers related
to the old combined-list approach, which we can
eventually eliminate.
My recent refactoring that split out MessageListData
introduced a nasty bug where we were putting muted
messages into the "All Messages" view even though
the underlying list was correctly filtering
them, so the symptoms were two-fold:
- muted messages cluttered up your feed
- replying to the message caused a traceback (since
it wasn't actually in the underlying data
structure)
This has to do with what MessageListData.add_messages()
was passing back to MessageList to orchestrate drawing
in MessageListView.
I think what happened here is I got this working kind
of sloppily but correctly for the non-muting case and
then got in the weeds of some other stuff. Not my
finest moment.
The actual correct code here is simple enough. We
triage top, interior, and bottom, and then the respective
methods that put the data into the data structure
return the filtered lists (i.e. not muted) and put them
into the info structure.
Fixes#9656
We want to avoid doing too much setup for the info overlay widget
during initialization, since we don't really need it, and side
effects like focusing a modal can cause hard-to-detect
glitches for other features.
In our toggler component (the thing that handles tabs in things
like our markdown/search help, settings/org, etc.), we have
a callback mechanism when you switch to the tab. We were
being tricky and only calling it when the tab changed.
It turns out it's better to just always call the callback,
since these things are often in modals that open and close,
and if you open a modal for the second time, you want to do
the callback task for whichever setting you're going to.
There was actually kind of a nasty bug with this, where the
keyboard handling in the keyboard-help modal worked fine the
first time you opened it, but then it didn't work the second
time (if you focused some other element in the interim), and
it was due to not re-setting the focus to the inner modal
because we weren't calling the callback.
Of course, there are pitfalls in calling the same callbacks
twice, but our callbacks should generally be idempotent
for other reasons.
We want the Botserver to not only work with the
botserverrc, but also with a zuliprc of an outgoing
webhook. Because the Botserver uses the outgoing
webhook token for authentication, we need to include
it in the zuliprc for outgoing webhooks.
This is preparation for an upcoming refactoring where we pass a bot
ID, not the email/api_key, into the zuliprc generation functions in
the bots code path.
`format_as_suggestion` formats a list of operators into a
suggestion using the Filter.describe and Filter.unparse methods.
This change aims to increase readability.
In admin UI for creating new choice type of custom field, the behavior
of trash icon for removing choice field is buggy.
When admin clicks on trash icon it disappears, but the row does not
and admin end up being unable to create the field.
Fix this by selecting proper element to find and delete choice row.
These two slash commands now use zcommand to talk to
the server, so we have no Message overhead, and if you're
on a stream, you no longer spam people by accident.
The commands now also give reasonable messages
if you are already in the mode you ask for.
It should be noted that by moving these commands out of
widget.py, they are no longer behind the ALLOW_SUB_MESSAGES
setting guard.
This adds a /ping command that will be useful for users
to see what the round trip to the Zulip server is (including
only a tiny bit of actual server time to basically give a
200).
It also introduce the "/zcommand" endpoint and zcommand.js
module.
We had a significant amount of code for handling what seemed to be 2
cases, but which were really just a single case (if we are trying to
narrow to a specific message ID, and we end up landing on it, restore
the previous offset; with the special case that the previous offset
might be passed in from the previous call).
This cleanup also fixes a very minor bug, where our background
auto-reload (`reload.initiate({immediate: true});` in the JS console)
would incorrectly reset the pointer position to match the a near:
message ID if that was present in the narrow.
This commit fixes a couple regression related to narrowing.
For a long time we've had bugs where we too aggressively
preserve the currrent selection on topic -> stream
re-narrows ("s" key) even when the wider narrow may
have unread messages before the selection.
Also, we recently introduced a bug so that when you used
a link from the "copy link to conversation" (aka a "near"
query), it would advance you to your first unread message
despite the near:999 specifier. (The code would work for
subsequent "near" queries once you had fetched some of
your original messages).
This commit introduces a new data structure called id_info (replacing
the select_strategy data structure) in various functions and uses that
to track all the ids of relevance.
Significantly rewritten by tabbott to handle a few extra corner cases,
and add a ton of comments explaining why it works the way it does.
Fixes#2091.
Fixes#9606.
When admin user create new private stream, widget for changing privacy
of stream doesn't render. Because we render subscription-settings
template partially on subscription-add event, so this case wasn't
handled.
Fixes#9469
Previously weren't registering modal properly, which gets fixed by
using open_modal. It further fixes closing of modal by using escape
and positioning of modal.
Fixes: #9590.
This directly prevents a traceback when submessage events
arrive in the wrong order. This was probably a symptom
of not updating message.submessages for not-yet-widgeted
messages, which was fixed in an earlier commit, but we
want defensive code in case of races or other glitches, and
it's not the end of the world is somebody sees partial
survey results due to some corner case.
The "if" condition that was removed in this commit
is no longer needed, since the called code now
handles the cannot-apply-locally use case. (We
wanted the called functions to be defensive, so
they already were effectively handling the conditions
anyway, and recent commits has them returning
appropriate values and doing the right things.)
This commit makes it so that any query for
which we do a local filter leads to us
examining the full list of unread message
ids in our cache to find a potentially
unread message that passes the filter. This
can often allow us to more immediately
jump to a new narrow with an appropriately
selected message.
Fixes#9319
We want to be able to call get_first_unread_info() even
if we cannot apply a search locally. It was returning
the correct value before, but this change removes a
blueslip warning that will allow our callers to remove
some guard code in a subsequent commit.
These styles aren't great, but they're hopefully
better than none at all and inspire a follow up
commit from somebody else (so it starts to look
like a "real" feature instead of feeling completely
proof-of-concept).
We want to update message.submessages for new events, even
though our couple of widgets (poll/tictactoe) that can process
"update" events currently just apply events as "deltas"
to their current data.
