This shows up when you're not running a Zephyr mirroring bot and lets
you use Webathena to have us run it. Obviously needs more docs.
Current problems include:
* supervisorctl reload ends up recreating /var/run/supervisor.sock
with the wrong permissions, so it only works once in a row before
you need to chmod that.
* /etc/supervisor/conf.d needs to be humbug-writeable; this is a clear
local root vulnerability
* This uses SSH and thus is kinda slow.
(imported from commit 7029979615ffd50b10f126ce2cf9a85a5eefd7a2)
This brings several improvements:
* The Dropbox script won't slow loading our app.
* If it fails to load, no traceback; Dropbox link just won't appear.
* For users with Dropbox disabled (most at this point), no loading at all.
(imported from commit e71ae5790fc85a185e622bdafb350109527b4eee)
The setdefault() and num_items() methods are handy, and it was a
little tough to keep track of which objects were Dicts vs. {}.
(imported from commit 6ca81ac411943c59bef6d6bae39c7641feb5574b)
The click handler for collapsing was too broad, and it overrode
the ability to click to narrow from the recipient bar.
(imported from commit feeaa9becf8e400e319e1a77e5b72a33bb22854c)
Specifically:
* Add and style the sidebar toggle button to the header and remove the
gravatar.
* Add the logic for retracting the left side bar.
* Modify the logic for clicking on the referral pane to prevent it from
closing the sidebar.
* Modify the logic for clicking on the stream filters to prevent them
from closing the sidebar.
* Modify the logic for clicking on the stream settings dropdown and the
user info dropdown to prevent them from closing the sidebars.
(imported from commit 73e00eb834a6e87cb8d659fdcf6c2e06fff3731d)
This is experimental, for staging only. There might be a better
way to model this than dueling force_expand/force_collapse flags,
but it works for now. The code in collapse_recipient_group()
could also be DRYed up relative to expand_summary_row().
(imported from commit 107151d1ecd640970fb7700d41278a003bd1abaa)
This is to set up collapsing, but I think they could be useful
in general, so I'm keeping this is a separate commit.
(imported from commit 0da2b8ef246649f678c7cb6664ee78bf36aca076)
(The approach has been simplified to look for summary_row in
the DOM, which makes muted and summary features work off the
same code.)
(imported from commit 4fa3d6ae5ad7bbac5958e60ecffb368d6ef29d2e)
As part of this commit:
* Add and style a top right button that controls the sidebar
* Add the necessary styles for the right sidebar when it's in that mode.
* Add the logic for controlling the sidebar expansion
* Modify the logic for prevent default click events to generally
hide popovers correctly.
(imported from commit ca8063f6c62b436799f952e88541ff0ae8ba85fe)
This change will allow us to test the muting feature on
staging. Any topic named "muted" will automatically be
muted. You can also mute any other topic on the console:
muting.mute_topic('devel', 'ios');
current_msg_list.rerender();
More UI around this experiment will be coming soon, as well
as support for muting entire streams.
The muting module keeps track of which topics are muted, but a
user can expand muted messages, and once that happens, the
messages are marked with the "force_expand" flag that gets
persisted to the back end.
Muted messages are rendered in similar fashion to the summarized
rows, and as part of unifying some of that code, we have
made it so that expanding a summarized section doesn't remove
individual flags related to summaries; instead, the messages
get the force_expand flag set.
(imported from commit acee4190e63813d46850415c41ff8ebfae4a6953)
Home/All/Private/Starred/@-mentions lost their left padding due to a
mistake in 700b444. Restored here.
(imported from commit 9a4d5ab5d376e64ba82802097c30449c6544a5e9)
The old API took a dictionary; the new function works for one
person at a time, which allowed us to clean up the calling code
in ui.set_presence_list.
(imported from commit 0ae9d01491238d32915572c7efebf476d05fed4b)
I regressed this recently, thinking that all our operators are
strings, but I forgot about the "near:" operator used in the
"Narrow messages around this time" feature. The user facing
symptom was that the search bar showed up empty instead
of saying near:50, which might actually be the better
behavior, but it certainly was not intentional. :)
(imported from commit fcb93cecbe9a052bb9bc1af7fcac5aecaba5aafb)
I'm trying to move well-isolated methods out of narrow.js, so that
narrow.js is more strongly focused on UI/ajax interactions and
big, heavy lifting stuff. The logical home for parse/unparse
seemed to be Filter, and they brought along two private methods
with them. The big code moves involved trivial follow ups
like s/exports/Filter/.
