Also handle the case of subscribing failing.
This race could cause you to not see initial traffic from the tutorial bot.
(imported from commit 395a2968555e20a4dbc106dfa9d5790e9f102a3e)
This was causing the spacing to be extra-spacious.
We only need the extra space at the bottom of a
--- Subscribed to stream x ---
message.
Also, add this space (and style things more nicely) with CSS --
<center> has been deprecated since HTML 4.01.
(imported from commit b5500bdf67bdcca5f4e5b2d3bbd76846b3961254)
This is basically just the logical extension of the previous commit
for the case where the last thing we did was subscribe or unsubscribe.
This even magically updates when you subscribe or unsubscribe from
another window :).
(imported from commit 2399329d11bf66aa0b614a21d2b3cf4035452279)
This is required to get historical messages that might be within the
message ID range of your home view.
I think we could avoid calling load_old_messages on every narrow by
tracking when the user last subscribed to each stream, and if the user
subscribed before the first message in the current home view message
window (aka the messages used for the fast-path narrowing), don't call
load_old_messages. This would happen almost every time. But it would
require a schema change to do this.
We also remove the load_more_messages call from hashchange.initialize.
It is no longer required now that we're calling load_old_messages on
each narrow anyway.
(imported from commit 1c78c183e61392429592ae89d566315be7be8999)
This should fix the problems we've been having with out-of-order
message deliveries, and is also an important prerequisite for showing
historical messages.
(imported from commit 77a18a526bf8ec4f1f70b776ac8b7e189d00bcf4)
This is a V1 of this feature. For now, the only way to expand is by narrowing
to the stream---future revisions may add a manual toggle if it is found to be
useful.
Additionally, showing per-subject unread counts will be coming in a future revision
as well.
(imported from commit fb5df0d27e928fa3b0f32b9ff2c1c508202cf7e5)
This commit will incorrectly list past-online users as active, a shortcoming that is
addressed in the next commit
(imported from commit b018767df686f88c0ca939c067c573e4d7cea357)
Otherwise it applies to all password-type <input>s, which is not necessarily
what we want.
(imported from commit da2bb86961f4ff1dcc48e89e51abac6dbea79548)
We now have the bar color to indicate (for most users) whether the password is
valid, so revert to the default validation behavior and don't validate before
the first blur.
(imported from commit 5c2f6e05a8796033942a2af62f244b61459ff1bb)
And scroll there on any error (previously, we would scroll only if we end up
submitting the form).
(imported from commit 63597c4da78ac92cd5c2314d6d174d178b1caaf3)
It seems to have no effect and does not appear anywhere else in our repository
or in jquery.validate.min.js.
(imported from commit c4d2f730f3b680e15af17cefee34f6930e64ade0)
Otherwise, if you get an error those e-mails are still around the next
time you try to invite someone.
(imported from commit b521a74f4d6c0d67271f804221f519d1aa7551ff)
This fixes user-visible browser errors caused by trying to use the id
of messages in an empty message list.
One error could be triggered by trying to go to the end of your feed
with the End key during a reload.
Another could be triggered by trying to narrow to a stream or subject
using hotkeys while in an empty narrow.
(imported from commit a0e5456fd3b475aecac6eddd7104772baaf3aeb8)
I noticed that on chrome, calling narrow.deactivate() actually ended
up calling itself recursively due to the hashchange code not correctly
handling the fact that in Chrome if you set
window.location.hash = '#';
and then read out the value, you get '' back out.
(imported from commit 9b5047fbe0e2ac1846e5325d066c72306634c523)
What was happening is that if you un-narrowed immediately after
receiving a message (e.g. because you just sent it), the autoscroll
animation from the zfilt table would still be running after you return
to the home view, resulting in the viewport being scrolled to an
apparently random point in the home view (even though the pointer was
still in the right place).
This cancels the autoscroll animations whenever you do one of:
(1) hashchange (e.g. to go to the settings page)
(2) select a message (covers narrowing/unnarrowing as well as keyboard hotkeys)
(3) mousewheel scroll
since those are basically the cases where we set the viewport
scrolltop directly.
Arguably this should instead be something where we somehow detect
which scroll events are triggered by what and cancel for any scroll
event not from the animation or rererendering, but that seems hard.
