Previously, muted streams in the left sidebar were faded using
opacity: 0.5, and on hover, the opacity was increased to 0.75.
This opacity was applied to all elements within the muted stream,
including the stream-privacy icon, names of the stream and topics
within, and the unread_count.
In this PR, we changed this behavior to handle opacity for each
element separately. We changed the opacity of the stream-privacy icon
and unread_count, while for the text (names of stream and topics),
we changed the alpha factor for the hsla color property.
The reason for this change is that we can have different opacity levels
for the unread_count and other elements. This will allow us to add
feature in next commits in this PR to set the opacity of unread_count
to 1 while keeping it at 0.5/0.75 for other elements in the case of
muted streams with unread messages in unmuted topics.
Fixes part of #24243
postcss-preset-env transpiles this back as necessary. (It does a
better job than we did, in fact: we had several four-argument hsl()
calls that should have been hsla().)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Having active streams greyed out can be confusing to the user. This
is especially useful when the app is still fetching messages on
a reload and the active stream has no messages and is thus marked
as `inactive`.
Ever since we started bundling the app with webpack, there’s been less
and less overlap between our ‘static’ directory (files belonging to
the frontend app) and Django’s interpretation of the ‘static’
directory (files served directly to the web).
Split the app out to its own ‘web’ directory outside of ‘static’, and
remove all the custom collectstatic --ignore rules. This makes it
much clearer what’s actually being served to the web, and what’s being
bundled by webpack. It also shrinks the release tarball by 3%.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>