(imported from commit ace0fe5aa1c7abce0334d079ba9eb8d9a57bd10f)
Have ui.set_presence_list() only touch the presence list.
Before this change, it was calling update_unread_counts(), which
has a bunch of side effects unrelated to the presence list.
(imported from commit 690f754d78874a03fa36f8ff8765d5a63e431d28)
This was broken in two ways:
1. Commit ad59d6f78042ce89, "Make the left sidebar and right sidebar
more consistent", pushed last Monday, changed the markup for the right
sidebar without changing a selector in stream_list.js that was looking
for the old markup.
2. Even then, whenever new user presence information came in, we would
rerender the user list and blow away the unread counts. This commit
patches around that by updating unread counts after rendering the user
list. I'm not sure what broke this or how it was working before.
(imported from commit 53ed40139e257e44411e918d1ecdce3a49e9ee51)
Trac #1479
All our typeaheads use this, but I made it an option that must be enabled
explicitly since it is not default bootstrap behavior.
(imported from commit 97852dc407d1f6dbe46b5fdd2c56d3ed8c6718d2)
This is like Python's dict.setdefault. I don't love the name, but
the consistency is nice.
We have lots of places where we do things like:
if (! dict.has('foo')) {
dict.set('foo', []);
}
var arr = dict.get('foo');
arr.push(3);
We can now write:
var arr = dict.setdefault('foo', []);
arr.push(3);
(imported from commit b8933809c69ba47ec346ed51d53966793403e56c)
This helps make our statuses more meaningful and should resolve trac #1534.
As part of this, we lower OFFLINE_THRESHOLD_SECS to 1.1̅6 minutes and
mark the user as idle after 5 minutes.
(imported from commit ee6b1ad203554a84b11e16c4c6195be9df5bcf4f)
This was caused by a branch I was working on conflicting with the
stream_data.js split.
(imported from commit 995dcf1412114bd36404b8c7ef66eb6f1e89648a)
keys() and other methods that implicitly return keys return the
casing used for the most recent set()
(imported from commit 47cac13c2b928fd19b07c44fd1504426fb36e3d8)
This means that we no longer need to unmunge keys at the expense of
having to store the original key.
(imported from commit 958c33c806b8b399e9a9290e4f14ef119d923c14)
This changes the mit.edu access rules from:
* Susbcriber list and inviting users to streams are unavailable
to
* Susbcriber lists and inviting users to streams are only available
for invite-only streams
streams must still be made invite-only manually.
This both cuts down on the amount of code that is different between
the mit.edu user experience and the standard one, as well as paving
the way for us to invite-only streams for zcrypt.
(imported from commit 24e0e85428608c05c89eeea349338dd392e5489a)
The function narrow.unparse() is used in a bunch of places in
the search suggestion code, and now it no longer lower cases
operands. This change contributes to fixing trac #1659.
(imported from commit 6b44b8a818482b5c8b4f9a45bc7d3a9d21e04eba)
Streams are converted to their "official" names now.
Topics are not canonicalized at all.
All other operands continue to be lowercased.
Since we don't lowercase stream/topic at the parsing stage,
we have to modify the predicate function to do the lowercasing
of stream/topic to enable case-insensitive comparisons. This
is slightly more expensive. The server-side predicate
functions are already case-insensitive.
(imported from commit 286f118c6c3ff9d23b37c7f958cab4c0eacd5feb)
This can be squashed with the prior commit or subsequent commit,
or it can just stand on its own, but it's part of transitioning
to a functional change in the next commit.
(imported from commit 155a0cdd28f851810fbedfef1a306e3190bf1c34)
If we have a stream named "Denmark" and we're narrowed to it,
then use "Denmark" as the default stream name in the compose box
even if the narrow operators are lowercase.
(imported from commit e9f06b7307c73231aa887dc95849e0307984e6f0)
This function returns the stream's actual name, if we can get it;
otherwise, it's the identity function.
(imported from commit 7a981adba9632d6c6eba54cb6514a9226d1e83e8)
We had a duplicate and incorrect check on if a stream was in your home
view, which caused us to not display Home unread counts in the sidebar
/ notification bar / Dock on page load.