(imported from commit f776021303404c87b36241c733b3d1bcb083163b)
Now that our plugin is in the Jenkins marketplace thing,
we don't need to have the user laboriously download it
from us and upload it themselves.
(imported from commit 25e9926f7f2314db8f3ea6c00c40514b6fd546c3)
When testing locally this bar sort of lies, because the actual bottleneck
is Django→S3.
In prod, our connection to S3 will supposudly be really fast so this won't
matter.
(imported from commit c9f4b4882cbfdf3bbb8180f1500f35d8481c1f39)
This allows users to drag and drop content onto the compose box, storing
their data in Amazon S3.
New dependencies:
- python-boto
(imported from commit 339874e483db5c36312c9ceae56db29da6ca0d99)
This allows blueslip to catch exceptions from the event handlers on
these elements in addition to the other benefits that not using
inline handlers provide.
(imported from commit 2bdcb2496c6c08fa7228a20ce6164b527cf64e41)
The close handler will be called on cancel anyway, so we don't need
to delete in the click handler.
(imported from commit 0fcf4b0d1408312a0889f2b69e01207c9c3835fa)
Previously, narrowing to a stream name that only contained digits
would throw an exception.
(imported from commit dc76877427078d70e3d5625622c665be3302c976)
I generally don't like this sort of state variable, but I don't see a
better solution. The codepath is that when you start out on the
subscriptions page and then click one of the left sidebar links to
narrow to something:
(1) hashchanged() would call ui.change_tab
(2) ui.change_tab triggers a gear change event
(3) The ui.js gear-changed event handler updates the hash
Resulting in the hash ending up at "#". Since there's no easy way to
pass arguments through to the event handler, we just use a global
variable inside hash_change.js to track whether we're currently
handling a hashchange event.
(imported from commit 7bb905a223b5539240fc36de7896ee8074ebc62e)
We previously had 2 mechanisms for narrowing used by the left sidebar
-- the top few links used the hashchange mechanism, while the streams
links used a custom click handler. Both were buggy -- the hashchange
one hadn't been updated to just select the first unread message,
whereas the click handler didn't change tabs.
Fixes#1141.
(imported from commit 8a8af974e78cc5c33937ac0078f04a9b5452b94a)
This appears to have been caused by our code for preventing the
viewport from being recentered if you move the pointer away from the
edge of the viewport from a position near the edge, which was being
run even when it was not triggered by a scroll event.
(imported from commit 0a4b3dcca75a6e5dbf1beb77a5249bd6a9c61341)
The old directional hotkey calculation system was fragile, and because
of this, didn't scroll when you used the home/end keys.
(imported from commit dca4786de13a4ed2864600dadbf4b1a5ba848074)
...rather than embedding them into index.html.
This is only acceptable for dev, but the next commit adds an alternative
mechanism for prod.
There isn't actually a manual deployment step here. However, this commit won't
work on staging / prod without the next one (since we don't serve
zephyr/static/templates in prod).
(imported from commit dce7ddfe89e07afc3a96699bb972fd124335aa05)
Not needed for any specific reason, but we will need the .runtime.js file
eventually, and we should use a version of the library that matches the
Handlebars compiler.
(imported from commit 5600bc8d44b681999e2e5bbf04b890e2bb8477a1)
This has the nice side effect of not requiring us to trigger the
events manually in the success callbacks of our subscribe/unsubscribe
ajax calls.
(imported from commit e8d9970b708e9832d22be4803570071bacb46792)
We currently only use these events to change the autocomplete lists.
I figure that the presence list will be updated by presence events.
(imported from commit e9c1466659c4bfd463806656e0023984a4ea4177)
A ticket is filed and this error is not fatal to the UI but rather
a warning to investigate, which we will now do
(imported from commit 3f67ec2b503e91b3921e33b89febd97790e389f1)
Before this commit, if you try to arrow around when the selected
message is outside the pointer threshold for recentering, you get a
big jump, even if you are arrowing towards the center of the viewport.
(imported from commit 5c15d5ccccdf027a8bfa8b79bf519fccbfa971d8)
We have to be careful about timing here. If Tornado fails to load
existing queues on startup then all clients will reload at once. On
the other hand, if we don't reload immediately then the client won't
get any events until the reload. For now, I've opted for the
user-friendly approach, so we need to make sure that Tornado gets a
chance to dump and reload its queues correctly.
