Using stream_id in recipient comparisons fixes a
bug in this scenario: go to home view, send message
to stream, wait for admin to rename stream, send
another message to the stream. Before this change,
the stream name would live-update but you'd get a
spurious recipient bar due to the prior message still
having the old stream name in places internally.
There were other ways to fix the live-update glitch,
but it's just generally cleaner to do stream id
comparisons.
Part of this change is to add stream_id to
compose_fade.set_focused_recipient().
Change the remaining "Admin settings" with a button, namely
changing a stream's privacy, to instead be a "[Change]" link
opening a confirmation modal.
Fixes: #3493.
* Created a drafts modal to display/restore/delete drafts
* Created a Draft model to support storing draft data in localstorage
* Removed existing restore-draft functionality
* Added casper and node tests for drafts functionality
Fixes#1717.
Activity.update_users() is still used to handle partial
updates of users in the buddy list, but now all the places
that want to re-build the whole widget go through
build_user_sidebar().
The pinned streams were sorted in alphabetic order (i.e. Verona appears
before devel). The reason is that after we plucked pinned streams out from
stream_data.subscribed_streams(), we didn't sort them again, so they
remained in the alphabetic order used in stream_data.
However, we did sort unpinned streams explicitly by using custom compare
function in stream_list.js (by default sort by lowercase stream name,
but when there are more than 40 subscribed streams, sort active streams
first). That's why this issue only relates to pinned streams.
Changes were made to sort pinned streams by lowercase stream name, always,
whether they are active or not (different from unpinned streams).
Tests were added to ensure this overall sort order is correct, i.e.
1. pinned streams are always sorted by lowercase stream name.
2. pinned streams are always before unpinned streams.
3. unpinned streams are sorted by lowercase stream name, if there are more
than 40 subscribed streams, sort active streams at the top, among active
and inactive streams, still sorted by lowercase stream name.
Fixes#3701
User search for streams will now return results where the stream
description (but not the stream name) include the string in the
user query.
The filtering process first obtains the streams whose names match the
user search query, then sorts and displays them. From the remaining
streams, it obtains streams whose description matches the query and
displays them in sorted order after the name match results. Other
streams are not displayed.
Fixes: #2674.
Fixes#268.
Modified significantly by tabbott to:
* improve code cleanliness / repetition
* add missing translation tags
* move code into message_edit.js
* correspond with the new backend.
* not display the option for messages only topic-edited
(There was a method with the same name before, but it wasn't
being used. The new version will accept stream_id instead
of name, and we will use it as part of deactivating streams.)
When we process messages for unread counts, we now call
people.pm_reply_user_string() to get a string of user ids,
rather than using emails that may have changed since the
message was originally created.
For our user administration, we now primarily work with user ids
that get put into data-user-id attributes. We still put emails in the
tags to make our Casper tests easy to maintain.
This requires a minor change to the back end to pass down user ids
for the /users endpoint (in get_members_backend).
I dug into why we never did this before, and it turns out we did, but
using `$.trim()` (which removes leading whitespace as well!). When
removing the `$.trim()` usage.
Fixes#3294.
We now convert our pm-with search operand to a list of user ids
for matching against messages, rather than using emails. On the
message side we look at user ids from display_recipient.
This fixes a potential class of flakiness in the tests where they
interact with parts of the admin UI that aren't actually visible at
the moment via selectors, which probably doesn't test what we intend
to test properly.
For some reason, this section of tests basically totally breaks
whatever test runs after it. To minimize the impact of that problem,
we move it to a separate file.
The casper test file 10-admin.js had gotten to be super huge, so a
split is a good idea regardless, but this should also make quaranteen
for tests broken by the settings redesign more manageable.
Previously, set_muted_topics was calling update_unread_counts once for each
topic in the input; this results in poor performance when there is a large
number of muted topics.
Fixes: #3605
We have added people.pm_with_url(message), which computes a
PM url from a private message using user ids rather than emails.
We call this in add_message_metadata(), since the slugs will
be valid even if emails change, so we don't need to compute
them on the fly during message rendering.
Currently, searching for group private messages requires typing each
person's email individually. This change improves the typeahead
suggestions for group `pm-with` searches by suggesting additional people
whenever a comma is entered.
Fixes: #3575
The function people.update_email() is not yet connected
to anything, but it sets the stage for upcoming changes.
When emails get updated, fundamentally we just update
the appropriate person object and add a new key to
people_dict. We sort of get a shim for free--old email
lookups will continue to work--but we add blueslip warnings
for stale lookups.
This helps make the Zulip development environment somewhat more robust
to new contributors, since it will give them a nice warning if they
try running any of our development tools outside the Zulip virtualenv.
Fixes#3468.
When filtering streams, we were incorrectly treating the regexp input
provided by the user as a regular expression, meaning that terms like
`c++` would trigger errors because they are invalid regular expression
syntax. We fix this by replacing RegExp with a simple IndexOf check.
Node test added by tabbott.
Fixes#3559.
This changes the markdown preview test to use the
waitForSelectorTextChange method rather than waitWhileVisible
because it was not being generated fast enough in some cases
to show correctly with waitWhileVisible.
