We are trying to phase out the trigger-event way
of telling modules to do something.
In this case we not only remove the indirection
of the event handler, but we also get to remove
`compose_fade` from the `ui_init` startup sequence.
This also has us update `compose_fade` outside
the loop, although that's only a theoretical
improvement, since I don't think `peer_add` events
every actually include multiple streams.
To make the dispatch tests a little flatter, I
added a one-line change to zjsunit to add
`make_stub` to `global`.
To manually test:
* have Aaron reply to Denmark (keep compose box open)
* have Iago add Hamlet to Denmark
* have Hamlet unsubscribe
Previously, the navbar failed at managing the searchbox text state in
cases where, eg, the user performs navigation by browser history.
This commit resolves the issue by ensuring that the searchbox text is
only (and always) set when the searchbox is made visible, and as such
there is no "state" to manage and we will always display the correct
text.
It also adds a test in `search_legacy.js` to make sure that the search
text is placed as intended.
Fixes: #14771.
The navbar currently fails at managing the searchbox text state in
cases where, eg, the user performs navigation by browser history.
This is a prep commit that will help resolve the bug.
I tried to make the most minimal change here
possible, since I don't really know this module
well. Possible alternatives were:
* $('#tab_bar') everywhere
* elem
* tab_bar_elem
I don't feel strongly.
Long term I believe we intend to change the name
of this module to something more like `navbar.js`???
When we call functions inside our own modules that use
the `window.foo = exports` pattern, we have always had
a pretty strong preference to call `exports.internal_function`
instead of `foo.internal_functions`.
The stragglers here weren't violating this convention
for any intentional reason. Some of the places here
probably were part of code moves where somebody
(probably me) moved functions into the modules to avoid
unnecessary indirection, and I missed a spot where I
could change from `presence` to `exports` (or whatever).
And other places are probably just kinda arbitrary
decisions by the original developer, and we just haven't
bothered to clean it up until now.
This combines `upload_realm_logo` and `upload_realm_icon` into single
function called `upload_realm_logo_or_icon`. The functions wer near
duplicates.
Additional refactoring should be able to deduplicate the logic further.
Part of #14730.
We can remove a {{theme_mode}}-settings class on the upload button
and access day/night from `.closest("realm-logo-section")`
so that only the outer ID differs between the two widgets.
Part of #14730.
Previously, renaming the stream would cause `colorize_tab_bar` to fail
because the search filter would provide it the old stream name and the
look up for the stream color would fail.
A quirk of how this system currently works makes it so that even
though the filter is set to the old stream name (and so becomes
inconsistent with the stream_data state) the `_stream_params` object
is maintained to be consistent with stream_data and as such can be
relied upon to find the correct color of the icon.
Previously the navbar did not live update the stream name correctly.
The correct behaviour was blocked on the `_stream_name` prop on the
filter object. The original purpose for maintaining this prop was
convenience, to reduce calls to `subs`, however, it would become
inconsistent with the value from `subs` on stream rename.
In this commit we add a call to `filter.fix_stream_params` in
`subs.update_stream_name`. This fixes live rerendering in the navbar,
despite the fact that searchbox in the nav (and the filter object via
`filter.operands("stream")[0]`) will still have the old name.
This is a slightly hacky way of masking some of the problems in the
Filter object. However, it should make do until we migrate to a stream
ID based state there.
Fixes: #14728.
Prior to this commit the icon in the navbar didn't live update to
reflect changes in stream privacy.
Here, we add a call to `tab_bar.render_title_area` in
`subs.update_stream_privacy()`, to enable live updates on the icon.
Fixes#14728.
The navbar currently does not live update the stream icon correctly
for changes in stream privacy.
One place where the correct behaviour gets blocked is on the
`_is_stream_private` prop in the filter object. We keep props such as
this for convenience, to reduce calls to `subs`, however, this prop
becomes inconsistent with the value we get from `subs` when the stream
privacy is updated.
In this commit we add a call to `filter.fix_stream_params` in
`subs.update_stream_privacy`. This change does not fix the live
rerendering in the navbar because we don't call redraw yet, but
it's a prep commit to towards that goal
The navbar currently does not live update the stream name or the icon
for stream privacy correctly.