(imported from commit 51a6ab31cb461e1e3373486dcec2e57eb12a8077)
Addresses a complaint brought up in our usability study.
We now hook into the "show" event on .subscription_settings elements and
do some obnoxious math to move the scrollbar the way we want.
Closes trac #1015.
(imported from commit 5d9cee1ffc242eb7b743fdccd2bd76bf0a7ba060)
This is in addition to only successfully reporting a given error once
per session. Previously, if an error was triggered many times before
the ajax call to report the error returned, we'd end up making many
ajax requests to report the error.
(imported from commit 559179e3c8c3fbf03bbb091a67361d447c80b7bb)
We made this change for performance reasons that don't exist now that
we only render a small portion of your messages, and it causes a
distracting flicker when you scroll through messages slowly.
(imported from commit 33379320f6b90d93ec8beac17323b287f8bb2485)
Those examples make the tutorial feel much longer, and they aren't
relevant to people who aren't using Humbug to talk about code.
(imported from commit c3213775d26cf533b3d9bde691de08a53d427939)
It's not so black and white in a world where we auto-scroll at the
bottom, and we've observed that people trying Humbug over-focus on it.
(imported from commit 2057643f179d5d1666cb33438c5a513977197b37)
This is required if the stream has unread messages in it
(from a previous subscription period). Otherwise the
unread count will be 0 until reload.
Fixes Trac #1117
(imported from commit 8f3d78eb52fdecb52456b0037cc89665c9027fbc)
Previously it was centered with respect to its enclosing div, which
looked slightly off.
(imported from commit da64f33551b500857bb91cb3ece959aafc9b1eb0)
In Firefox, prevents e.g. a slash in a stream name, which we wanted to store as
%2F, from converting back to a literal slash.
There is some appeal to normalizing the URL fragment after parsing, but in
general this way seems better. It may decrease page load time on narrowed
views.
Doesn't yet fix#826; the URL is correct but the narrow is still wrong.
(imported from commit 32e3fa9e968139863f34b9698f1c8b39d06f0c14)
This was biting us before when the user would leave a narrow before a
get_old_messages call associated with it finished. Specifically,
search.maybe_highlight_message() would assume a message was in the
DOM when it wasn't any more.
We also have to hide the 'loading more messages' indicator when
reseting the 'load more' status because otherwise it wouldn't get
hidden like normal in the load_old_messages() continuation, causing a
load_more_messages() not to fire when re-entering a narrow.
(imported from commit 4a136dd01305b039c0970f897b07e603b87d5d8e)
If the user scrolls super fast, our scroll handler might not catch
the user passing by some messages.
(imported from commit 14cebffcd1321f02443971ac5e1c922db19648ab)
We create a circular reference between handler functions and our
wrappers for them so that we can pass the wrapper to jQuery.off when
users pass the original handler to us. This reference-counting
system can't break all the circular references we create because
users can unbind event handlers without explicitly naming the
handlers they want to remove (they can remove all bindings on an
element, for example). For now, we hope that this memory leak isn't
too bad.
(imported from commit 9615b5761b4b09ca7ca52c0d847e9b83330373fa)
Previously, we couldn't actually unbind some event handlers. The
problem was that when a user called $.off(events, handler), the
passed handler wouldn't match any that were actually bound because
the handler that was actually bound was our wrapper.
This bug specifically caused the handlers for our idle timers to
never be unbound, effectively never cancelling them.
(imported from commit 48efac954994a05c356d326e64a78ab0ace9fe3e)
We will need this for removing event handlers. This will
unfortunately create a memory leak, but we'll partially deal with
that later.
(imported from commit e439cb44d245e16d2254d1be053b68015a1f4c79)
Previously, if for some reason pointer updates were not returning from
the server, the client would resend its request every second, rather
than waiting for the previous request to fail before sending a new
one.
(imported from commit d134adc50aabd135c7631913fecab3519aca6640)
It's closer to a presence query than an update, and more importantly
this moves this out of Tornado -- previously Tornado was spending at
least 3ms per recipient on messages sent to the MIT realm fetching all
this data to return back to users. This should save around 100ms per
message sent to a popular stream the MIT realm -- but more
importantly, each such event is 100ms during which Tornado is not
processing other messages.
