Previously, all of the callers of message_edit.save() would check if
it returned true, and if so, call message_edit.end(). This resulted
in various bugs in the past, so we switch to the much cleaner model of
just calling .end() inside .save().
message_edit_form.handlebars already has a message_edit_topic that
refers to the topic edit section of message editing, and this made
things very confusing.
This fixes the following issues:
1. Photos are no longer resized larger than their native resolution.
2. Photos with transparency now have a checkerboard behind them to
signal an alpha of less than one.
We get events to delete subscribers for streams we are not
necessarily subscribed to, and it is now important to
process those events to produce the correct UI for showing
the number of subscribers to streams.
Passes the allowed domains for a realm to the frontend, via
page_params.domains. Groundwork for allowing users to add and
remove domains via the admin setting page, rather than via the
realm_alias.py management command.
Because jQuery passes the actual hashchange event to an onhashchange
handler, the `if reload` checks in the `hashchanged` function were
always returning true, resulting in the wrong logic being used for
computing where to send the user in the event that they edited the
hash in the browser to change their narrow.
Previously we showed an "Edit" item in the actions popover menu when a user
could edit the content or topic of a message, and nothing otherwise. We now
show "Edit", "Edit Topic", or "View Source" in the popover menu for every
message, depending on the editability of the message, and present an
appropriate version of message_edit_form when the menu item is clicked.
Finishes #1604 and #1761.
We compute the editability of messages in several places around the
frontend; standardize the definitions and store in
message_edit.get_editability. This commit should not change app behavior.
If you chose the same language as was already selected, the alert would
say “is now the default language!” where it omits the language name.
This is the fix so that the language name appears all the time.
The lightbox will now distinguish between whether or not something is a
photo and a YouTube video by the class name of the message inline
preview. It embeds the YouTube video in the lightbox as an iFrame
rather than previewing the video screenshot.
The startup code in subs.js used to intermingle data
stuff and UI stuff in a loop inside a called function,
which made the code hard to reason about.
Now there is a clear separation of concerns, with these methods
being called in succession:
stream_data.initialize_from_page_params();
stream_list.create_initial_sidebar_rows();
The first method was mostly extracted from subs.js, but I simplified
some things, like not needing to make a copy of the hashes
we were passed in, plus I now garbage collect email_dict. Also,
the code path that initialize_from_page_params() mostly replaces
used to call create_sub(), which fired a trigger, but now it
just does data stuff.
Once the data structure is built up, it's a very simple matter
to build the initial sidebar rows, and that's what the second
method does.
This replaces add_stream_to_sidebar(), which was kind of a misleading
name, and it also adds a couple lines of code that were always
called right after calling add_stream_to_sidebar().
This function will make it easier to unit test upcoming
changes related to stream counts.
This was mostly moving code, but one change is that we
don't call create_subs() in subs.js any more (which would
have been kind of circular dependency), since the only thing
that it did besides calling a more appropriate function
in stream_data.js was to generate a trigger that was
subsequently ignored and possibly a UI trap, as we don't
want to be messing with the stream sidebar when we go into
the stream settings page.
We now simply call exports.create_sub_from_server_data() for
newly encountered unsubscribed streams (which don't belong in
the sidebar anyway.)
This function used to live in subs.js. It's mostly a code move,
but I simplified the logic to determine whether it's subscribed
not to do a lookup into the same data structure that the sub
already came from.
I also added some tests.
This moves these functions from subs.js to stream_data.js:
receives_desktop_notifications
receives_audible_notifications
This makes notifications.js no longer dependent on the
bloated subs.js.
The data-name attribute in this case allows for a particular settings
section element to show up when the appropriate sidebar category is
clicked (which will have the same value in the data-section key).
Previously, URLs were being incorrectly treated as unknown search
operators (since they had exactly one ":" in them, just like foo:bar
for an invalid choice of foo).
Fixes#1743.
Filter behaves similarly to filter in left sidebar, see PR #684. Added
stream input field to the stream creation modal along with other settings,
for clarity.
Fixes#455, #563.
This is a new mechanism to replicate the behavior of Emoji Box
drag-to-resize without the adverse effects of the last iteration — such
as not being able to drag to select text in the compose box.
The API uses this endpoint /json/streams/<stream_name> to update
stream information such as description, since the stream_name is
part of the URI it should be encoded to escape unsafe characters.
Fixes#1986.
This fixes a bug where the .subscribers property of a subscription
object in stream_data wasn't being properly updated to remove the
current user when the current user unsubscribed from the stream.
Fixes#1667.
Previously, we sent users to an "invite your friends" page after they
created an organization. This commit removes that step in the flow and sends
users directly to the home page. We also remove the now-unused
initial_invite_page.html template, initial_invite.js (which pre-filled the
invite emails with characters from literature), and the /invite URL route.
Add media queries to hide the image actions if on mobile (probably
unnecessary to have), and make the image description (name, author)
close to full width.
This fixes two minor issues with the lightbox styling:
1. The width was not supposed to be calc(100% - 20px) anymore. It now
should just be full width.
2. The exit button was not vertically aligned exactly nor horizontally
centered between the edge of the nearest button and the edge of the
screen. Both are fixed with the new margin.
- Expand a box full of emojis into the
compose window for users to graphically select emojis.
- Append an emoji to the end of the message when a user
clicks the emoji in the emoji box.
- Trap the escape key to always close the emoji box
before closing anything else if the box is open.
- Fixes: #147.
`glue` ingores the + sign in the name of the emoji and creates the css
class without it. This causes the emoji pallete to miss '+1'
emoji. This commit creates a translation map from emoji name to css
class that we can use for the emoji popover.
Some languages such as Japanese use different word order with
English. If the stream name must be the last word, translating to these
languages is difficult.
