06f3cb2b78 added some styling to make the
embed previews prettier, and in particular added a bottom fading gradient to
make the embed description text fade out slowly, when it is out of bounds.
The fading used an ::after pseudo-element which had 100% height of the
`.data-container` which contained the title and the description of the
preview. This pseudo-element got overlaid on the title and made it
un-clickable.
This commit retains the visual appearance of the fade, while reducing the
height of the ::after pseudo element, so that it never gets overlaid on the
title, keeping it clickable always.
Adding the element for the invite link would cause the modal footer to
shift upwards, in nightmode this caused the stream list to appear
beneath the footer as the footer background was transparent. This commit
replaces that styling with a solid equivalent color.
Due to additional nesting added in reactions.scss, night-mode styles
were prioritized lower than the original rules defined.
Fixes regressions introduced by changes in PR #12473
For non-admins some organisation settings tabs are 'collapsed' by default.
A button at the bottom of these settings can be used to toggle
show/collapse for these settings tabs.
Resolves#12313.
Show black scrollbars with a thin light border in day mode, or white
scrollbars with a thin dark border in night mode (both at 50%
opacity). This matches the native scrollbars on macOS pretty closely.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
perfect-scrollbar replaces both the appearance and the behavior of the
scrollbar, and its emulated behavior will never feel native on most
platforms. SimpleBar customizes the appearance while preserving the
native behavior.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Cleanup single message template moving CSS rules for box shadow
of a private message stream inside stylesheets. For any messagebox
inside of a `.private-message` element, the box shadow is set using
the class. In cases of normal streams, the box shadow is set using
inline style since we cannot have different classes for each color.
Changes made in drafts.scss are to keep the current style of not
having the left border. Setting style using classes, this rule had
to be overridden.
This bug turned out to pop up wherever a table existed in both
'settings' and 'organization settings', notably *excluding* both
'Custom Emoji' and 'Authentication Methods'.
The first thought to the solution was to simply add `thead` to the css
rule that applies the appropiate color for headers and the like. This
was successful, however it brought attention to a sub-problem:
`emoji-settings-admin` and `auth-mehtod-settings-admin` were both
creating table headers in the body of the table. This was causing the
rows in these two tables to be colored inversely from all the others.
This is also the reason why these tables are the only ones correctly
styled. These handlebars were updated with the headers moved out of the
body.
The even and odd rows of the tables were then colored appropriately.
Fixes: #12209
A few bugs were caused by 7d4cebbc1e.
In night mode:
- home icon was hidden by grey box on "All messages" narrow.
- inactive tabs (eg "mentions" and "stars") were hidden behind grey box.
- topic tab was hidden behind grey box in topic narrow.
In both night mode and normal mode:
- "private messages" tab in individual/group pm narrows was illegible.
These were all results of unexpected differences in precedence rules
caused by the refactor.
This adds a class `rendered_markdown` for all the elements which have
rendered markdown content; This is done to add different styles for
rendered content in day mode and night mode.
Also replace the element selectors from CSS to use the class.
This was introduced in e0236646
For 1.5 years we did not find a case that needed it (besides the
`a` tag hover state, that is not obvious if it was needed or it was
used as an example)
It is not obvious if this solution was a good idea. The concern was
that `body.night-mode` is more specific than `body` and some styles
might override others less specific in cases we might not want that.
Of course, we want that in the majority of cases, and css-specificity
rules are not simple to comprehend.
Good further reading:
http://cssspecificity.com/https://specificity.keegan.st/
The added complexity of the resulting styles and the added code that
might not serve any practical purpose seem to not be worth it.
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 a fairly big commit, but at the end
it simplifies a lot of things.
It's difficult to fix highly coupled code in
incremental steps because, well, it's highly
coupled code.
The main thing this does is give each type of
chevron in the left sidebar its own class
* all-messages-arrow (NEW)
* stream-sidebar-arrow
* topic-sidebar-arrow
Before this change, the "All messages" chevron
was using stream-sidebar-arrow, which was a
strange name for something that's not actually
in the stream sidebar. Obviously this was
cargo culted.
There was not much JS to change here--we just
fix the click handler for "All messsages".
And then there's a one-line change to the template,
and the rest is re-organizing the CSS.
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.
The antialiasing decisions we made for the webapp should be constant
over the entire page, not limited to particular subsections or themes.
If we wanted antialiasing, we should do it on the entire page, not
individual random widgets. But it's not clear we actually want to do
it on the entire page. The `-moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale`
setting now happens by default in OSX Mojave (40% world market share
right now and growing), so there's no reason to override it. And
without retina displays, generally, subpixel rendering provides better
results than antialiasing (which overrides subpixel rendering).
Thanks to Anders Kaseorg for advice on this issue.
When copying a message by clicking on "copy and close" button in
message edit box an alert appears that says "Copied!"; Background
of the message is set corresponding with the day mode but not the
night mode. This changes the background of the alert message to
the dark color in night mode.
These mentions look like regular mentions except they do not
trigger any notification for the person mentioned. These are
primarily to be used when you make a bot take an action and
the bot mentions you, or when you quote a message that mentions
you.
Fixes#11221.
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.