(imported from commit 134169f0fdcd9f6640fda957edc4a28b07783d8e)
We also needed this when rerendering on append, so moving it into
_maybe_rerender allows the two places to share the code.
(imported from commit 027d99cae7864747cf1ec94c95e8ece495b5c907)
It's pretty confusing if this doesn't change. In some other world we
could update the fade, but since we're currently only fading on reply,
I think it would be weird to update the fade when you're picking a new
recipient.
(imported from commit 8f77419d443d578068b57f847354ac6da7632ee2)
Previously, we compared the recipients of messages to the message that
you triggered the reply off of -- even if you did a reply-to-sender.
This commit changes the code to instead track what you faded by,
rather than just the message you faded on.
Fixes#1037.
(imported from commit d9e2cb4122501b1bc45e231d4b52c2e7f9284fdd)
Previously, if you renarrowed, all message fading would be cleared
until you close and then reopen the compose box.
Fixes#1024.
(imported from commit 57981ba29ab597c4c84ca6e4e9d04a8284f49117)
We treat these exceptions the same way we treat fatal errors: report
the error message to our server and then allow the exception to reach
the top level.
We could also override document.onerror, but don't. There are a
couple of ramifications of this:
* Exceptions caused by event handlers directly attached to DOM
elements aren't handled
* Exceptions caused by code at the top level that triggers an error
(such as parse errors in our Javascript files) aren't handled
The reason we don't override document.onerror is because the
document.onerror handler has a limited interface and doesn't receive
the exception object. It only gets the message, file, and line
number of the error. Additionally, exceptions that we allow to
propogate out of blueslip trigger an onerror event when they're never
caught. In order to avoid handling the error twice (once by blueslip
and once by the onerror handler), we'd have to encode the fact that
the error has already been handled in the error message, which is
pretty ugly.
(imported from commit 7f049ae519dc198a9f7cfd41fd5dd18e584bd061)
This is to let us pass in the stack trace of an existing exception,
which will be required in a upcoming commit.
(imported from commit 421366a7a01deb770b7620417fb4660769c5db53)
The referenced element where the error was supposed to go was removed
in 66fd42914e4fc33719c4f21ad401748989f20b49. Now the error message uses
the regular compose error message area.
(imported from commit c82a6d863fa327ba982157d0b0607545d7e65cb7)
Previously, if the pointer was high on the page such that there was a
lot of empty space below and the render window was full (a situation
we could get into if we're following new messages arriving), a newly
recieved message would not be rendered even though it would have been
visible on the screen if we had done a rerender. Adding the
_maybe_rerender() call to the end of append() ensures that we don't
end up in this situation.
(imported from commit 925d3cc62e8221b42f1d5ff1788e99c7d07ccc24)
Now that Zev's message list branch is merged, there's no longer a
performance penalty for loading these old messages, and it improves
our narrowing performance to have them loaded.
This code is slightly different from the original commit
93d47710891cfc4db9fa00beaa5ccd10113aa1c3 since the way to access the
first element in the message list and the API for get_old_messages
have changed since then.
(imported from commit f295f892bea9327eb8316225b7b98f0e3b3fdc9a)
This will hopefully make stream privacy more noticeable. We still don't
allow people to modify privacy after stream creation, however.
Since we now use a radio box on the stream creation modal we had to change
the selector used by subs.js to determine if a new stream was to be invite-
only.
(imported from commit 641a4fab74301a9b3ecd4b3859f010dd4ece193e)
We were previously having an issue where the tutorial could
be pre-empted if you got a few messages while you were first
logging in.
I have some reservations about this being slightly fragile, and a
better approach might be to just have a bit that we use to determine
whether or not you've already seen a tutorial. (Or potentially that
checks whether or not you've ever sent a message.)
(imported from commit f8858f64a36bcd25887b76314caff283929f340c)
The issue, prior to this fix, is that the presence list actually
gets drawn *on top of* our "more messages" popup, which is ugly.
(Toggling the z-index on either or both of them did not seem
necessarily to matter, but that's probably because z-index
is subtler than I understand.)
This fixes Trac #1078.
