Fixes#9842.
Enables avatar images in pills wherever user_pill.js is used.
(e.g composebox, user group settings)
Changes to search_pill.js are not made as search pills haven't been
added yet completely and search_pill.js just contains the preparatory
code right now.
No change to compose_pm_pill.js is not required as it uses
`user_pill.create_item_from_text` in its `create` function.
Adding the 20*20 image inside the pill caused a minor increase in
pill height. Making the image 19*19 causes some increase in the height
under different zoom conditions. I'm not sure about the reason behind
this, so this can be counted as a hack.
Allow passing image link in the item passed to appendValidatedData.
When passing image link via any of the append* functions, make sure
that create_item_from_text for that pill also adds the image link to
the item created.
This commit does not make any visual change to the current app.
Changes to user_pill.js are necessary to enable user avatars for
pills.
We now use narrow_state.filter() everywhere. The
two functions did the same thing, and I slightly
prefer the concise name, which was already in use
in lots of places.
This implements right-to-left message automatic detection support in
the compose box as well as the message feed. Full unit tests and
support in the message-editing UI are for future work (as are
potentially more fancy things like supporting things like
right-to-left multi-word names for users/streams/etc.).
Fixes#3123.
I also removed the comment that said "this is just a workaround".
It is not, it is technically correct for us to do apply different
CSS rules to <p> tags that aren't the first child of the <li>
element in question.
xmlns:svg is an XML namespace declaration that would be valid in XHTML
but not in HTML. Even in XHTML, it wouldn’t be necessary because we
don’t write SVG tags prefixed like <svg:circle>, only unprefixed like
<circle>.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This commit fixes some modules that were erroneously left out while
transitioning app.js to webpack. This commit exposes them using
expose-loader or setting them directly to window.
This commit moves all files previously under the 'app' bundle in
the Django pipeline to being compiled by webpack under the 'app'
entry point. In the process, it moves assets under the app entry
to a file called app.js that consumes all relevant css and js files.
This commit also edits the webpack config to be able to expose certain
variables for third party libraries that are currently required by
some modules. This is bad coding form and should be refactored to
requiring whatever dependencies a module may have; we're just
deferring that to the future to simplify the series of transitions we
need to do here. The variable exposure is done using expose-loader in
webpack.
The app/index.html template is edited to override the newly introduced
'commonjs' block in the base template. This is done as a temporary
measure so as not to disrupt other pages on the app during the transition.
It also fixes the value of the 'this' context that was being inferred
as window by third party libraries. This is done using imports-loader
in the webpack config. This is also messy and probably isn't how we
want things to work long term.
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.
We remove css which has been dead since convertion of subscriptions
page to an overlay. This should ideally have been dealt with in
commit 1886f0a which actually did the converstion but we forgot to
handle it at that time.
We remove the dead CSS which was introduced in commit 963a93367
back in 2013 and doesn't seem to have any use now. Its probably
the case that we removed the actual html structure which used this
CSS since 2013 and forgot to clean up the css part.
This was killed when the "Deleted Streams" feature was dropped
in commit 7bbe44d7 but we forgot to deal with it at the time.
squash to admin_streams_list
This cleans up some leftover js and css from the effort of
redesign the rows of the #subscriptions table. Redesign happened
in commit 368b5859 and but we forgot to clean up these js and css
pieces.
squash to subs.js.
The error handling for delete/reactivate was broken.
The old code related to appending id_suffix to the ids of
the per-bot error divs did not have corresponding
selectors in the actual error handling.
Things still aren't great, but there's a bit more
encapsulation now, and you'll see errors for the
delete/reactivate cases.
The user can also edit the question after adding it.
The question in the poll can only be added/edited
by the user who started the poll.
The input bar will be disabled for the other users
if the question is not yet added. If the question is
added, the input bar will not be visible to the other
users.
Even when admin removes all custom fields from org, custom
fields header "Profile" doesn't get removed.
Render header "Profile" whenever custom fields data get changed.