This does fix a subtle issue where you may get incoming
events for a message that the client knows about but which
it hasn't yet activated as a widget. Up until now,
we've rarely seen the bug that's fixed here, since it's
usually the case that as soon as we receive a message, we
widgetize it right away.
The user can now specify the value while creating a stream.
An admin can later change it via `Change stream permissions`
modal. Add is_announcement_only to subscription type text.
For some reason in my original version I was sending both
content and data to the client for submessage events,
where data === JSON.parse(content). There's no reason
to not just let the client parse it, since the client
already does it for data that comes on the original
message, and since we might eventually have non-JSON
payloads.
The server still continues to validate that the payload
is JSON, and the client will blueslip if the server
regressses and sends bad JSON for some reason.
With this commit, we change how we deal with translation for strings.
Previously we used to fetch the translations data after loading which
created a lot of unpleasant race bugs.
So we changed this to use the `translation_data` sent in `page_params`
which is available at load time. The previous fetching can be useful if
we want to change the string to the changed language without reloading
the page but since we ask the user to reload the page after changing
the default language so fetching after loading isn't useful for us and
hence we can add resource only once.
Ultimately, we can remove the i18next plugins too. We leave the logic
for clearing local storage, patched to fully clear it.
Fixes: #9087.
Fixes#3380.
The blueslip warning mentioned in #3380 were from paths ending at
people.email_list_to_user_ids_string. Some additional blueslip warnings
were raised after using that function.
Although we can put a validation check somewhere in the call stack of
people.email_list_to_user_ids_string, this function itself is used to
validate the operand by the higher order functions, so it wouldn't make
sense to put a validation check before that. Instead, removing the
blueslip warning altogether was chosen.
people.email_list_to_user_ids_string was replaced by
people.reply_to_to_user_ids_string which is a blueslip-free version
of the same. Other blueslip warnings were removed.
In 1f72647a5a I accidentally
flipped a condition that made the down key "recenter" on
the "normal" case, not in the "is-at-end" case.
This commit undoes that regression, which probably only
affected czo for a weekend, and makes the logic a bit
more clear.
If atleast one of the private_message_recipients is invalid, compose
box will not be opened.
Thanks to Aastha Gupta <aastha.gupta4104@gmail.com> for some preliminary
work on this.
First, it's silly that these weren't in common.css in the first place,
since that meant these were a bunch of duplicated code, but
additionally, that meant that these weren't available on the
`/activity` page (or other pages that don't include the portico styles).
Fixes#9561.
In user profile popover, date type of custom fields values are
not showing in correct format as "date_joined" value.
Fix this using moment.js to render date type of fields
in correct format.
We've had rare and hard-to-track-down glitches with our
old implementation for going up and down in the message
list, which was using jQuery selectors.
We now just use MessageListData under the hood to find
our next id.
The Botserver uses section headers in the flaskbotrc to
determine which bot to run. Silently setting the section
headers to a bot's username is confusing and makes it
harder for Botserver users to figure out how to get the
Botserver to run the bots they want. This commit empties
all flaskbotrc section headers and thus makes the assignment
of bots explicit and mandatory.
Previously, the Botserver determined which bot to run for an
outgoing webhook by dispatching on a different URL endpoint
for each bot. Now, instead, the Botserver determines which bot
to run by the section header of the bot in the flaskbotrc.
This commit makes the frontend provide the new flaskbotrc
and updates the setup steps for the Botserver in the docs.
Fixes#6515.
New suggestions for `sender:King ha` will respect spaces and the new
suggestion will be `Sent by King Hamlet <email>` instead of `Sent by King,
search for ha`. But if first term of sender operand is a valid user email,
tokens will be seperated by spaces. e.g `sender:hamlet@zulip.com abc`
will show `Sent by King Hamlet <email>, search for abc`.
We had debug code that was reaching into msg_list._items when
it could use msg_list.all_messages() instead.
When we split out MessageListData, using _items started
breaking this code.
This should make it easier for us to iterate on a less-dense Zulip.
We create two classes on body, less_dense_mode and more_dense_mode, so
that it's easy as we refactor to separate the two concepts from things
like colors that are independent.
A "zform" knows how to render data that follows our
schema for widget messages with form elements like
buttons and choices.
This code won't be triggered until a subsequent
server-side commit takes widget_content from
API callers such as the trivial chat bot and
creates submessages for us.
This starts the concept of a schema checker, similar to
zerver/lib/validator.py on the server. We can use this
to validate incoming data. Our server should filter most
of our incoming data, but it's useful to have client-side
checking to defend against things like upgrade
regressions (i.e. what if we change the name of the field
on the server side without updating all client uses).
We should probably have a try/catch in MessageListView itself
too, for post-processing kind of stuff, but we want to make
this new module defensive in its own right.
This is a trial to have the first reply hotspot in the bottom
whitespace (and stick there until "Got it!" is pressed).
Tweaked by tabbott to clean it up a bit. Still needs more work on the
visuals.
This should significantly improve the user experience for creating
additional accounts on zulipchat.com.
Currently, disabled in production pending some work on visual styling.
We can have this scenario:
- somebody else creates a widget-ready message
- message arrives in storage
- (message is not yet in view, so no message.widget)
- new submessage event arrives
We want to just ignore submessage events in that case.
(There's a more complete fix coming for this scenario, where
we at least update message.submessages for the eventuality
that we do render the message later.)
This commit improves the output that blueslip produces while
showing error stack traces on the front-end. This is done by
using a library called error-stack-parser to format the stack
traces.
This commit also edits the webpack config to use a different
devtool setting since the previous one did not support sourcemaps
within stack traces. It also removes a plugin that was obviated
by this change.
Fixes#9492.
`is` operator uses predefined categories. This commit
displays an invalid operand message if the operand does not fall into
any of these categories and the `is` operator is not at the last.
e.g. `is:abc sender:abc@zulipchat.com` will have `invalid abc operand
for has operator, sent by abc@zulipchat.com` as a prefix for all its
suggestions.