(imported from commit a255aadb1884cf6c659085b26a36d378f680e83e)
The new system, called blueslip, makes errors fatal when in debug
mode and only output a message when running in production. In the
future, it could also send user errors back to us automatically.
(imported from commit 1232607c0311e885c8b5a5e8a45ffb28822426e0)
The jQuery .data() documentation says: "Every attempt is made to
convert the string to a JavaScript value (this includes booleans,
numbers, objects, arrays, and null) otherwise it is left as a
string. To retrieve the value's attribute as a string without any
attempt to convert it, use the attr() method."
(imported from commit f47c1cbb94cb5a98ea9842b00f45c35cd21873f9)
This should hopefully cause the page not to scroll around when we load
a giant block of emoji, because now the size of the emoji is known
before it finishes loading.
(imported from commit f566437edd725f6084c6a10c6230fd36e8d12346)
Our mobile apps (which don't support in_home_view filtering) will move
the pointer to a message that isn't actually in the home view, so we
need to accept that sort of input for now (and maybe in general --
even if we fix our mobile apps, third-party clients may screw this up
too).
(imported from commit ce837e972f0581abd1df44fdb2dd5270dfb9afde)
This should make their size totally known to the DOM,
which should prevent jumpiness when they load.
(imported from commit 564d920014f5bc52c217adf54c2f5bab6ba625e0)
This uses the unauthed v1 of the Twitter API, which is going to go
away soon, but it's fine as an interim measure.
(imported from commit 709a250271321f5479854a363875c9da43e6382d)
For people who aren't on the @humbughq.com realm the tutorial bot showed
up in the create new stream modal but attempting to invite them failed.
This was most often noticed with the tutorial bot.
In the future we should figure out a really good cross-realm story, but
in the near-term we need to probably exclude other people outside your
realm rather than special-casing @humbughq.com.
This closes trac #1059.
(imported from commit df704df0c8ae84b23d9491ce6ab77300831cdd20)
We now add the my_fullname class to the entry for you in the sidebar so
that we can automatically update this element when changing your name.
This closes trac #979.
(imported from commit f1473d6bb6f18810311d42c85d4b57aab9966498)
We also grey out the box to prevent the user from clicking twice.
This closes trac #1030.
(imported from commit eec810e3fbc5b7c9350c2d91e448fb27d4c856f8)
This code also has the side effect of making it no longer possible to
click to the right of a name to start composing a message to them.
Fixes#931
(imported from commit 80e995ccc8ead18b80a39181c47cc94d6063f0f6)
Previously, if a narrowed view started out with no message selected,
one would never be selected unless you clicked on it.
(imported from commit 11c6a1a8d046ec33a3dbea4067c40896be137485)
The message list data structure never had the rendered_idx values
initiatized except via _maybe_rerender (called when a message is
selected). For the narrowed message list for streams with no messages
yet, we didn't select a message (as there was none to select); the end
result is that msg_list.append() will never rerender because it tries
to subtract undefined from undefined and gets NaN in its test for
whether it needs to rerender.
So fix this by initializing _min_rendered_idx and _max_rendered_idx to
valid values for the empty message list (the closed interval from 0 to -1).
(imported from commit 6afecb1569185a842a3a9108cedba7e88f8befad)
Use less technical subjects, and make them good examples of actual
topics you'd want to discuss (previous examples like 'jQuery' might
leave people wondering "jQuery is a technology, not a topic, why is
that a subject?")
(imported from commit 23b74fe145ed2d325daa94a46e63c42c005b1459)
Require POST method for /accounts/logout. This has the side effect of
automatically enabling Django's CSRF protection.
(imported from commit 44b1b6ebaadc1c03006e21ae54ac768e31234801)
The typeaheads take some time to open and changing focus on keydown
sometimes prevents them from doing so before the focus is changed.
(imported from commit a8153704e60f3d6c34af55a3de5bd43071a15baf)
This is in response to the following bug report by Evan Broder:
FYI, it looks like if I accidentally tab to the "Formatting" link and
hit enter, it erases the message (and replaces it with a reply to
whatever the selected message is, I think?)
This is subtle and here's why: Suppose you have the focus on a
stream name in your left sidebar. j and k will still move your
cursor up and down, but Enter won't reply -- it'll just trigger
the link on the sidebar! So you keep pressing enter over and
over again. Until you click somewhere or press r.