(imported from commit db27cf9091f8b47200b025f03a26c4fe82701882)
Users were getting confused about why the unread count in the sidebar
/ notification bar / Dock was different from what the bankruptcy modal
said, so only show them the true server count until they've made a
decision.
(imported from commit 71d376cd4a85749ccf49936b251e6b8ac21361b7)
This change would allow anyone in the realm to set a topic for a "no topic"
message. As soon as the message topic is set, only the sender can change it again.
(imported from commit 0a91a93b8fd14549965cedc79f45ffd869d82307)
The new implementation makes add_topic() be O(1). We incur
the cost of sort() in topics_seen_for(), but that's only called
in the typeahead widget, and I think the typical number of topics
should be manageable here.
(imported from commit 0e332301b2e44b4465bf7a1d93ae525a8d17a6b6)
Specifically:
* Fix the settings menu positioning and appearance
* Restyle menu and add arrow on top
* Remove labels from new message buttons in narrow windows and adjust the close button on the composition pane
(imported from commit 586753b6526289b32ec0a90b62d8b2ac1c8182cd)
This partially reverts d3c28b17859cacd49b7db9f8784d4b8b9069e1ff.
It is necessary to call update_floating_recipient_bar from _fade_messages and
_want_normal_display because they are called after opening/closing the compose
box. There is no scrolling there, so it is not otherwise updated. It is not
necessary to call from update_rendered_messages as it is not called on
changes of the fade state.
Related: Trac #1682
(imported from commit e2528f8c8827b7e2a135d7fc2b53e9e8162799b0)
I haven't filed an issue about this since I just quickly found and
tracked down the bug, but the STR were:
1. Subscribe to stream foo
2. Hide foo from your home view
3. Unsubscribe from stream foo
4. Unhide other subscribed streams you've hidden from home view, if any
The "All messages" link would stay, although it should go away in this
case. The apparent cause was an incorrect assumption (when implementing
this feature) that the stream_info dict only contains subscribed
streams; in fact, we also populate it with streams you used to subscribe
to.
(imported from commit 67f95c8c8a211a4943a2de394919d15a0d5435d0)
Specifically:
* Remove min width setting for the main div as it is no longer necessary.
* Change max width for the app to 1200 and adjust top margin on the message pane
(imported from commit 846dd3dcd7798efa615e15c61681b0ab7465f5e3)
Once you enter a view, the last n messages will be exempt from
summarization, to give the users a little more context. Any
subsequently arriving messages will also be exempt.
We will try n=5 at first.
(imported from commit 3e6fe58109e692389bf02dde2230d788b5818d52)
For web pages, the initial favicon is the same as the favicon we
set for no unread messages and the initial page title is the same
as the page title we set for no unread messages. However, for the
OS X app, the dock icon does not get its badge updated on initial
page load. If the badge icon was wrong right before a reload and
we actually have no unread messages then we will never execute
bridge.updateCount() until the unread count changes. Therefore,
we now ensure that bridge.updateCount is always run at least once
to synchronize it with the page title.
(imported from commit 5d1269c62c1c3190aea96ef6f96c46acdb9fdf9c)
Dict.each() allows to iterate through values and keys of a Dict.
The callback function is passed value as the first parameter to
be similar to _.each()'s calling sequence.
(imported from commit e745e8b5d2f167b8b8acf7542b767494e354b037)
This fixes#1682, a recent regression that came out of
a5a47e13fc9d, which introduced the update_rendered_messages()
function in compose_fade.js. The original implementation
was finding the table row for a message, but not the table
row for its recipient bar. Now we style both elements.
(imported from commit a9628df0b03f79a24dfa68f4f2061eda2ca8ecea)
The calls to ui.update_floating_recipient_bar() were brought over
from compose.js, and it turns out they just complicate scrolling,
since we already call the function in the scroll handler.
(imported from commit d3c28b17859cacd49b7db9f8784d4b8b9069e1ff)
See trac #1676. Topic autocompletes were case insensitive
w/r/t to topic itself, but if a stream was called "Denmark"
but the compose box's stream field had "denmark", then we
wouldn't suggest any topics.
(imported from commit c8296c166115bb96023026da212f73a243432305)
Move zulip.subject_dict into composebox_typeahead.seen_topics,
and encapsulate the use of seen_topics inside composebox_typeahead
with add_topic() and topics_seen_for().
(imported from commit 2bc2d1714fabdc07a661cbf815d14b36a08990e2)
This lets us avoid popping up a separate browser window (which would
not currently work in the desktop app).