Fixes#9492.
Default suggestion e.g `abc messages` as a suggestion for `is:abc`
is not shown in a new suggestion. But if the is operator is already
present before any other operator, the default message text will be
used. e.g `is:abc sender:abc@zulipchat.com` will have all the suggestions
with the prefix `abc messages, sent by abc@zulipchat.com`.
`get_containing_suggestions` was used to get the operand suggestions
for the `has` operator. `get_special_filter_suggestions` is now used
to get both the operand and operator suggestions for `has`.
Partially fixes#9461.
Negated suggestion for both operand and operators are handle in
get_special_filter_suggestions. A bug is get_operator_suggestions
causing the removal of `-` symbol from the operand was also fixed.
Now that we've moved it into a bulleted set of options inside a modal,
there's no good reason to have separate variables for the corner cases
around who can manage a stream.
Our logic for stream_has_topics never accounted for
us creating essentially "empty" stream buckets that
don't have topics, but we recently added some code
related to unread counts that violated the original
assumptions of the code.
Now we check deeper into the stream bucket to find
actual topics.
This bug manifested in the left sidebar where users
were seeing streams as recently active just because
some muted topics had unread counts, when in fact
the stream was inactive for practical purposes.
Having submessages will become common enough that the
info message here is too spammy, and there are other
ways to observe incoming submessages if you're doing dev
debugging, which this was originally written for.
We could get submessage events for messages that weren't
in our message store if somebody played with a widget
that was on an "old" message for somebody else.
Dropdown element for outgoing interface type was not showing correct
value, cause the way default value was set to dropdown was incorrect
(it should have been setting the selected parameter on the selected
option if it were going to be selected via the template code).
Fixes#9419.
This adds a tour of Zulip to the bottom of the homepage.
In order to get the carousel nave, we use Bootstrap 2 from a CDN on
this page; this isn't ideal in the medium term, but upgrading
Bootstrap across the project is too much work for now.
It also updated all the svg to be optmized per new version.
This new version, since the last version contains bug fixes and improvement.
Refs: https://github.com/svg/svgo/releases
We ask our users to enable Snapshot notifications in Zulip via
Slack! But our Slack integration isn't exactly super robust and
I checked and our librato implementation isn't super smart about
handling snapshot payloads that come in via Slack.
Overall, this seems like a very poor solution, asking the user
to set up Slack in order to get the notifications in Zulip. So, I
thought we should get rid of at least the docs that suggest doing
this.
I also read librato/view.py and it wasn't clear to me how Slack
is supposed to act as an intermediate service here in a reliable
manner, which is another reason to not advertise this.
Fixes#9373.
`not_subscribed` warning is not shown for bots on either private or public
streams. Some of the bots have an interface such that they receive the
message mentioning them even if on a private stream where they are not
subscribed.
We use "Everyone" for the button labels already.
Soon we'll support "Everyone" meaning either the installation or the realm,
depending on the URL route used to access the stats.
When suggesting operators to chose, category wise suggestions are
shown instead of a single default suggestion. e.g suggestions for
all the categories of has operator will be show instead of `Messages
with one or more` suggestion which did not make sense.
`has` operator uses predefined categories. This commit displays an
invalid operand message if the operand does not fall in to any of
these categories and the `has` operator is not at the last.
e.g. `has:abc sender:abc@zulipchat.com` will have `invalid abc
operand for has operator, sent by abc@zulipchat.com` as a prefix for
all its suggestions.
Fixes#9384.
Default suggestion e.g `messages with one or more abc` as a suggestion
for `has:abc` is not shown in a new suggestion. But if the has operator
is already present before any other operator, the default message text
will be used. e.g `has:abc sender:abc@zulipchat.com` will have all the
suggestions with the prefix `messages with one or more abc, sent by
abc@zulipchat.com`.
This commit lays the foundation to handle submessages for
plugin widgets. Right now it just logs events, but subsequent
commits will add widget functionality.
Partially fixes#4708.
Implements a first version (v1) for the feature. The next step would be
to allow admins to toggle `is_announcement_only` in the UI.
Fixes#9182. Adds a link to the keyboard shortcuts popup at the
bottom-right corner of the right sidebar. A tooltip saying
`Keyboard Shortcuts(?)` has been added to the icon. The icon is
positioned using `position: fixed`.
We now initialize most modules in ui_init.js, which
isn't the perfect place to do it, but at least now
we have a mostly consolidated entry point.
All the new foo.initialize() methods introduced in
this module run the same order relative to each
other as before this commit. (I did some console
logging with a hacked version of the program to
get the order right.) They happen a bit later than
before, though.
A couple modules still have the `$(function() {`
idiom for miscellaneous reasons:
archive - is a different bundle
common - used elsewhere
list_render - non-standard code style
scroll_bar - no exports
setup - probably special?
socket - $(function () is nested!
transmit - coupled to socket
translations - i18n is a bigger problem
ui_init - this bootstraps everything
We now work with MessageListData objects while populating
data from local narrows, before actually making the
wrapper MessageList object.
This change will simplify unit testing (less view stuff
to fake out) in certain situations.
It will also allow us to eliminate the delay_render flag.
We used to have positional parameters for table_name
and filter, but we don't use them for message_list.all
and we're about to replace filter in some cases.
Passing everything in on opts is more consistent and
self-documenting in the calling code, plus lots of
unit tests can get away with passing in `{}` now
for situations where table_name does not matter.
All of our callers pass in muting_enabled, so we
remove the default value for it. And then the
collapse_messages variable doesn't have to live on
`this` as it's only being passed through down to the
view.
Before this change, the way to add messages had a lot
of ping-pong-ing between MessageList and MessageListData,
where first the data got triaged, but not actually
inserted into data structures, and then subsequent
calls would add the data and get filtered results.