Net-net though, I think it's a change worth making, because
it's good for keyboard accessibility.
(imported from commit b65bcc0abbc751718bb03d418c03961b9ed9e42b)
I.e. if you sent a stream message, Tutorial bot will reply to that
stream, and if you sent a PM, Tutorial bot will reply with a PM.
(imported from commit 05b7d1848f6eb1f70dcd5fb365fba9daee52a5dd)
This simplifies a bunch of fragile resizing logic in our code,
and also addresses the Chrome Canary bug where clicking in the
searchbox causes the navbar to get huge.
This fixes Trac #764 and Trac #1039
(imported from commit fc8c3995109de384b71dfba2b986a8500ff7f08d)
I figure it's worth giving people time to read the message and click
the "Report error link" before we redirect the page away; 60 seconds
is still short enough that if the person wasn't at their computer,
it'll still fix itself.
(imported from commit 577193cf8dca0a646933741a50769378ddd824bb)
The new message list system can rerender the message list on scroll,
but did not properly re-highlight any messages which were highlighted
at the time the scrolling was initiated due to an open compose box,
this time due to a bug where the meaning of "this" changes when we
moved the rendering code into the message list library.
(imported from commit 26d9716811b56a6f89ae22e68038ad560dcfee64)
The new message list system can rerender the message list on scroll,
but did not properly re-fade any messages which were faded at the
time the scrolling was initiated due to an open compose box.
(imported from commit 4bc7c172e8bb55acfaacc5e5460eb6a2ef9aebe2)
Now when the font increases, so will the size of the emoji. (1.4em
seems to be 20px at our default settings, so this doesn't change the
size of the emoji for any of our existing people).
(imported from commit edb0b590f00bfbad0355a41b1f995335cf0e9e07)
Previously we did the equivalent of a $('.message_comp').child('input'),
which does not search beyond the first level.
In addition, using a comma in a selector is essentially an AND, which
means the narrow search only applied to elements of the 'input' class.
So when debugging we saw a bunch of elements being selected and that hid
the bug for a bit.
Now we do a .find instead which will ensure we blur the correct
elements.
This closes trac #1045.
(imported from commit f44383ee9fc93406d031589ef914f5a003334ea7)
This now adds you to a special `tutorial-username` when you begin,
we send tutorial messages there, and we remove you from it when
you're done.
(imported from commit a93a90b9347a4f72536e96331ddfd1d47727ce71)
But only allow them to send to tutorial-<<your username>>.
The idea being that this helps reduce potential abuse from this JSON
call. (Because otherwise, anyone could call into this endpoint and
have the tutorial bot send random messages to random peoples's
streams.)
(imported from commit 471d4348d7ad43858b5df240e4f1dceba006aab6)
Prior to this commit, at 800px, e.g., the Google button
is smushed into the login form.
(imported from commit 422d1b677439460785f6b31ea2fe2c819e23e259)
Previously, we blurred all input/text boxes, including e.g. the search
box. This probably won't impact normal operation, but this can be a
problem for our automated frontend tests which tend to have different
timing than real life.
(imported from commit ea84312bea2aae99d51b48cede0746e7a5b6e76e)
We had a bug where if the selected message had the same subject as the
target message, but a different stream, narrowing by subject would
narrow to that subject plus the selected message's stream rather than
the target message's stream.
(imported from commit 4b196342318a06d8aeea46bf05e3d7416ecb6c5b)
Previously if you narrowed to
"pm-with:wdaher@humbughq.com,jbarnold@humbughq.com", you'd always get
no results because our filter was comparing your query against
message.reply_to, which is sorted in alphabetical order.
(imported from commit 40dc78640f3b010f11312176cfcf3c331fdf3337)
The most expensive part of adding the display time to messages is
calling time.toLocaleDateString() and time.toLocaleTimeString().
Most of the time, this information never gets seen, so we now delay
calculating it until just before the user would see it. This cuts
the time to render a chunk of messages from >1s to ~200ms.