We now trigger an event in user_events.js, and we dynamically
build the list of names in pm_list.js by calling out to
people.get_recipients().
We have a few variations of functions that build lists of names
for huddles, which should be cleaned up eventually. They are
called at different times in the code path, so the different
functions, while doing mostly the same thing, start with different
data sources.
Note that this only works for people who are currently logged in.
Folks that log in after you may pick up the old full name from
the message. (I'll address this in a separate commit.)
Replaces the hardcoded list of emoji_names and unicode_emoji_names in
static/js/emoji.js with a list generated from emoji_map.json, both to get
the list out of version control and so we can start modifying it for our
autocomplete. This does not change the contents of emoji_names. It sorts and
removes duplicates from unicode_emoji_names (causes no change in behavior,
since unicode_emoji_names is only used as if it were a set).
We now allow spaces and other special characters to be part
of the token (following "#", "@", or ":") that the typeahead
code will further evaluate as a typeahead candidate.
This is important for folks with short/common first names
on larger realms.
I moved the UI element for "Copy from Stream" to be above
the list of users, including the filter box and check/uncheck
links, which no longer get applied to the list of streams.
The reason I no longer apply the filter to streams is...
* It's kind of confusing to have filters apply to both
streams and users. There should be separate filters for
them, and I will try to resuscitate that feature later.
* The code to filter the streams was doing a sketchy
regex operation against user-inputted data. (`match()`)
* We want to use the same stream filtering code as the
right sidebar uses.
* It improves performance for the common case that you
are filtering users.
The reason I no longer apply the check-all/uncheck-all actions
to streams is that it would be crazy to select all your streams
to copy users from, and it would be expensive/slow for large
realms, and it would likely be done by accident if somebody was
trying to manage individual users.
Finally, the check-all/uncheck-all actions have been scoped
to the users filtered by the text box, so I moved the links
under the text box to make that hopefully more clear to users.
The function people.filter_by_search_terms() used
to return a JS object with emails as keys to represent
a set of users. Now we return a Zulip Dict() object
with user_ids as keys.
One of my commits from yesterday erroneously set the
"mentioned" flag on messages that weren't mentioning
the current user, so you would get the pink/salmon
background when you sent at-mentions to other people.
Now we check the user_id before setting the flag.
If we get a realm_user update for a user that is **not**
changing their full name, we no longer call
admin.update_user_full_name().
This was probably a fairly minor bug.
Earlier commits removed all uses of page_params.email outside
of people.js, and it turns out we have page_params.user_id, so
we don't even need page_params.email for seeding the data.
The local echo code now marks up mention buttons with user ids
instead of email. Our code in message_list_view.js deals with
either the old style or the new style of markup now to determine
which mention buttons need to be highlighted.
As part of this commit we extract mention_button_refers_to_me().
After this change, if a user sends a message with at-mentions, the
local echo code will add the `mentioned` flag to 'message.flags`
as part of the callback to build the HTML, rather then doing it
hackily during a post-processing step.
The function echo.apply_markdown() actually applies markdown to
a message now, instead of simply computing markdown. Passing
in the outer `message` object will allow us to avoid some hacky
post-processing of messages after rendering, because we can
have our parser callbacks update message on the spot in a more
atomic fashion.
This commit doesn't change any behavior yet, but it starts us
down the road of deprecating page_params.email and allowing
people.js to control all access to the current user's email,
which will be important for email changes.
- Remove `underscore.js` from `static/third` and fetch it from `npm`.
- Upgrade `underscore.js` to 1.8.3.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.2.
Part of #1709
- Remove `codepointat` from `static/third` and fetch it from `npm`.
- Upgrade `codepointat` to 0.2.0.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 4.1.
Part of #1709.
In people.emails_strings_to_user_ids_string, we just warn
for bad emails going forward.
Users can enter bad emails into the search location bar,
for example, and that causes us to compute a browser hash,
which in turn uses this function.
(It's possible that we should adjust the search code not
to compute hashes for narrowing when the narrow doesn't
make sense, but that could be a non-trivial fix.)
The slugs for PM-with narrows now have user ids in them, so they
are more resilient to email changes, and they have less escaping
characters and are generally prettier.
Examples:
narrow/pm-with/3-cordelia
narrow/pm-with/3,5-group
The part of the URL that is actionable is the comma-delimited
list of one or more userids.
When we decode the slugs, we only use the part before the dash; the
stuff after the dash is just for humans. If we don't see a number
before the dash, we fall back to the old decoding (which should only
matter during a transition period where folks may have old links).
For group PMS, we always say "group" after the dash. For single PMs,
we use the person's email userid, since it's usually fairly concise
and not noisy for a URL. We may tinker with this later.
Basically, the heart of this change is these two new methods:
people.emails_to_slug
people.slug_to_emails
And then we unify the encode codepath as follows:
narrow.pm_with_uri ->
hashchange.operators_to_hash ->
hashchange.encode_operand ->
people.emails_to_slug
The decode path didn't really require much modication in this commit,
other than to have hashchange.decode_operand call people.slug_to_emails
for the pm-with case.
This new module abstracts the setting up of a test
server for tests to run, pulling existing code from
casper and paving the way for API tests in the future.