We had our input elements for stream settings inside li tags
and their alignment was managed using CSS. We move away from
this HTML structure to have inputs and labels inside divs for
two reasons. First is that if we want to later refactor the HTML
to have some different design, then having them inside `ul`
requires complex changes to CSS and eventually we would have
to move away from using `li`s for the part that is changed to
have a different design. Second `li`s are generally not used
to organize input elements.
Above is an explanation of why this change is a preparatory
commit for shifting to have a tabbed design in the stream edit page.
So following changes are done to have a more consistent
HTML structure in stream types modal:
* Added modal-body and removed the non-standard
usage of the unordered list for settings header and inputs.
* Updated relevant CSS rules to have the same design during refactor.
Co-authored-by: Pragati Agrawal <pragati22066@gmail.com>
This should make it more intuitive to add
new elements to the compose box (such as
banners), and it also makes it a bit more
clear for styling purposes that the same
geometry happens whether the compose box
is open or the buttons are visible.
I lifted the #compose_container div into
the server template. It's not totally
clear to me why we need both #compose
and #compose_container, but there are
some scary comments about 1400px that
made me too timid to address that quirk.
In passing I removed a clearly redundant
click handler.
This is important for showing popovers/menus with a light background
in Zulip's light theme.
We extend light-theme to show dark colours in night theme.
We record Git details about the merge-base with upstream branches in
the zulip-git-version file, if the upstream repository is available.
Note that the first Git upgrade after merging the parent commit will
not include the merge-base details, since the upstream repository will
not have been available.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
* Revert "frontend: Remove hover effect from small messagebox."
This reverts commit 27d9643274.
* Revert "frontend: Use placeholder style for small messagebox text."
This reverts commit 8453aac260.
* Revert "frontend: Make "Reply" button look more like a textbox."
This reverts commit 9fdd7184c6.
Previously, we relied on the browser placeholder text style, but this
makes it impossible to style text to look like a placeholder.
Chrome uses `color` to set the placeholder, while Firefox uses
`opacity`. This commit sets both, since setting one without the other
will lead to strange behaviour.
We pick the color for the light and day themes to ensure that we meet
WCAG standards for accessibility.
The 'reply' button shows the stream>topic or recipient(s) of the
selected message, for better UX. It also expands to fill the
remaining horizontal space in the button bar -- this should help make
it easier for new users to figure out how to reply.
Finally, it uses "Message" instead of "Reply", to better match the
compose box.
Fixes#17940.
Currently only enabled in development, since the exact details don't
seem right..
Co-Author-By: Signior-X <b19188@students.iitmandi.ac.in>
Co-Author-By: Aman Agrawal <amanagr@zulip.com>
Implements UI for #8005.
Introduce a new class "table-sticky-headers" in the settings
and organisation settings HTML table tags and it is used
to make the table headers fix at the top. This commit also
add the background-color and hover properties to the
settings and organisation settings table to make them look
similar to the recent_topics_table.
We use an icon which is more clear for what it stands for.
Increase allowed size of message-control-buttons slightly so
that they are clearly visible. This is more important for
GIF icon to be visible properly than any other icon here.
KaTeX makes use of a "span.overlay" element for the little vector
arrow symbol on top of a `\vec` object. This conflicts with Zulip's
CSS for our overlays, which are divs with the `overlay` CSS class.
While KaTeX may rename their class
(https://github.com/KaTeX/KaTeX/issues/1456), we can work around this
issue by scoping our own overlay CSS and click handlers to
"div.overlay" rather than ".overlay".
Fixes#18068.
Recent Topics is no longer an overlay now, but note that it is
also not a typical messages narrow. It can reside between
an overlay and a Filter in the sense that it is dispalyed as
a typical Filter narrow but has properties of an Overlay.
Compose box is not visible in this view as it will be confusing
to many users and hence compose shortcuts have also been disabled.
Keyboard shortcuts that apply on messages have also been disabled.
The remaining shortcuts that apply to a narrow are still accessible
here.
When interacting with popovers in the night theme using the keyboard
UI (e.g. the `i` menu for a message), the background color was
incorrectly white, resulting from the bootstrap `nav > li > a:focus`
rule. We had already fixed this for `nav > li > a:hover`; we just
need to add `nav > li > a:focus` to the relevant block of CSS rules as
well.
Replaces #17195 and #17353.
Rewritten to use a cleaner solution by tabbott.
css-loader@4 broke @import statements referencing files with
extensions other than .css, unless those @import statements are
compiled away by another loader. Upstream is more interested in
arguing that such @import statements are semantically incorrect than
applying the one line fix.
https://github.com/webpack-contrib/css-loader/issues/1164
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit transitions all styles in app.css in the Django pipeline
to being compiled by webpack in an app-styles bundle, and renames the
various files to now be processed as SCSS.
To implement this transition, we move the old CSS file refernces in
settings.py and replace them with a bundle declared in
`webpack.assets.json` and includedn in the index.html template
Tweaked by tabbott to keep the list of files in `app.css` in
`webpack.assets.json`, and to preserve the ordering from the old
`settings.py`.