Now we have a simple API for MessageListData.add_messages
that does all the data stuff up front. Having a fully
function MLD.add_messages not only makes the ML.add_messages
function about four lines shorter, it also sets us up
to easily build standalone MLD objects before making
the heavier ML objects.
We now only preserve the offset for the previous
selection (pre-narrow) if that is still the id
we want selected after calling maybe_add_local_messages.
Right not this does not change any behavior, but
upcoming changes to maybe_add_local_messages will
change the selected id to the first unread message
in certain circumstances, in which case preserving
the offset will possibly be confusing, since you're
not on the same message.
We will need this for cases where the topic names in
unread.js are a superset of the names we got from messages.
It's important to pass in a dict of existing dicts to avoid
expensive max() calls to get the max ids of topics (otherwise
the plan would have been to merge the lists in the caller).
Whenever custom fields templates get rendered within user account
settings, on-change event listener wasn't get created. Cause
event listener wasn't set properly.
When org admin tries to change only bots name of no-owner-bot,
It update bots name but returns error, "No such bot owner".
Cause frontend pass `null` value in `bot-owner`.
Template was rendering undefined value of `bot_id` instead of
`user_id`.
Fix this by replacing `bot_id` with `user_id` and changing
template data variable to `data-user-id` to avoid
future confusion.
Fixes#9305.
Empty operators are not allowed while parsing narrowing URLs.
`parse_narrow` stops parsing further if it encounters an empty string
operator.
If we find unread messages for a sender, we will
try to render locally narrow for sender searches.
Note that our current implementation brute forces
through all the unread ids. We can improve this,
although it's not really a bottleneck until we
also support buckets for general filtering.
We now try harder to find the first unread message in an
upcoming narrow, which has the user-visible effect that we
select the unread message before waiting for search results.
Before this change, we only applied this logic to searches
that were things like exactly stream/topic or exactly is-private.
Now we will also handle things like stream/topic/sender. For
the stream/topic piece we look up candidate unread ids using
the steam/topic buckets in unread.js, but then we still filter
those messages by stream/topic/sender as we look for the first
unread id.
I renamed get_unread_ids() to _possible_unread_message_ids().
The name is deliberately verbose, since we're about
to make it have kind of unusual semantics that only make sense
for its one caller.
The outside code will continue to call get_first_unread_info().
In the tests I wrap this function in a wrapper with the more
pleasant name of "candidate_ids", since in the test there's
less worry about unwittingly exposing a kind of janky function.
This is setting up for a subsequent commit to have a smaller
diff. The current ordering of the code blocks doesn't matter,
since only one of the conditions will be true, so this won't
change any behavior. (Later commits will make the order matter.)
We don't reference this anymore (it was only ever used by the Dropbox
integration, which was hardcoded-off for years before being removed in
e6833b6427)
We will use this to find the first id from a list of
message ids that matches a filter. (This will help us
during narrowing to determine whether we have at least
one good message locally, so that we can render something
useful before waiting for the server.)
This new API replaces some more specific functions that were
only recently introduced:
is_stream_only
is_stream_topic_only
is_pm_with_only
is_for_only
We use the deterministically sorted "term_type" values for
matching. (Notably "stream" will come before "topic".)
This uses scss mixins, this are functions you can pass parameter in it and
return css/scss. It made repeating vendored transistion, and user-select property
more easier to use with less repetation. This also includes a scss file called reuseable_components.scss
which can be used anywhere else.
The app icons (web/mobile/desktop) got all squished together when
they broke to a new line in smaller windows. They now have better
spacing and all break at the same time.
The integration widgets on the homepage had a weird-looking white
border. That border has now been updated to match the better-
looking border on the integrations page.
The "Short/Long Text" option for custom profile fields wasn't properly
capitalized (i.e. "Text" should have been all lowercase), and also
wasn't properly tagged for translation.
For the sake of consistency, the change to proper capitalization has
also been applied to the models and any tests involving this feature.
Due to a bug in Django, it complained about the models having changed
and thus not being consistent with the migrations. That isn't actually
true (since the database stores the numeric values for each key), but
the migrations have been modified to avoid this error. This does not
affect the migrations' behaviour in any way.
This works for other text boxes as well, but compose is the main one
that one would want to do a search from.
It's possible we'll find after doing this that "getting back into
compose" becomes a problem, but I guess we can handle that when the
time comes.
This is preparation for enabling an eslint indentation configuration.
90% of these changes are just fixes for indentation errors that have
snuck into the codebase over the years; the others are more
significant reformatting to make eslint happy (that are not otherwise
actually improvements).
The one area that we do not attempt to work on here is the
"switch/case" indentation.
This makes a few important cleanup changes:
* Using the more standard data-field-id name for the ID value.
* Using $(e.target).closest() rather than `.parent`, which is more
robust to future changes in markup.
Most of this was straightforward.
Most functions that were grabbed verbatim and whole from
the original class still have one-line wrappers.
Many functions are just-the-data versions of functions that
remain in MessageList: see add, append, prepend, remove as
examples. In a typical pattern the MessageList code becomes
super simple:
prepend: function MessageList_prepend(messages) {
var viewable_messages = this.data.prepend(messages);
this.view.prepend(viewable_messages);
},
Two large functions had some minor surgery:
triage_messages =
top half of add_messages +
API to pass three lists back
change_message_id =
original version +
two simple callbacks to list
For the function update_muting_and_rerender(), we continue
to early-exit if this.muting_enabled is false, and we copied
that same defensive check to the new function
named update_items_for_muting(), even though it's technically
hidden from that codepath by the caller.
For a commit that was just merged I had the "back-out" case
at the wrong nesting level. It was a pretty obscure failure
scenario that never came up in practice, but basically if you
were starting at a message that was not in your narrow, but
we did have some messages in your narrow, we would try to
go near the old message instead of talking to the server to
find the next unread message in that narrow.
