Or on the scroll triggered by that resize.
Then we don’t need a kludge that skips the resize handler in
situations where it might hide popovers.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
If you click on the avatar, we now show the menu
right next to the avatar. The current behavior
is particularly funny for long names. (I confirmed
this with Rishi.)
This fixes several bugs with /me messages:
* We no longer hover name if you're over
the message.
* We now launch the user popup if you
click on the name.
* Even if you click on the avatar, we
launch the user popup to the right
of the name. (I think this is odd,
but it's consistent with how we
do it for normal messages.)
The underlying problem here is that you have
two possible organizations.
From a logical standpoint, the image and
name go together (and both launch the user menu):
img Alice | says hi
From a physical perspective, the main message
is "Alice says hi" and it's aligned differently
from the image:
img | Alice says hi
Our HTML reflects the latter.
HTML doesn't allow overlapping diffs, of course,
so you have to pick your poison.
The code that was removed here wasn't doing what it
was intending to do, and we really just want to pop
up the user menu above the currently selected message.
In this commit, I've added a feature to unstar all the starred
messages. This is useful, e.g., for folks who are using starred
messages to keep track of things they should come back when next at
their desktop.
The event flow is the standard one for a feature with a confirmation modal:
(1) User clicks on unstar all messages.
(2) We display a confirmation modal; if the user confirms, we send a
request to the backend to clear all starred messages.
(3) The events system sends that UI update back to us, removing the
stars from the UI.
Fixes#11401.
This is totally broken on master. If you "collapse" a /me
message, it adds the "More..." link without actually
hiding any content.
I have another branch related to collapse/condense that
will make this easier to resurrect.
Using a more specific class avoids confusion related
to the .arrow class, which is not only a popover concept,
but also a Zulip concept in the left sidebar.
This is a pure data function, so it shouldn't be in popovers.js file
(Steve Howell added test coverage here, and tabbott removed an
accidental functional change.)
Accomplished by adding a function to clear the status message with
an empty string. The html is then updated to reflect changes without a
refresh.
Currently, it's a small hassle to clear a status message. This option
makes things a bit easier.
Fixes#11630.
We now have a function get_user_circle_class
that returns one of these values:
"user_circle_green"
"user_circle_orange"
"user_circle_empty"
And we put that in the templates.
And then CSS renders the circle of the appropriate
color.
The unit tests now explicitly capture whether
we are rendering the correct kind of circle.
We use the `fix_positions` options every time
we launch a user popover, whether it is from
the message pane avatar or the buddy list
chevron.
For the message pane case, we can eliminate
some complexity related to trying to put
the menu above or below the avatar. We now
always suggest "right", and if there are
constraints due to being close to the edge
of the screen, the fix_positions code
will take care of it.
The patch to bootstrap will make the position smarter, but we still
want to preserve the 100px default vertical offset we chose for visual
reasons.
Tweaked by tabbott to preserve the visual design.
In small screen sizes, when the user presses shortcut `w` to search
for another user, the hide_all function calls in the search code path
would hide the right sidebar, immediately after opening it, making the
hotkey basically unusable.
We fix this by extracting a separate hide method that hides all true
popovers, but not the user list sidebar.
Fixes#11463.
We now compute the class that drives the tiny
green/orange/empty dot in the user popover using
the same logic as the buddy list.
This was broken in the early implementation of
set/clear-away, but it was never released.
Fixes#11413
This makes it possible it include our standard markdown formatting in
one's custom profile fields, allowing for links, emphasis, emoji, etc.
Fixes#10131.
While we're at it, we remove the JSON parsing that was part of the
user field code path, since this function isn't responsible for
rendering user fields.
We instead get the specific fields from message
that we use. This is particularly helpful
for subject -> topic migration; we no longer
have to account for "subject" fields in
client-side templates.
Apparently, we didn't have one of these, and thus had a moderate
number of generally very old violations in the codebase. Fix this and
clear the ones that exist..
This fixes the most core data structures inside of
muting.js. We still use stream names for incoming
data to set_muted_topics and outgoing data from
get_muted_topics.
This will make us more resilient to stream name changes.
Before, if you were logged on when a stream rename
occured, topics that were muted under that stream would
appear to be unmuted. (You could fix it with a reload,
but it can be jarring to have a bunch of unread messages
appear in your feed suddenly.)
Fixes#11033
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.