This closes Trac #1673.
(imported from commit eb1990d8021600fc4d3870f6ec3a28f7111036c3)
This resolves trac #1675, without introducing the problem that
caused us to set the immediate flag in the first place. (Some
commits just prior to this eliminate some slowness with rendering
by taking the debounced function out of the code path.)
(imported from commit 8c72f25a9d5eb38376957f222b9413d3167fa386)
These calls were expensive and unnecessary. We already update
fade/unfade classes deeper in the call stack, when we render
the messages inside message_list.js.
(imported from commit 08fe028462b6d4569d9798a290dd7b26eb21fb01)
The call to compose_fade.update_faded_messages() in message_list
caused us to traverse every message in the current table, which
was extremely inefficient. Now we call the newly created
compose_fade.update_rendered_messages(), which only fades/unfades the
messages passed in as the first parameter.
(imported from commit a5a47e13fc9daeedd0899b2cfb02beb3f6b8cd0a)
e.g., from a comment in the commit:
// Execute the conditional code if all conditions are true.
// Example usage:
// {{#if_and cond1 cond2 cond3}}
// <p>All true</p>
// {{/if_and}}
We'll use this for the email forwarding UI, but it may also be
generally useful, and easy to generalize to OR.
(imported from commit da601f94d9da300213ff46be50255135c014eca0)
This has the amusing side effect of showing all the Zulip bots in the
administration view because none of them have the is_bot set.
(imported from commit cdec19d2109c092018c1f331aa32f345d1587683)
We now show a list of users and allow you to deactivate a user using the
same process as `python manage.py deactivate_user`.
We add a new menu item accessible from the gear icon which will eventually
have much more than just this, but we have a good start here.
Here we also add a property to UserProfile which determines whether you're
eligible to access the administration panel, and then have code which shows
the menu option if so.
This introduces a new JS file, admin.js.
(imported from commit 52296fdedb46b4f32d541df43022ffccfb277297)
We remove the calls to clear_box()/hide_box() and start(),
so that we don't mutate a bunch of UI elements needlessly.
Everything that start() does either never made sense in a
just-after-message-sent context, or it was necessary prior to
this fix only because of what happened in clear_box() or
hide_box().
This change closes out trac #1672, "Clean up always-open code."
(imported from commit bedaa719eb05e166a4bac562784da0cce8859700)
One of the calls was obviously a typo dup, and the other
call is already covered by clear_box().
(imported from commit 448dc4c0f265cc7260ea08f0468a7d1440903e3c)
Due to the code removed in this diff, we would put you
back to your original reply stream/topic/sendee
(imported from commit 6e1f4666e3b32b057e692e015782780f7c734445)
The flag has been set to true for a while, so we removed
the flag and a bit of dead code associated with it. This
change should not affect any functionality on any realm.
(imported from commit 8d457f52584173994d0e5e83ca326f892cd90057)
Use information from the server to figure out if we should prompt for
bankruptcy, rather than trying repeatedly inside load_more.
(imported from commit ccb8cb1ce482b8bf3d343e7324fef7981880282d)
We instead implemented the ~desired functionality here using the
API and a bot to make a totally read-only, static, slowly-updating
view into the Zuliverse.
This is the moral equivalent of reverting deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9
(imported from commit 9d743fe82f197b37f005e5a038f77cc4b8566024)
1) The class Filter now lives in its own module.
2) The function canonicalized_operators() is now a class method on Filter.
3) The function message_in_home moved to filter.js and became private.
4) Various calling code had to change, of course.
5) Splitting out Filter helped simplify a few tests.
(imported from commit e41d792b46d3d6a30d3bd03db0419f129d0a2a7b)
* We now clear the validation errors when the input box is de-focused
* We make the left sidebar height accommodate the validation error messages
(imported from commit 4b39bfd3e8e8dd707722492a3f98967ee4ccf0ab)
To get to the bottom of the too-much-fading regression,
it was necessary to clean up the code, which was overly
complicated by multi-purposed functions.
The API for compose_fade now has these functions:
set_focused_recipient
start_compose
clear_compose
update_message_list
update_faded_messages
Internally there is now a notion of "normal display",
so e.g. when you want a normal display, we call
_diplay_messages_normally() internally, which removes the
faded/unfaded classes from all messages.
