These seem to have been there since the very first version of our
markdown styling, and I can't imagine why we would the behavior of not
line-wrapping links now.
(I think the "weird bug" mentioned in the comment history might have
to do with an old animation when you hovered over a link on portico
pages).
This appears to caused by trying to reuse this bit of spacing logic
from the Help Center's CSS rules.
I'm not altogether happy with this fix, but it resolves the issue and
we can defer further work until we're ready to clean up the
portico/landing pages CSS more generally.
Mostly rewritten by Tim Abbott to ensure it correctly implements the
desired security model.
Administrators should have access to users' real email address so that
they can contact users out-of-band.
Clients won't have access to user email addresses, and thus won't be
able to compute gravatars.
The tests for this are a bit messy, in large part because our tests
for get_events call subsections of it, rather than the main function.
This provides a clean warning and 40x error, rather than a 500, for
this corner case which is very likely user error.
The test here is awkward because we have to work around
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/12362.
In email hidden case (that is when `email_address_visibilty` is set to
everyone), for "non admins", this commit hides emails from:
- compose box user typeahead.
- PM user typeahead
In email hidden case, for admins, email is shown in user typeaheads.
In email hidden case (that is when `email_address_visibilty` is set to
everyone), for "non admins", this commit hides emails from:
- user popover
- custom profile popover
In email hidden case, for admins, email is shown in both user popovers and
custom profile popovers.
Along with this, we refactored settings_org.populate_auth_methods to use
HTML function after rendering all auth methods rows rather than appending
each row individually, which actually is a good practice.
Also in this commit, to compare `current_val` and `changed_val` in
`check_property_changed` function of the property
`realm_authentication_methods`, which are objects, and we found here
https://stackoverflow.com/a/1144249 that there is no easy way to do so. So
I followed this approach,
```js
JSON.stringify(obj1) === JSON.stringify(obj2)
```
but before converting them to string we want the same order of keys, so we
used `sort_object_by_key` to sort `current_val` by keys and
`get_auth_method_table_data` always return `changed_val` having keys
sorted.
Since these refactor were closely related we kept them as a single commit
here.
Fixes: #11954.
Actually, this is a preliminary commit which adds a general
`sort_obj_by_key` function to sort objects according to keys.
In this commit, we have refactored `populate_auth_methods` function by
extracting the logic for the desired `sort_obj_by_key` and used that to
sort `auth_methods`, but the main motive of this function is to sort
`realm_authentication_methods` in `check_property_changed` to sort
`current_val` in the upcoming commit.
The `LocalUploadBackend` returns a relative URL, while the `S3UploadBackend`
returns an absolute URL. This commit switches to using `urljoin` to obtain the
absolute URL, instead of simply joining strings.
This commit also adds a small functionality change where the results of
each webhook fixture message sent is now displayed to the user.
With a small tweak by tabbott to fix a styling bug.
Fixes#12122.
Note: If you're going to send fixtures which are not JSON or of the
text/plain content type, make sure you set the correct content type
in the custom headers.
E.g. For the wordpress fixtures the "Content-Type" should be set to
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded".
The `transition` property does not need prefixing. In fact, very
few properties need that nowadays. So remove it to simplify
the code. This is strictly a refactor with no style change intended.
Many of these styles shouldn't have been prefixed even if needed.
The prefixes exist exactly because the implementations might differ
from the incoming standard.
Looking at the supported browsers:
https://caniuse.com/#search=transition
We see that this property has had mainstream support from 2012 and
was supported on Firefox in 2006 !!!
We now use a Proxy to wrap zjquery elements, so
that we can detect callers trying to invoke methods
(or access attributes) that do not exist. We try
to give useful error messages in those cases.
The main impact here is that we force lots of tests
to explicitly stub `length`.
Also, we can't do equality checks on zjquery
objects any more due to the proxy object, but the
easy workaround is to compare selectors. (This
is generally an unnecessary technique, anyway.)
The proxy wrapper is fairly straightforward, and
we just have a few special cases for things like
"inspect" that happen when you try to print out
objects.
The coverage data for the platform where we run the backend+frontend
tests should be complete, so there's no reason to upload coverage data
for the other platforms.
Hopefully this change will decrease the likelihood of codecov
producing flaky results.