Barring a few minor edge cases, when we now do a narrow
that is based on a sidebar-like search (e.g. stream/topic,
no extra conditions), we now go directly to either the
first unread message we know about locally or the last
message if we're all caught up.
We of course used to do this in master until recently; this behavior
was broken by Tim's narrowing refactor branch (ending with
26ac1d237b) which moved us to always
using the select_first_unread flag, by default (fixing issues where if
you clicked around while your pointer was behind, you'd land in the
wrong place).
We now have arguably the best of both worlds:
* The pointer is not considered when computing narrowing positioning
* We only go to the server for sidebar clicks if the data isn't
available in the browser.
We had a recent regression that had kind of a funny symptom.
If somebody else edited a topic while you were in a topic
narrow, even if wasn't your topic, then your narrow would
mysteriously go empty upon the event coming to you.
The root cause of this is that when topic names change,
we often want to rerender a lot of the world due to muting.
But we want to suppress the re-render for topic narrows that
don't support the internal data structures.
This commit restores a simple guard condition that got lost
in a recent refactoring:
see 3f736c9b06
From tabbott: This is not the correct ultimate place to end up,
because if a topic-edit moves messages in or out of a topic, the new
behavior is wrong. But the bug this fixes is a lot worse than that,
and no super local change would do the right thing here.
We now do real-time sync to update the attachments UI when new
attachments are uploaded/deleted.
While we're at it, we fix the UI for the delete option to not do a
weird local echo thing.
This completes the work of a couple issues. There's still useful
performance work to do here (see the TODO), but it's a minor issue in
a rarely-used screen.
Fixes#6731.
Fixes#3710.
We send add events on upload, update events when sending a message
referencing it, and delete updates on removal.
This should make it possible to do real-time sync for the attachments
UI.
Based in part on work by Aastha Gupta.
We only use this data in a rarely-used settings screen, and it can be
large after years of posting screenshots.
So optimize the performance of / by just loading these data when we
actually visit the page.
This saves about 300ms of runtime for loading the home view for my
user account on chat.zulip.org.
This commit moves the stylesheets under the archive bundle in
the Django pipeline to being compiled by webpack instead. It
also removes a remaining call to a portico stylesheet that no
longer exists.
This commit transitions landing-page.css from the Django pipeline
to being compiled by webpack as landing-page.scss under the
'landing-page' and 'integration' bundles.
Even though starred messages are never unread, it's useful
for us to have helper functions for them.
This change makes it so that clicking on "Starred Messages"
takes you to the last read message immediately, without a
server delay.
This fixes some minor glitches with buttons:
* Movement of the organization-settings-parent block on the
appearance of widgets.
* Large and odd look of save button.
* Use of fadeIn and fadeOut rather than changing opacity as
opacity don't actually remove them.
If notifications_stream is private and the current user has never been
subscribed, then we would throw an exception when trying to look up
notifications_stream. In this situation, we should just treat it like
the stream doesn't exist for the purposes of this user.
This is purely to make it easier to read narrow.activate()
without having to page past lots of unnecessary detail when
you're trying to understand things like how we set the
selection.
The maybe_select_closest helper, when first introduced, was
tiny and close to its callers.
As it's grown, it's become kind of a big hurdle to reading
narrow.activate(), because it's out of chronological order
and it's hard to tell at a glance which variables it's closing
on.
Now we just move it out to module scope.
It's mostly moving code, with these minor changes:
* we pass in opts for the old closure vars
* we rename then_select_offset -> select_offset
* we early-exit on empty lists
We replace these variables in narrow.activate:
then_select_id (int w/-1 as a sentinel)
select_first_unread (boolean)
The main goal here is to get away from the boolean, since
we are about to introduce a third select strategy.
The new var is select_strategy and it has a union
type with these flavors:
"exact" (was select_first_unread === false)
"first_unread" (was select_first_unread === true)
The new flavor will be something like "last_id".
Eliminating then_select_id is also nice, since the -1
sentinel value could be a pitfall, and it's semantically
cleaner to encapsulate behind a check for
select_strategy.flavor.
We use an IIFE (immediately invoked function expression)
to fetch messages. This will allow us to introduce some
local vars in a subsequent commit without creating an ugly
diff and without cluttering an already crowded namespace.
This cleans up a subsequent diff. Within the context of
`maybe_select_closest`, there's only one `msg_id` we care about,
so the more convoluted name `then_select_id` makes much less
sense than it does in the enclosing scope, and it will make
even less sense after some future changes.
There's also some cosmetic cleanup here.
When we are deciding whether to preserve scroll position, we
mainly care that then_select_offset is set to a value. If
we had no intention of preserving scroll offset, we would have
never bothered to set it. The check for !select_first_unread
is always redundant, as verified by lots of clicking around
with some print debugging. And it's a brittle check,
because it couples the decision of scrolling destination to
the mechanism by which we decide our selection. While those
things are closely related, it's possible in the future that
we'll decide to advance to an unread message and still want
to set then_select_offset, but we might forget to mutate
select_first_unread.
Long story short, the code is simpler and safer now.
We move the var declaration of then_select_offset closer to
where it gets calculated, and we avoid code duplication in
calling current_msg_list.get_row().
Even when then_select_id has the sentinel value of -1, we were
trying to look it up in our message_list.all object. This would
have returned undefined, which is fine, but it's more explicit
to just bypass the check.
This commit transitions all styles in app.css in the Django pipeline
to being compiled by webpack in an app-styles bundle, and renames the
various files to now be processed as SCSS.
To implement this transition, we move the old CSS file refernces in
settings.py and replace them with a bundle declared in
`webpack.assets.json` and includedn in the index.html template
Tweaked by tabbott to keep the list of files in `app.css` in
`webpack.assets.json`, and to preserve the ordering from the old
`settings.py`.
This is done because the current column-left and column-right were
actually just floating left and right and making use of float-left
and float-right makes more sense. This also helps with the upcoming
public archives feature which will try to include portico content
with main app content.