(imported from commit 6167e7a8e1c3b4ca77471fa346292be4ffa67ec8)
Adding the display times to messages is very expensive (> 1s for 400
messages in Chrome on my machine). This commit doesn't directly
address that issue, but does mitigate its affects on scrolling speed
when rendering the next chunk of the message list. After this
commit, rendering a portion of the message list for the second time
only takes ~300ms.
(imported from commit b22badb5dcce69be297f6403b1cb40950e46376e)
Long-term we probably want to pick the render window size and
re-render threshold based on the user's window height instead of
arbitrarily.
When we re-render we probably also want to ensure that the newly
selected message appears in the same location as it would have
before the re-render.
(imported from commit f044b7f2200822e8e6e8dba7108d087a69016134)
One of Matt Goldstein's comments is that we often make you look
like you're not at your computer, even when you are, just because
you haven't checked Humbug for a while.
While it's important to have this be accurate, right now I think
we err on the side of showing you as not present. So I increased
some of the timeouts in an attempt to fix that.
(imported from commit 9fd8f432e6684ec1b33d1d932f37caa99c627959)
This might need to change after we merge zev's message list branch, but
it fixes the bug and performs well and isn't a lot of code.
And it has the nice property that it'll only fade messages within the
neighbors range, so there's no need to update the unfading code to
support this.
(imported from commit c562d7335bc5635c960321e1451e4ba0f4452ee9)
It's not quite what the CUSTOMER4 person wanted, but
I think it scratches the itch.
This fixes Trac #1023
(imported from commit 9186499c8f6bacb230a2d1ed6d5ca7ffa7416ac3)
To be fully responsive, we can basically never specify the width of
our container in a fixed number of pixels; otherwise we'll run into
the situation where there's an inordinate amount of wasted space on
our left and right.
So everything needs to change from, e.g. row to row-fluid,
and that has a whole cascading series of changes that that implies.
(imported from commit 7e2771d916f429548c65c0a00fc4c11397054656)
Previously we defaulted to current_msg_list.selected_id, which was
fine if you were narrowing from the home view, but if you navigated to
a narrow with no messages in it and then clicked something in the left
panel or used the search bar, it wouldn't work.
Fixes trac: #870.
(imported from commit 5ee480d8d2b1fb300fccbe75e04135d977a1fc07)
The first change might somewhat address users asking "does it matter
which one I click on?" by not being specific that one should click on
_this message_.
The latter I think addresses a small confusion I've seen where people
try try to hit tab before starting a reply.
(imported from commit 708acdf4d4c80713795b96b1a59d681a88604670)
This is the fix for https://trac.humbughq.com/ticket/958 (Narrowing
moves the pointer) proposed by jhurwitz. Currently on master,
narrowing can cause you to end up wildly out of place.
This branch is not a perfect fix -- you do end up with the pointer on
the expected message after the narrow, but that message is centered on
the screen; better would be for that message to not move at all.
(imported from commit b89e4e2c896add20eceb609db46c46dc025fdce2)
If this is not the case, then you can't actually click the
"Press Enter to send" checkbox in the composebox (or anything
in the space occupied by where the popup will go).
This actually is not a perfect solution because that area still
remains unclickable for anything else. (In particular, for example,
scroll a message's "Info" link and then try to click on it -- you
can't! The click is captured by the #notifications-area div.)
http://www.vinylfox.com/forwarding-mouse-events-through-layers/
proposes an alternative more general way of dealing with this,
but it seems like a real pain.
This fixes Trac #1017.
(imported from commit 9cfde1cfff63ab32ae7d129980c47567e221eac3)
This import strips other icons we aren't using from the CSS definitions and
fonts.
Licensed under MIT.
(imported from commit 02cc2681a1cf44107444b6fe70420afca6950ae2)
In Safari only, if you narrow to something and scroll all the way back
up to the top and then unnarrow, your position actually remains all
the way at the top!
We explicitly call a "scroll_to_selected" as the final step of
deactivating a narrow, which brings this message into view.
This doesn't seem to be an issue on Chrome and Firefox, but I'm not
quite sure why; something about the sequence of events.
(imported from commit fc73640351be03c02eb2f3c8a23de3327723f002)
By splitting up all_msg_list and home_msg_list, we can properly add/remove
streams from the home view without having to jump through hoops.
(imported from commit 92767197759f7519197dfc58be951b60fa823fbb)