We now complain about programmers who don't use
4-space indents in template files, rather than
letting the pretty printer fix them.
This is partly just to simplify the pretty printer
code (in future commits), but it also makes the
symptom more obvious to newbie developers. They
are probably just as able to react to the direct
error messages as they are able to figure out how
to read diffs from the pretty printer and grok
the --fix syntax. And once they learn the convention
and configure their editor, it should then be a
one time problem.
We now create tokens for whitespace and text, such that you
could rebuild the template file with "".join(token.s for
token in tokens).
I also fixed a few bugs related to not parsing
whitespace-control tokens.
We no longer ignore template variables, although we could do
a lot better at validating them.
The most immediate use case for the more thorough parser is
to simplify the pretty printer, but it should also make it
less likely for us to skip over new template constructs
(i.e. the tool will fail hard rather than acting strange).
Note that this speeds up the tool by almost 3x, which may be
slightly surprising considering we are building more tokens.
The reason is that we are now munching efficiently through
big chunks of whitespace and text at a time, rather than
checking each individual character to see if it starts one
of the N other token types.
The changes to the pretty_print module here are a bit ugly,
but they should mostly be made irrelevant in subsequent
commits.
This tool has been unmaintained since our initial code
sweep to fix templates, and it has possibly bit-rotted
during unrelated code sweeps like introducing mypy, etc.
It's not documented anywhere.
The preferred method now is to run:
./tools/check-templates --fix
update_ui_and_send_reaction_ajax is called from hotkeys, popovers,
reaction clicks, etc. but it is the common point to deny
spectator from creating a reaction local echo.
Writing the secret to the supervisor configuration file makes changes
to the secret requires a zulip-puppet-apply to take hold. The Docker
image is constructed to avoid having to run zulip-puppet-apply on
startup, and indeed cannot run zulip-puppet-apply after having
configured secrets, as it has replaced the zulip.conf file with a
symlink, for example. This means that camo gets the static secret
that was built into the image, and not the one regenerated on first
startup.
Read the camo secret at process startup time. Because this pattern is
likely common with "12-factor" applications which can read from
environment variables, write a generic tool to map secrets to
environment variables before exec'ing a binary, and use that for Camo.
1. The initial welcome message now contains less detail.
2. The bot now responds to these commands: "apps", "edit profile",
"dark mode", "light mode", "streams", "topics", "message formatting",
"keyboard shortcuts" and "help" - the bot still responds if there are
slight variations in these commands.
3. Tests have been made to check if bot responds to the advertised
commands (with variations) and gives a negative message if it doesn't
understand the message.
With substantial tweaks by tabbott.
Fixes#19900.
String 'Here are a few messages I understand:'(next commit) was failing
./tools/check-capitalization check because of the capital I. I added
'I understand' to the IGNORED_PHRASES list in tools/lib/capitalization.py.
Adding "I" was working as well but didn't seem to me as a very great fix.
Strangely enough, adding " I " to the list made the test fail again
(With a lot of failed strings this time) as mentioned in the following
CZO thread.
Relevent CZO chat -
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/49-development-help/topic/capitalization.20confusion.2E
A confirmation link takes a user to the check_prereg_key_and_redirect
endpoint, before getting redirected to POST to /accounts/register/. The
problem was that validation was happening in the check_prereg_key_and_redirect
part and not in /accounts/register/ - meaning that one could submit an
expired confirmation key and be able to register.
We fix this by moving validation into /accouts/register/.
The availability of this option is now controlled by fancier logic in
stream_settings_ui.js, but we neglected to remove this
development_environment guard when doing so, resulting in stream
creation being broken in production environments (because the
JavaScript code depended on this value being available).
This is the standard way to indicate that something is a dropdown
menu, and in particular avoids confusion some folks had with the
pencil icon.
Tweaked by tabbott to unify CSS with all of our other dropdown list
widget instances.
Fixes#19888.
We select the first enabled radio button by default instead
of selecting "Public" because there can be case when a user
is allowed to create a private-stream only and the other
options are disabled in that case after some recent changes.
This commit adds code for live-updaing the stream-privacy choices
in stream creation form and privacy change modal on changing
"create_public_stream_policy", "create_private_stream_policy"
and "create_web_public_stream_policy".
This commit renames disable_private_stream_privacy_option to
update_private_stream_privacy_option_state and also refactors
the code such that it can also be used to enable the option along
with disabling the option in further commit.
This commit renames disable_public_stream_privacy_option to
update_public_stream_privacy_option_state and also refactors
the code such that it can also be used to enable the option along
with disabling the option in further commit.
This commit renames hide_or_disable_web_public_stream_privacy_option to
update_web_public_stream_privacy_option_state and also refactors the code
such that it can also be used to enable or show the option along with disabling
and hiding the option in further commit.
This commit splits the hide_or_disable_stream_privacy_options_if_required
function into three separate functions for public, private and web-public
streams. This is a prep commit for live-updating the stream-privacy choices
on changing the realm setting.
This commit adds "Manage this user" option in the user-info popover
which simply opens the administrative user-info modal.
We show a spinner on submit button in this case as modal
is not closed immediately and thus we need some indicator
to show that the task is in progress. There is no spinner
on submit button in the modal opened from "Users" section
of organization settings.
Error handling for this case is different than when the
modal is opened from "Users" section of organization
settings because there is no overlay in the background
of modal in this case.
In this case, we show error inside the modal and do not
close it and in case the change is completed successfully
we just close the modal without showing any message.
Fixes part of #18944.
We received a complaint about the generation of multiple duplicate
drafts for a single message. It was discovered that the likely cause
of this was how we were handling clients that were frequently
suspending/unsuspending, we would initiate a reload when we discovered
this, and expect the `beforeunload` handler to save the draft. This
behaved correctly, however, we would also save the compose state and
fill it in via `preserve_state` in reload.js. The important detail
here is that `preserve_state` would not encode and preserve the
`draft_id` for the current message, partly because it had no way of
knowing the `draft_id` of the draft... since we have not saved it yet,
the `beforeunload` event happens after `preserve_state`. As such,
performing any action that would trigger a draft to be saved, eg
pressing Esc to close the compose box, would save a duplicate draft of
the same message.
To resolve the above bug, we (1) ensure that we call
`drafts.update_draft()` in `preserve_state`, this returns a draft_id
to us, which we (2) ensure that we encode as part of the url and (3)
set on the `#composebox-textarea` as a `draft-id` data attribute,
which we check the next time we try to save the draft, post reload.
Note that this causes us to save the draft twice, once from
preserve_state and then again from the `beforeunload` handler, but we
do not add two drafts since the second update_draft call just edits
the timestamp because it finds the `draft-id` data attribute on the
`#composebox-textarea` set by the first call.
Previously, opening a draft and closing it without changing the
content would cause us to show the "saved as draft" tooltip. This was
annoying and would cause annoying UX after fixing a bug related to
saving drafts when reloading, as such, this commit removes the above
behaviour by introducing a simple check on whether the draft contents
are edited.