This moves respond_to_mention() and reply_with_mention() to
compose_actions.js. These methods are basically thin layers
on top of compose_actions.start().
This module extracts these two functions that get called by
several other modules:
start()
cancel()
It is a little bit arbitrary which functions got pulled over
with them, but it's generally functions that would have only
been called via start/cancel.
There are two goals for splitting out this code. The first
goal is simply to make `compose.js` have fewer responsibilities.
The second goal is to help break up circular dependencies.
The extraction of this module does more to clarify
dependencies than actually break them. The methods start()
and cancel() had actually been shimmed in an earlier commit,
and now they no longer have a shim.
Besides start/cancel, most of the functions here are only
exported to facilitate test stubbing. An exception is
decorate_stream_bar(), which is currently called from
ui_init.js. We probably should move the "blur" handler out
of there, but cleaning up ui_init.js is a project for another
day.
It may seem slightly odd that this commit doesn't pull over
finish() into this module, but finish() would bring in the
whole send-message codepath. You can think of it like this:
* compose_actions basically just populates the compose box
* compose.finish() makes the compose box do its real job,
which is to send a message
Before this fix, if you scrolled back in your PM history for a
person that you've had recent conversations with, then we would
backdate the record of their most recent conversation, and this
would make the sort ordering under the "Private messages"
section incorrect.
This commit fixes this error by re-writing the function
message_store.insert_recent_private_message() to check any
prior timestamps for that user. It also optimizes the function
a bit to short-circuit in O(1) time for cases where a recipient
already has a more recent timestamp, by having a Dict keyed
on user_ids_string.
This better sets expectatations for the fact that in Zulip, the
Organization settings UI is available read-only to non-administrator
users.
Tweaked by tabbott to update some additional references.
We had never-enabled code to allow users to set default
streams for their bots (for event registration, default sending, etc.).
This commit removes the code.
We've had this kind of hacky setting called message_view_only for
a long time in the hotkeys code, and it originally helped optimize
the code a bit. It wasn't well maintained, and people started
adding non-message-view behavior to the arrow keys without flipping
that flag to false. This change finally flips the flag to false,
which simplifies some of our logic.
We now explicitly return true from process_hotkey() when we
handle up/down/backspace for the drafts modal. Also, we no longer
call preventDefault() from drafts.draft_handle_events(), since the
caller does that, and we no longer return `true`, since we were
never inspecting the return value anyway.
The up/down arrows now navigate the left pane of the settings menu.
The code here was originally implemented as part of our settings
redesign, but the code was added in a place that became unreachable
after we fixed a bug with home_tab_obscured(). This commit
resurrects the code and places the guts of it in settings.js. It
is possible that we want to clean this code up eventually to deal
better with hidden blocks.
The code here used to live in hotkey.js. Its complicated calling
protocol made it difficult to unit test. We are also trying to
slim down hotkey.js.
Our arrow navigation for things like `#stream_filters` has always
been kind of awkward, since it's difficult to get the focus to
their list items. This commit does nothing to fix that yet.
For small-ish realms (<= 250 users), we ensure that the presence
info includes all realm users the front end knows about, even in
cases where the server sends down a slimmed version of presence
data. We make the users "offline" by default, of course.
This commit sets us up to optimize larger realms without concerns
of breaking small realms. Small realms may want to continue to
show all users, even users who may have been offline several weeks,
since it doesn't clutter their API as much as it would for big
realms.
Most of this code was simply moved from activity.js with some
minor renaming of functions like set_presence_info -> set_info.
Some functions were slightly nontrivial extractions:
is_not_offline:
came from activity.huddle_fraction_present
get_status/get_mobile:
simple getters
set_user_status:
partial extraction from activity.set_user_status
last_active_date:
pulled out of admin.js code
We also fixed activity.filter_and_sort to take user_ids.
* Change the classes and ids of different widgets and modals
and make suitable changes in `admin.js`.
* Remove any other occurrences of `alias` or `realm_alias`
from admin.js.
We remove the jquery dependency here and just search for strings
in the text. It turns out the test was leaking jquery into
message_edit, so now we explicitly stub jquery in message_edit.
Our unread.js code basically silently treats empty recipient
strings or unknown streams as having zero unread messages,
which is probably the correct behavior. We now have tests
that cover this. This commit also gets us to 100% line
coverage on the module (but not yet 100% branch coverage).
Previously drafts called compose.snapshot_message which would then
get the message object from compose.create_message_object. This method often
checked for the validity of stream/user recipients which would often cause tracebacks.
The new method in drafts.snapshot message just gets the data from the fields and
stores them in the draft model without any additional checking.
The addDraft and editDraft tests were copying objects by reference
which meant the methods weren't tested properly. Due to this, a bug with
stubTimestamp was also discovered where the method wasn't getting stubbed
* 'd' in message view opens drafts.
This also adds hotkeys within the drafts UI:
* Up/down arrow keys navigate the drafts.
* Pressing enter edits the selected draft.
* Pressing backspace deletes the selected draft.
Some variable names tweaked by tabbott.
If we get reactions for deactivated users, or otherwise missing
users, we only issue a blueslip warning now. The function
get_message_reactions() was indirectly causing blueslip errors
before this fix, but we can downgrade to warnings now that this
function has better unit tests around it.
We eventually want to track deactivated users on the client.
Fixes#4289
We now track our inbound timing events using code in
typing_data.js.
This code may be a little more robust with variations on how
recipients are represented in events, although there are no known
bugs here.
This change moves most of the logic related to starting and
stopping outbound typing indicators to a new module called
typing_status.js that is heavily unit tested.
While this was in some sense a rewrite, the logic was mostly
inspired by the existing code.