This mostly sets up the next commit. The two conditions here
are both inexpensive to check, but we want to bypass an upcoming
expensive operation if can_apply_locally() returns false.
With past logic, on fast upload progress bar don't appears because
uploadFinished is called as soon as upload is finished so
progress bar get disappeared. To make these hiding of progress bar
smooth we set setTimeout for every hiding of progress bar as well
as complete status element.
Here `file.lastModified` is unique for each upload so it is used
to track each upload individually.
Also, we have used `uploadStarted` function because it is
called for each file during an upload.
Fixes: #9068.
Previous logic was little buggy, as many time there can be considerable
difference between uploadFinished and progressUpdated as progressUpdated
can finish much earlier(on a slow connection) and the "uploaded file"
markdown text is inserted with some delay.
It is also a preliminary commit for making each progress bar independent
as currently progressUpdated may close upload_bar even after only
one file out of many files is uploaded.
We were missing it but it is added in the upstream, so just added it
at the appropriate place in plugin code(in the upstream there is some
code refactoring but this seems to be the most appropriate place).
This commit removes the need for portico.css to be generated
by the Django pipeline and makes the error page use the css
file compiled by webpack instead.
This takes advantage of the new function narrow_state.stream_id().
We now assume the incoming stream_id is a valid stream_id, so we
no longer need to test some of the error checking. (It's possible that
the incoming stream_id may no longer be for a stream you subscribe
to, but the nice benefit of working more in "id space" is that if
it doesn't match the narrow's stream id, we know false is a safe
return value.)
After adding a newly created stream to the top of the stream list,
call to actually_filter_streams in stream_events.mark_subscribed
rerendered the filter_table and the stream list was refreshed. The
call to actually_filter streams was introduced to rerender the
subscriber list but stream_edit.rerender_subscribers_list takes care
of it already.
Fixes#9033.
Currently when admin add/remove/update custom fields, changes
are not reflected in user settings page, if settings tab
is already open. This might be rare case, but it looks like
an error when admin go to user settings page just after
updating custom fields in org settings.
Fix this by re-rendering custom fields in user settings
on custom_profile_fields event.
In a refactor last fall, we changed `set_message_booleans` to mutate
state (specifically, destroying msg.flags in favor of setting
properties like `msg.unread`). This was fine for most code paths, but
the maybe_add_narrowed_messages code path called
`message_store.add_message_metadata` twice (once after talking to the
server to find out whether the messages go into the current narrow),
and so when we extracted set_message_booleans from that, the second
call didn't properly short-circuit.
We fix this by just removing the second call, and also add a comment
warning about the add_message_metadata call there as being dangerous.
Fixes#8184.
Instead of treating false differently from undefined, our
function is now a regular boolean function, and we limit our
code comments to the one corner case where the true/false
decision is kind of arbitrary and possibly confusing.
The buddy list never includes yourself nor bots, so we
remove the special case handling for those situations.
If we were to put bots or the current user back in the list,
I'm not convinced the old logic was what we'd want in either
case going forward.
For example, we might want to fade bots that aren't subscribed
to public streams, since they might otherwise confuse people,
but then again they would receive messages. And then "yourself"
is a recipient in the technical sense but they're kinda
not and either way it doesn't provide much signal either way.
We don't need to special-case the stream cog handler when we
handle the click event for the surrounding header. The browser
will fire the event for the cog first, which stops propagation.
The new list_cursor class is more generic and saves the state
of your cursor across redraws.
Note that we no longer cycle from bottom to top or vice versa.
The node test code that was removed here was kind of complex
and didn't actually assert useful things after calling methods.
When we populate the buddy list or update it for activity, we now
have buddy_data set a faded flag that is rendered in the template.
This avoids some re-rendering overhead and is on the eventual path
to having our widget be more data-oriented (and all rendering happens
"behind" the widget).
We still do direct DOM updates when the compose state changes or
when we get peer subscription events.
This introduces a generic class called list_cursor to handle the
main details of navigating the buddy list and wires it into
activity.js. It replaces some fairly complicated code that
was coupled to stream_list and used lots of jQuery.
The new code interacts with the buddy_list API instead of jQuery
directly. It also persists the key across redraws, so we don't
lose our place when a focus ping happens or we type more characters.
Note that we no longer cycle to the top when we hit the bottom, or
vice versa. Cycling can be kind of an anti-feature when you want to
just lay on the arrow keys until they hit the end.
The changes to stream_list.js here do not affect the left sidebar;
they only remove code that was used for the right sidebar.
The blur_search() function was removed in this commit:
See da06832837
We now no longer attempt to call it. It's not completely clear
to me what this did before, but we are rewriting a lot of the
keyboard navigation for search anyway.
In this cleanup I make it so that all jQuery selector references
are toward the top of the module, and we do all finds relative
to the container ('#user_presences').
This will make it easier to make a better list abstraction for
the buddy list, for things like progressive rendering.
This was a bit more than moving code. I extracted the
following things:
$widget (and three helper methods)
$input
text()
empty()
expand_column
close_widget
activity.clear_highlight
There was a minor bug before this commit, where we were inconsistent
about trimming spaces. The introduction of text() and empty() should
prevent bugs where users type the space bar into search.
A recent change filtered out offline users from the buddy list
whenever the list size would otherwise exceed 600.
This commit reverts half that change--we can now show 600+ users
again, but only when searching.
This is because we cover the case of `realm_allow_message_editing` by
`realm_msg_edit_limit_setting` after the conversion into dropdown.
This commit also contains a minor variable renaming.
Add realm setting to set time limit for message deleitng.
Set default value of message_content_delete_limit_seconds
to 600 seconds(10 min).
Thanks to Shubham Dhama for rebasing and reworking this. Some final
edits also done by Tim Abbott.
Fixes#7344.
This fixes an issue where with very tall messages (more than about a
screen in height), one would end up scrolled to the bottom of the
message if you clicked on it, which usually felt annoying.
