This code path isn't currently reached for the logged out "spectator"
view, but it will be in upcoming commits. This makes sure that case
is handled properly.
When building search suggestions for stream topics, instead of
assuming that the user has access to the stream's topic history
from the server, we check whether the user has access to the
stream's topics.
The stream list left sidebar currently has 3 sections:
* Pinned (+ Muted pinned streams)
* Active (+ Muted active streams)
* Inactive streams
Previously, these sections were separated by horizontal lines, which
did not provide an easy way to discern why there were sections. We add
labels to these section dividers to help with this.
Additionally, within each section, we now sort all muted streams to
the bottom, so that they general minimal clutter.
Fixes#19812.
In "stream_data.js/stream_post_policy_values", change, the object to match
the following order and description of these policies:
1. Everyone [Default]
2. Admins, moderators and full members
3. Admins and moderators
4. Admins only
This sorts from least to most restrictive.
Muted streams are now greyed out in the personal settings,
also changes to the notification settings of a muted stream are
not possible anymore.
Also, add a bell-slash icon after the stream name of muted streams,
clicking on it unmutes the stream.
Fixes#19780.
Move stream_data.id_to_slug to internal_url, making it shareable. The
function has been renamed to stream_id_to_slug to reflect that it
operates on a stream id.
The stream_data.id_to_slug and stream_data.name_to_slug
functions mistakenly used Javascript's String.replace method,
this commit changes it to use String.replaceAll, the result
being slugs generated from streams with names greater than
2 words are now properly formatted.
In English, compound adjectives should essentially always be
hyphenated. This makes them easier to parse, especially for users who
might not recognize that the words “web public” go together as a
phrase.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
An explanatory note on the changes in zulip.yaml and
curl_param_value_generators is warranted here. In our automated
tests for our curl examples, the test for the API endpoint that
changes the posting permissions of a stream comes before our
existing curl test for adding message reactions.
Since there is an extra notification message due to the change in
posting permissions, the message IDs used in tests that come after
need to be incremented by 1.
This is a part of #20289.
The availability of this option is now controlled by fancier logic in
stream_settings_ui.js, but we neglected to remove this
development_environment guard when doing so, resulting in stream
creation being broken in production environments (because the
JavaScript code depended on this value being available).
There is a bug when a newly created stream appears in the notification
settings table if user changes any setting in 'Streams' row of the
table even though user has not changed the notification setting of
the stream and thus the stream should follow the global-level values.
The stream is correctly not added to the table if user changes the
setting after reloading once after creating the stream.
The bug is due to the notification settings of the new-stream being
set to the user's global settings at time of stream creation which
are not overridden since the stream-creation event contains only
stream fields and not subscription fields. And the newly created
stream is not present in the table after reload because during
initialization of the client-level data structures the notification
setting values are overridden by the values stored in server.
This commit fixes create_sub_from_server_data code to initially have
the notification settings set as null in the sub object which are
overridden by the correct value during initialization. This keeps
the notification setting values as null just after stream creation.
Fixes#19933.
The previous phrasing used incorrect terminology (E.g. "stream
members", not "stream subscribers", which is really confusing given
that we have a "member" role which is also relevant in this text).
This reduces the complexity of our dependency graph.
It also makes sub_store.get parallel to message_store.get.
For both you pass in the relevant id to get the
full validated object.
This change should make live-update code less brittle,
or at least less cumbersome.
Instead of having to re-compute calculated fields for
every change to a stream message, we now just compute
the fields right before we render stream settings UI.
This is mostly a pure code move.
In passing I remove an unneeded call to
update_calculated_fields in the dispatch code,
plus some tests that don't need them.
The only reason to use typeof foo === "undefined" is when foo is a
global identifier that might not have been declared at all, so it
might raise a ReferenceError if evaluated. For a variable declared
with const or let or import, a function argument, or a complex
expression, simply foo === undefined is equivalent.
Some of these conditions have become impossible and can be removed
entirely, and some can be replaced more idiomatically with default
parameters (note that JavaScript does not share the Python misfeature
of evaluating the default parameter at function declaration time).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>