This change does fix one known bug, which is that when we
were changing recipients before (while typing was active), we
were not stopping and starting typing indicators. This was
a fairly minor bug, since usually users leave the compose
box to change recipients, and we would do stop/start under
that scenario. Now we also handle the case where the user
does not leave the compose box to change recipients.
If a url is present in stream description, it will be
rendered as a clickable link under /streams page.
Tweaked by tabbott to use the separate rendered_description element to
avoid duplicate rendering and to live-update.
Fixes#1435.
Instead of passing in a hash to template whose keys are a
mixture of records and strings, we now pass in an
array of records. This also removes a spurious if condition
in the template that was a result of the janky data structure.
This adds an image feed that you can scroll through with hotkeys
in the lightbox.
The left and right arrow keys along with the left and right arrows
will go to the prev/next image, and clicking on an image will also
take a user to that image.
Send typing notification events when user types in the compose box.
Listen for these events and display a notification.
Sending notifications: Notifications are throttled, so that start
notifications are sent every 10 seconds of active typing, and stop
notifications are sent 5 seconds after active typing stops or when the
compose box is closed.
Displaying notifications:
When a typing notification is received, if the current narrow is private
messages or is: pm-with and the user is not the sender,
"Othello is typing..." is displayed underneath the last message. This notification is
removed after 15 seconds. If another notification is received during this period, the
expiration is extended. When a stop notification is received the notification is removed.
Internally, a list of users currently typing is maintained for each
conversation (in a dict). When an event is received the list (for the appropriate
conversation) is updated and the notifications template is re-rendered
based on the narrow information. This template is also re-rendered when
the narrow changes.
Significantly modified by tabbott for clarity.
Fixes#150.
Stub the blueslip module to print a nicely formatted traceback.
Earlier the traceback used to be only a `ReferenceError` because
blueslip was not stubbed.
Fixes: #4021.
We simplify hotkey mappings by using different hashes for
keydown and keypress events. There are browser bugs (iOS, for
example) where keypress events have the wrong keyCode values.
This led us, under iOS, to interpret "!" as "page up."
This fix also helps us disinguish escape from shift-escape.
Brock Whittaker helped on figuring out the keypress/keydown
issues that are addressed in this commit.
Fixes#4019
The initial version of the tests cover most normal keys, but they
do not cover special keys like enter/tab/escape or arrow keys
or home/end/page-down/page-up yet.
The with_overrides() function no longer works at the module
level, so you can temporarily override one function in a module
without breaking more permanent monkey patches.
This makes us slightly more vulnerable to unintentional test
leakages, but it solves the problem where you often need lots
of temporary overrides for writer functions but you want to
keep a more permanent override for some sort of reader function.
The function with_overrides() uses the logic from the old
run() function in dispatch.js to allow you to call a test
function and override parts of the global namespace only
for the duration of when test_function runs.
We now pass in function names as 'foo.bar', which is a bit
easier to type/read/grep, rather than passing the module name
and function name individually.
This adds a button to #subsciption page called "View Stream"
that narrows the user to that particular stream.
This fix involves typical changes to JS/CSS to add new features,
and we also add a "preview_url" field to the sub object in
stream_data.js.
Fixes#3878
Change applies to both subdomains and non-subdomains case, though we use
just the EXTERNAL_HOST in the non-subdomains case if there is only 1 realm.
Fixes#3903.
It's easier to reason about the activity.js code if we just
make it clear that presence_info is a global singleton. Going
forward, functions that use that data will explicitly refer to
exports.presence_info.
This change makes some tests slightly more awkward to set up, but
with the actual code you now don't have to question whether there
are multiple copies of presence_info to maintain.
The diff for compare_function is a bit confusing to read, but it's
basically just de-dented since we don't need to parameterize the
compare function any more.
This refactors the .message_controls to stop relying on absolute
positioning and strange CSS, and throws them inline.
This also restyles so they hang to the right of the time which is now
always present.
Fixes: #3761.
We pass in sub instead of stream_name, to support callers that
already do lookups by stream id.
And then we make the second optional argument be subscribers, since
that is all we were using from the old `attrs` argument.
- Remove `handlebars.runtime.js` from static/third and fetch it from npm
- Upgrade `handlebars` to 3.0.3.
I change the test since there is a patch about line, written in
handlebars'
v2.0.0-beta.1 release note:
"Lines containing only block statements and whitespace are now removed."
Fixes part of #1709.
If we get invalid events related to stream subscribers, we now
exit earlier to prevent ugly tracebacks. We may eventually
want to upgrade some of these warnings to errors, once we fix some
of our live-update bugs. In particular, we don't yet live-update
users when streams go from private to public, so if you add/remove
subscribers to a newly-public stream that a user still thinks is
private, they will not be able to handle the event through no
fault of the codepath that happens during the add/remove.
This currently only supports this in emoji reactions, not in actual
emoji in message bodies, but it's a great start for people who want a
text-only view.
Tweaked to update the text by tabbott.
Fixes#3169.
I noticed while reviewing #3807 that we still haven't fixed this;
because timestamps are primarily displayed in the message view, fixing
this is trivial.
Add neccesary UI in #administration and #settings for
changing the bot owner. The bot owner select control
is rendered dynamically in order to avoid performance
issues in case of large number of users.
Fixes: #2719.
Use `name_to_codepoint.json` file (and the similar structure in
emoji_codes.js) to map emoji names directly to codepoints and change
the rendered emoji image to `unicode/<codepoint.png>` rather than
`<emoji_name>.png`.
Fixes: #3539.
If you send a group PM from the home view, and then one of the
recipients changes their email, and then you send a group PM
to the same recipients, we need to make sure we don't create
a spurious recipient bar. This fix makes this happen by
changing util.same_recipient() to look at user ids instead of
emails.
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().