Fixes#8941.
static/styles/scss/portico.scss is now compiled by webpack
and supports SCSS syntax.
Changed the server-side templates to render the portico-styles
bundle instead of directly requiring the portico stylesheet. This
allows webpack to handle stylesheet compilation and minification.
We use the mini-css-extract-plugin to extract out css from the
includes in webpack and let webpacks production mode handle
minification. Currently we're not able to use it for dev mode
because it does not support HMR so we use style-loader instead.
Once the plugin supports HMR we can go on to use it for both
dev and prod.
The downside of this is that when reloading pages in the development
environment, there's an annoying flash of unstyled content :(.
It is now possible to make a change in any of the styles included
by static/styles/scss/portico.scss and see the code reload live
in the browser. This is because style-loader which we currently
use has the module.accept code built-in.
Previously, we did a rerender without first re-computing which
messages were muted; this was incorrect, because whether a message is
muted can change if the topic changes.
Fixes#9241.
This was only called from two places in one function, and we can just
check muting_enabled in the caller.
This refactor is important, because we might need to update muting
after other changes (specifically, message editing to move a topic to
be muted/non-muted).
This is a slight change in the responsive design, moving the 975px
cutoff to 1025px; the main effect is that for windows that just barely
had a right sidebar, we now hide the ride sidebar. This is pretty
beneficial for the user experience specifically in the common size of
1024px, where that sidebar was making things feel a bit too
constrained.
This function replaces part of compose_fade.would_receive_message(),
which has a real janky interface of returning true, false, or
undefined.
We don't need to couple the semantics of compose fading to whether
we help subscribe a mentioned user. They're mostly similar, but they
will probably diverge for things like bots, and the coupling makes
it difficult to do email -> user_id conversions.
One thing that changes here is that we get the stream name from
compose_state, instead of compose_fade.focused_recipient. The
compose_fade code uses focused_recipient for kind of complicated
reasons that don't concern us here.
Some labels like one for `translate_emoticons` which contains HTML
get escaped because of use of `{{ label }}` syntax, which escapes
the string for XSS security purpose but since labels aren't any
threat to any such security cases, we can use triple curly brackets
`{{{ label }}}` syntax.
Fixes: #9231.
A common path is a new user goes to realm_uri, which redirects to
realm_uri/login, and clicks the google auth button thinking it is a
registration button.
This commit just changes the wording on the page they land on to be
friendlier for that use case.
This coverts the "checkbox" for `realm_allow_message_editing` and
"input" for `realm_message_content_edit_limit_seconds` into a
dropdown with the option for custom time limit option.
Upgrade webpack to latest version at the time of authoring. This
involves upgrading webpack version and its loaders to compatible
versions. It also involved editing tools/webpack to use the
executable for webpack-cli instead because of a change in how the
webpack package wants you to handle shell execution.
It also fixes the confugration for TypeScript in the webpack config
as that was previously broken. Including TypeScript files in JS
files compiled by webpack now works.
If the browser is in the progress of reloading when it finishes
fetching some messages, it's not really a bug, and we shouldn't report
it as such.
This should help make Zulip's browser error reporting less spammy.
If you visit a narrow that has unread messages on it that aren't part
of the home view (e.g. in a muted stream), then we were never calling
`message_util.do_unread_count_updates`, and more importantly,
`unread.process_loaded_messages` on those messages. As a result, they
would be unread, and moving the cursor over them would never mark
those messages as read (which was visible through the little green
marker never disappearing).
I can't tell whether this fixes#8042 and/or #8236; neither of them
exactly fits the description of this issue unless the PM threads in
question were muted or something, but this does feel related.
We consistently either pass a `then_select_id` into narrow.activate,
or were using the select_first_unread option. Now, we just compute
select_first_unread based on the value of then_select_id.
In the very early days of Zulip, we didn't have unread counts; just
the pointer, and the correct behavior when opening a new tab was to
place you near the pointer. That doesn't make any sense now that we
do have unread counts, and this corner case has been a wart for a long
time.
This commit does the main behavior change here. However, there's a
bug we need to fix, where we might end up trying to pre-render a view
of the narrow based on the `all_msg_list` data before `all_msg_list`
is caught up). We need to fix that bug before we can merge this; it
should be possible to determine that using `FetchStatus` on
`all_msg_list`, or with better performance by using the `unread_msgs`
structure to determine whether the message we should be selecting is
present locally.
Fixes#789.
Fixes#9070.
Apparently, we were incorrectly passing through something related to
opts.use_initial_narrow_pointer as the value for `use_first_anchor`.
If you read the logic in narrow.js carefully,
use_initial_narrow_pointer was unconditionally false.
The correct value for this attribute is when we're trying to narrow to
the first unread message in a given context. There are two things to
check:
* then_select_id is -1; i.e. we don't have a specific message ID we're
trying to narrow around.
* select_first_unread is True, i.e. we're trying to narrow to the
first unread message.
A bit more work should allow us to get rid of the second condition,
but I'm not quite confident enough to do that yet.
This prevents us from using const in our JS code, with exceptions
for test code and the portico. Hopefully this is just a temporary
rule until we make our pipelines with work with ES6.
I tried to prevent "let", but that was too noisy.
This adjusts the one false-negative case of using const in a comment.
This change makes a common code path for these two operations:
* clicking on a user
* hitting enter when a user is highlighted
The newer codepath, for the enter key, had some differences that
were just confusing. For example, there's no need to open the
compose box, since that's already handled by the narrowing code.
For possibly dubious reasons, I let each handler still call
popovers.hide_all() on its own, since it makes the code a bit
more consistent with existing code patterns.
If we would have more than 600 people in a buddy list, it's kind of
cumbersome to scroll through it, and it's also expensive to render
it (short of doing progressive rendering, which adds a lot of
complexity).
