It now takes an anchor message id, a number of messages before, and a
number of messages after. The result always contains the anchor
message.
(imported from commit 84d070dc8091161c86d4bbeafbdc299493890a2a)
We need a deterministic order for the client test suite, and it seems like a
good idea generally.
(imported from commit cc8fc555611f2d2f1b21e63ce6860d446baa3410)
We had this problem where clicking a hyperlink bubbles up and causes a
click on the message, which causes the composebox to open.
We "fixed" this by setting cancelBubble (or, even better, calling
stopPropagation()).
Unfortunately, on Firefox, this fix breaks Ctrl-click and Shift-click,
because those are (apparently) implemented by adding an event listener
on link clicks, and stopPropagation prevents them from being called.
We instead work around this by handling this case in the click handler
of the parent element. (This allows the normal URL click AND Firefox's
bound event handlers for Ctrl and Shift to run.)
This resolves Trac #374.
(imported from commit 16fb3aa6fc582f1fba5009812e0b1178ce7c5bb7)
Mixing these two in this file is bound to lead to a world of hurt (and
has, historically). At some point I'd like to do this across the
entire codebase.
(imported from commit 9ff029597587f9c37a0bd9f32c25a769aa1a7a20)
This makes the "handle hotkeys" code path a lot simpler, and also
fixes the "copy not working" issue we were seeing on Firefox 17.
(imported from commit 8ab96d12895da2876f60da58f373372612f4ba32)
So, in Firefox, $(window).width() does not include the width of the
scrollbar. However, the CSS media-query max-width DOES include the
width of the scrollbar -- so the Bootstrap change and our change do
not happen at the same time.
window.innerWidth does take into account the width of the scrollbar,
though, and seems to have reasonable cross-browser support, so we use
that instead.
(If we wanted to be slicker, we could use a media query a la
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/window.matchMedia ,
but that's not supported in IE <10.)
This resolves Trac #35.
(imported from commit ca35321c02d5e79e4f9c439a662805c016a333ed)
Old browsers might not have the global JSON object, so we may have to
include something like https://github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-js
for old browsers in the future.
(imported from commit e30a291d1212f2a00b543551b3a77082c7406eec)
This was causing our tests to fail and would have also
affected API users not using our Python bindings
(imported from commit 2d81496892e9042e328279edea94be8ee4d21c1b)
return_messages_immediately's return value is not returned, so the
argument validation in @has_request_variables didn't work correctly.
@has_request_variables would return a json_error, but
send_with_safety_check expects a dict.
(imported from commit 86b6bccb7861dbf523c06b606b87374e339059a4)
The original check has become too broad now that we have more buttons,
and specifically this lets you use the search hotkey to start a new
search after you've been searching up and down.
(imported from commit 0e691ff55ff9d4be8d406d1eb47fc2062758d28b)
This change substantially increases the number of view functions where
the API and JSON versions are actually identical code.
(imported from commit 2eee55a8943cf9a684bec2ba1f6d7afcb2b91948)
Functions with the @has_request_variables decorator can have some of
their arguments extracted from the HTTP request. For each such
argument, its default value should be an instance of the POST class.
The arguments to the POST constructor control the request variable
name that the function parameter should be populated from (it
defaults to the same as the parameter name), whether the value should
be converted before being passed, and whether a default value should
be supplied if the parameter is missing from the request.
(imported from commit ba1c25d73ba3980e44abec1458e6496807fcdaa4)