To test formatting we want a hard coded date, so we
can verify the date arithmetic with stable dates.
To make the test less brittle, we disable the
feature to remove old drafts.
This was an emergency fix. We should probably just
remove the last N drafts instead of having the 30-day
limit. Or we should have a better way to stub the cutoff
date.
Adds three helper functions - `row_with_focus`, `row_before_focus` and
`row_after_focus` to get the focused, previous and next to focused
draft rows respectively.
`delete_id` in `drafts.js` referred to the next draft row which was
to be focused when deleting using hot keys. The var name was absurd
and is hence renamed.
Adds a `remove_draft` function which deletes the draft and updates the ui
by removing it from the list of drafts.
Also adds comments to increase readability.
We weren't using the actual sorted data to find
the last element. This probably worked by accident
in some cases, but this commit makes it more
deterministic.
We want the return value from this for the next
commit, so we no longer call `format_drafts` indirectly
from `populate_and_fill`, and we rename the latter
to `render_widgets`.
We had an anonymous callback for drafts that was
hard to read. It's much easier to flatten the code,
give functions actual names, and stub them as needed
in the unit tests.
The `replying_to_message` field was used in some
early versions of compose fade, but it has no more
use in the current code.
The drafts implementation didn't really make any sense,
anyway, as we were claiming to reply to the same
message we were drafting.
This commit prepares the frontend code to be consumed by webpack.
It is a hack: In theory, modules should be declaring and importing the
modules they depend on and the globals they expose directly.
However, that requires significant per-module work, which we don't
really want to block moving our toolchain to webpack on.
So we expose the modules by setting window.varName = varName; as
needed in the js files.
This is preparation for enabling an eslint indentation configuration.
90% of these changes are just fixes for indentation errors that have
snuck into the codebase over the years; the others are more
significant reformatting to make eslint happy (that are not otherwise
actually improvements).
The one area that we do not attempt to work on here is the
"switch/case" indentation.
We consistently either pass a `then_select_id` into narrow.activate,
or were using the select_first_unread option. Now, we just compute
select_first_unread based on the value of then_select_id.
While applying formatting to drafts if any draft contains some syntax
which our markdown processor is unable to process delete the draft so
that drafts overlay can be opened without any error. Also report the
exception to the server so that error can be fixed.
This commit forces the files that create modals to create their own
modal closing function instead of creating all of them in the modals
file. These functions are then passed to the modals.close object. This
is intended to remove modals.js's dependencies on these other files.
We now only call compose_state.composing() in a boolean context,
where we simply care whether or not the compose box is open. The
function now also returns true/false.
Callers who need to know the actual message type (e.g. "stream" or
"private") now call compose_state.get_message_type().
This is mostly just moving methods out of compose.js.
The variable `is_composing_message`, which isn't a boolean, has
been renamed to `message_type`, and there are new functions
set_message_type() and get_message_type() that wrap it.
This commit removes some shims related to the global variable
`compose_state`; now, `compose_state` is a typical global
variable with a 1:1 relationship with the module by the same
name.
The new module has 100% line coverage, most of it coming
via the tests on compose_actions.js. (The methods here are
super simple, so it's a good thing that the tests are somewhat
integrated with a higher layer.)