One place where the correct behaviour gets blocked is on the
`_stream_name` and `_is_stream_private` props on the filter object.
We keep these props for convenience, to reduce calls to `subs`,
however, these props become inconsistent with the values from `subs`
when the stream is renamed or stream privacy is changed.
This refactor extracts out `get_stream_params` and `fix_stream_params`
methods as a prep commit towards correcting the problem, but does not
make any behavioural changes.
This is a prep commit for solving #14728.
A comment about the difficulties relating to live updating stream
names in the navbar was incorrectly placed within the function for
live updating stream descriptions in
023187b3f1.
This moves the comment to the right place.
We store the relevant data to hide/show a topic in the row itself,
and use jquery to hide/show it on filter change.
This also fixes search breaking the set filters.
This fixes the bug that message was undefined since we used to store
locally echoed message id and were not updating it after new message
id for the same message was received from the server.
We remove all trace of the old topic and reprocess all the new
messages in old and new topics.
process_topic_edit function was moved since it needs to be below
get_topic_row function.
We reuse the existing logic for displaying and updating stream color
from the stream left sidebar.
Tests fixtures were extracted and updated for this commit.
The approach that supposed to use this data was not implemented
and hence this data will no longer be used.
If this feature is implemented in future,
this data will still not be used since we would depend upon
starred_messages.js library to provide us the required information.
* Add action to mute topics.
* We don't need to store muted data per topic as previously planned.
* Moved launch topic test to the top so that they run on non-modified
data.
* Show an empty overlay of recent topics.
* Register click event to open recent topics.
* Launch recent topics on "t" keypress.
This is based on the draft overlay.
This is part of a refactor that aimed to remove /json/users calls,
as we can get all the information needed on people API.
Now, the list render for $users_table and $deactivated_users_table
uses user_ids instead of user objects, as the people API give us
a filtered list of active_user_ids and non_active_user_ids.
The populate_users function doesn't need to sort the list of
active and non-active users, because the list_render is called
specifying to sort users by their full_name.
Author: Clara Moraes Dantas <clara.moraesd@gmail.com>
As part of a refactoring, we are now able to remove the
/json/users calls and get all the information needed on people.js.
To do this, now the populate_users uses the people api to get
all the active and non active human users.
This is part of a refactoring aimed to eliminate /json/users calls,
as we can have all the information needed on people.js.
Now, human_info() will call is_person_active() because the person
object it will receive won't have is_active field anymore, as
we'll use the people api to get a set of filtered active/non active
users.
Author: Clara Moraes Dantas <clara.moraesd@gmail.com>
This was previously hardcoded with agreement between the Zulip backend
and frontend as 86400 seconds (1 day). Now, it's still hardcoded in
the backend, but arranged in a way where we could add a setting
without any changes to the mobile and terminal apps to update logic.
Fixes#15278.
I don't believe it's actually been possible for this to be shown in
Zulip in several years; and we just made it more obviously so
(resulting in a linter error).
We now trigger realm day/night logo upload by clicking on realm
day/night logo element itself rather than having a big upload button
and to match our user avatar UI. Added new spinner over the logo
element itself to show while uploading realm logo for both day and
night logos.
Change user avatar spinner implementation to match
realm icon spinner implementation and have common css class
since similar implementation between similar widgets may help
in future deduplication.
The orig_initial_pointer variable was part of the implementation for
ensuring server-initiated reloads preserve the user's selected message
and scroll position (so that they are not disruptive). Previously,
the logic did some unnecessary contortions to ensure the two goals:
* The `pointer.js` logic knows what the server thinks the pointer is.
* The `message_fetch.js` logic knows what anchor to use to center it's
home view fetch.
It's a lot cleaner to do this by not mutating page_params.pointer.
In the past, the anchor message has always been the same as the
pointer, but we're about to change that as part of removing the
pointer entirely.
Using the anchor is logically what we meant, anyway, since we always
want to select a message that's actually within the range we just
fetched.
This was implemented in 2012 to avoid showing a loading indicator for
fetching messages for users with no message history. However, the
Zulip onboarding UI always creates some message history, and fetching
history is fast, so this is likely clutter more than a useful
optimization.
We're migrating to using the cleaner zulip.com domain, which involves
changing all of our links from ReadTheDocs and other places to point
to the cleaner URL.