So, as a short term measure, we filter out offline users whenever the
list would exceed 600 users. Note that if you are doing a search that
narrows to fewer 600 users, the offline users will appear again.
We now have components.toggle simply return an object, without
putting the object into a lookup table. The consumers of the
objects have all been changed to just store the object in their
own module scope.
The diff is a bit hard to read here, but it's mostly de-denting
code and removing these things:
- we don't have opts.name
- we don't have __toggle.lookup
- we don't have keys
- we don't create a sibling object to the prototype object
This fixes an issue where users whose names had a "g" in them would
have the "g" clipped in the "private messages" section in the left sidebar.
We avoid a change in the effective visible line-height by shrinking
the margin.
`<td>` elements are fixed-width, so we refactor the entire
`<table>` structure for responsive design.
This fixes a bug with how the `To:` block looks in other languages.
Fixes#9152.
Following templates are affected: display-settings.handlebars and
ui-settings.handlebars.
There will be no UI change, it is just to make code more readable.
In this commit:
Two new URLs are added, to make all realms accessible for server
admins. One is for the stats page itself and another for getting
chart data i.e. chart data API requests.
For the above two new URLs corresponding two view functions are
added.
Previously, a code block with a small width would be displayed
inline with the previous paragraph's text.
To fix this, now every p inside an li element except the first is
a block instead of an inline-block. However, this only applies to
li elements for integration instructions.
This makes sense intuitively because if there are multiple p's
in a list element, not all of those should be inline-blocks. The
first one should be because it needs to be inline with the list
number. The rest should be treated (and displayed) as separate
paragraphs.
Another thing to keep in mind is that the way Markdown code
blocks get converted to HTML is such that every code block
becomes <p><code></code></p> when converted to HTML.
We used uploadStarted for drop callback which is kind of confusing
for new contributors as there is a big difference between uploadStarted
and drop like uploadStarted is called for each file in an upload whereas
the drop is called once when the file(s) are uploaded.
This fixes a handful of minor issues:
* Non-uniform padding for the right sidebar unread count bubbles.
* Weird vertical positioning of unread counts in the right sidebar due
to a slightly off line height.
* Missing padding between long stream names and the unread count for the stream.
* Removes a duplicate border-radius command in the left sidebar CSS.
This commit introduces a helper function called
maybe_select_tab() that goes to the correct tab in the
toggler widget.
It avoids the "lookup" mechanism, which I am hoping to
deprecate, and it handles hypothetical startup issues
by warning instead of crashing.
Before this commit, this sequence would lead to errors:
* Open streams page via the gear menu.
* Go to "All" tab.
* Leave streams settings.
* Re-open stream settings via the gear menu.
After doing this, the tab would show "Subscribed" but the list
would be of all messages.
Now we explicitly goto the first tab.
I added a long comment explaining how subs.js contributed
to this bug--in short, we re-build the widget instead of just
re-opening this.
We may also want the toggle component to simply default the
initial tab to the first tab.
We now make sure our toggler exists before invoking its `goto`
method. Usually a toggler exists pretty early during app
startup, but _setup_info_overlay is wrapped in i18n.ensure_i18n,
which asynchronously fetches translation data.
This commit also simplifies how we find the toggler, by just
storing it in the module where it gets created and consumed.
Fixes#9085.
Rishi and I decided that it makes sense to get rid of the Facebook
integration for a few reasons, some of which are:
* The setup process is too complicated on Facebook's end. The users
will surely have to browse Facebook's huge API reference before even
having a vague idea of what they want.
* Slack chooses not to have a Facebook integration, but relies on
Zapier for it. Zaps that integrate with Facebook are much more
streamlined and the setup process isn't as much of a pain. Zapier's
Facebook Zaps are much more fine-tuned and there are different Zaps
for different parts of the FB API, a luxury that would likely span
2K+ lines of code on our end if we were to implement it from
scratch. So, I think we should relegate integration with Facebook to
Zapier as well!
* After thoroughly testing the setup process, we concluded that the
person who submitted the FB integration didn't really test it
thoroughly because there were some gaping holes in the docs (missing
steps, user permissions, etc.).
If you started composing a message to a topic, and then the topic was
edited, we would update the compose box and message list state, but we
didn't correctly update the fade state after updating your compose box
(and the message list), resulting in the messages being incorrectly
faded.
The refactor in 12509515ae had a subtle
bug, which is that we switched from accessing the message list "this"
(aka the message list being rerendered) to current_msg_list. This
meant that when the narrowed_msg_list was in view and code needed to
modify home_msg_list, we accessed the wrong `selected_row` to preserve
the scroll position of (namely, the one in current_msg_list, not the
one in home_msg_list).
Fix this, by moving the function to be a property of the
message_list_view object, which makes more sense structurally, anyway.
We may, in the future, want to do a similar migration for more of
message_viewport.js.
Fixes#8854.
If muting, topic editing, or deletion causes a narrow loses its last
message, we should show the empty-narrow notice; similarly, if
un-muting adds the first message, we should hide the notice.
We do this in `rerender()` since that's the common code path for
re-rendering the message list after events that might change this.
This has likely been broken since the very first muting
and topic editing implementations.
This commit exposes some inner variables of notifications.js to make
them easily testable. The first test added simply checks whether the
showing and closing of notifications works properly, and doesn't yet
verify the main code logic of the notification generation.
In 7b8da9b we have introduced some other checkmark icons
which aren't necessary as old icons still make sense there.
So removing them as they don't add any extra value.
Fixes: #8995.
Zulip's search typeahead had a security bug, where when autocompleting
a specially crafted stream name, and then hitting space, code within
the stream name would be executed.
Zulip was doing HTML escaping correctly in the main code path using
Filter.describe to describe a narrow, but the escaping function was
not called in a few parallel code paths. We fix this in a way that
should protect all of these code paths, by making Filter.describe
return properly escaped HTML, rather than depending on its callers to
do so.
Thanks to w2w for reporting this issue.