Adds "Topic editing only" along with the tooltip explanation to lower right
of message editing box when it's past the message content editing deadline.
This separates the display settings module from the
settings_table.handlebars template.
Additionally, it fixes the node tests to search in the
static/templates/settings directory and initialize any templates in there
while running tests on the settings templates.
Adds a new field org_type to Realm. Defaults for restricted_to_domain
and invite_required are now controlled by org_type at time of realm
creation (see zerver.lib.actions.do_create_realm), rather than at the
database level. Note that the backend defaults are all
org_type=corporate, since that matches the current assumptions in the
codebase, whereas the frontend default is org_type=community, since if
a user isn't sure they probably want community.
Since we will likely in the future enable/disable various
administrative features based on whether an organization is corporate
or community, we discuss those issues in the realm creation form.
Before we actually implement any such features, we'll want to make
sure users understand what type of organization they are a member of.
Choice of org_type (via radio button) has been added to the realm
creation flow and the realm creation management command, and the
open-realm option removed.
The database defaults have not been changed, which allows our testing code
to work unchanged.
[includes some HTML/CSS work by Brock Whittaker to make it look nice]
This includes reduced title font size to bring the total info bar
height to the same height as the buttons, and an image preview that
doesn’t hit the walls of the container.
Unblur the link that was clicked so that when a user presses up/down
buttons it will automatically go back over to the individual messages
rather than tabbing up and down the sidebar.
Fixes: #1875.
This fixed additional downloads of a downloaded image by following the
keypress pattern of “Download” -> Esc -> Enter -> Enter -> … where
each enter downloads the image again.
It is necessary to blur the focus on the link when closing the overlay
to prevent this.
There is an issue where the unnarrow on escape was firing before the
overlay would escape. This shouldn’t happen because then when you try
to close out the overlay you also lose your spot on the page.
By changing the order, all is restored with the world.
Probably most properly we should check for any number of spaces that
isn't 4, but that's a bit more work to do with our linter framework,
and in practice basically every CSS whitespace error we see is 2-space.
This adds an event listener (by way of delegation) to the
.message_inline_image elements that pops up the overlay and hides it
when the overlay exit is clicked.
Fixes#654.
This lets you use up and down arrows in certain sections on the site to
navigate lists. It also prevents potentially unwanted actions caused by
using up/down arrows in those sections.
Fixes: #1696.
This adds a support a notification at the top of the screen that
alerts a user they’ve muted a stream and gives them the option to
unmute if it was an accident.
The notification disappears automatically after 4s, but if a user
moves their mouse over the notification, the timer resets to 2s after
the user moves their mouse off the notification, to make it easy for
users to read the full message and decide what to do.
Previously, no error would display in the UI if the link to the emoji
image was invalid. This would happen for instance if you put in
“invalid” for the Emoji URL. No alerts would pop up but it would refuse
to add the emoji.
This catches the error and displays a notification that looks like
“Failed: Enter a valid URL.”
Fixes#1116.
This adds a preview button to the subscriptions page to allow a user
to check out the stream without having to subscribe.
The button’s default state is hidden but on subscription row hover it
shows itself.
The preview button updates its text from "Narrow" to "Preview" and
back when a user subscribes and unsubscribes from a stream.
Fixes: #1519.
This fixes a bug where Zulip would throw a TypeError if the user were
to try to narrow to a stream they had never been subscribed to. With
the new "preview" feature on the subscriptions page, this will now
happen much more often.
This restructures the styling for the Zulip settings and
administration pages to minimize use of Bootstrap and use a consistent
styling library for similar elements.
While it is basically a wash in terms of the page's visuals, it will
make our life a lot easier for future work on improving the settings
pages section of the site.
In HTML, the line break immediately following a start tag is ignored
(see: https://www.w3.org/TR/html4/appendix/notes.html#h-B.3.1). An
extra span tag has been introduced in the upstream Pygments
HtmlFormatter in order to preserve the first new line. The Bugdown
Tests as well as our fenced_code.js frontend markdown processor have
been updated to reflect this new behavior.
From the popups that appear when clicking the down-arrow in the left
column's streams, you can now unsubscribe from that particular
channel. This runs on the same function that unsubscribes you from
streams in the "Subscriptions" tab.
Fixes: #1554.
[tweaked by tabbott to fix some errors]
The ‘for’ attribute is not valid HTML in the case of this because the
emails are invalid character sets and the input has no ID with the
email.
This changes it to a data-name which is still searchable but doesn’t
interfere with typical input behavior.
The checkboxes no longer float-left, fixing an issue with the
subscribe buttons leaning right in narrow windows.
Fixes: #1491.
This adds a permanent scrollbar to code blocks to get around some
Chrome on Mac issues where scrollbars won’t appear with particular
combinations of hardware.
Fixes: #1565.
The registration pages — both the landing page and the follow through
page after receiving an email have been restyled to be more linear in
nature and centered using flex box.
This will make it convenient to in the future install Zulip's
third-party dependencies via node without having to integrate them
with the webpack bundler.
There are no modern browsers that do not have built in JSON parsing
abilities. We do not need $.parseJSON as it now just serves as a call
to JSON.parse.
Attr now returns “checked” instead of true and “” instead of false in
higher versions. This fixes those issues.
The attr(“data-*”) have also been covered to data() as well.
This code checks whether or not manual color inputs are supported in
the browser, but does so with an invalid property “!” which throws a
console.warn statement in jQuery. We change this test to a valid
“#ffffff” that works and does not throw warnings.
$.browser is not supported in higher versions of jQuery. The solution
is to instead use vanilla JavaScript to test the navigator.userAgent
property for the browser.
Fixes: #1033.