(imported from commit 7eb2b0a163f29d9ebae26661f432fecc7c331e4c)
Previously we would just discard the results of get_old_messages,
which meant that any messages sent either while you were doing the
tutorial or that you started out with (as in the case of the CUSTOMER3
experiment) would be lost until you reloaded.
(imported from commit f5280c091ab6ed7c2af6eb8fe49c0fa6b997ac97)
This makes fade/unfade start sooner (good), but it might
re-introduce some typing sluggishness (bad).
(imported from commit 4e3112ed1ac931f2931182f91b60567ef2d72695)
When starting a compose, call compose_fade.set_faded_messages,
which will immediately do fade/unfade logic, whereas before
the code path went thru debouncing logic.
(imported from commit 7d0b30435be32a7132dbf05bf064b03b925a2d42)
Move code from compose.update_fade() into
compose_fade.set_focused_recipient(), which makes it
so that we only have to send the msg_type.
(imported from commit c17665d9f34f525bdedcd36d39d3a112fa36a914)
The code in unfade_messages() is O(N) over the number of
messages, but a simple flag allows us to track the fact that
all messages are unfaded, so we can short circuit the O(N)
logic in many cases.
A typical scenario now would be that you start typing a
stream while the topic is still empty. Modulo debouncing,
every keystroke now leads to a call to unfade_messages(),
but this change only does real work the first time.
(imported from commit da07cf408bbdbf5b381ff3ec33a5e05e34eef5b5)
The compose_fade has three public exports:
set_focused_recipient
unfade_messages
update_faded_messages
All code was pulled directly from compose.js, except for the
one-line setter of set_focused_recipient. The focused_recipients
variable that used to be in compose.js was moved to compose_fade.js,
hence the need for the setter.
(imported from commit 462ca5d0d0bd58612d0197f3734a8c78de8c6d30)
"Kiosk mode" is a "read-only" Zulip suitable for embedding into
an iframe on another site. I say "read-only" in quotation marks,
because the account is still a fully-fledged active account on
the server, and we just tear out a bunch of stuff in Javascript
(that a malicious user could easily re-enable).
So in that sense, it's not actually safe in security-sensitive
environments -- malicious users logged in via kiosk mode
can do anything the kiosk-mode user can do.
(We need this functionality for the customer3 realm specifically;
we'll possibly just tear this code back out once that experiment
has run its course.)
(imported from commit deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9)
This fixes Trac #1567.
This is kind of a big hammer approach, though. If we did support
spellcheck on other platforms (without doing more work), this might
actually potentially disable it.
But we don't, so this is mostly a non-issue for now.
(imported from commit 74dcb42b19c37e1e8d1e9a2b265e1e6ae0cc2c67)
There are also one or two places we don't need to use it for security
purposes, but we do so for consistencey.
(imported from commit aa111f5a22a0e8597ec3cf8504adae66d5fb6768)
util.enforce_arity takes a function and returns a new version which
throws an error if an incorrect number of arguments (as determined by
the function prototype) are passed.
(imported from commit 20e69a6dc7b6f8455726ab4fae8d5b7b04dc4103)
If you search for "hello", then the word "hello" will once again
be highlighted yellow in the messages.
(imported from commit 172a40f1e288f9947ab3bfbff82b4a2f5ba5cecb)
This fixes trac #1357, which says that some users get annoyed
when the system keeps generating the same color for them, which
would happen if they didn't like #76ce90 and kept picking a
new color for their streams.
(imported from commit 0fdb726aad4009332cc056a5e98bb39e01ef414c)
Instead of splicing up a cloned copy of stream_assignment_colors
every time somebody uses a color, we just rebuild a hash
of used_colors from our subscribed streams when we need to assign
a color, and we avoid calling into stream_color.pick_color() when
a stream already has a color.
This change has a slight functional impact in the situation where
a user unsubscribes some streams during their session, because
we weren't "reclaiming" colors before on unsubscription, but the
simple approach gets that for free.
(imported from commit adf360365bdf1ae9db99c533a0bde62d91f5dfe8)
This is a pure refactoring that mostly just moves code from
subs.js to the new stream_color.js and updates module references
accordingly. In order to prevent introducing some exports,
update_stream_color was given an additional "sub" parameter
and update_stream_sidebar_swatch_color was given an "id"
parameter.
Killed off unused initial_color_fetch var.
(imported from commit b7644ce67f50d31fb46f564d758d661eea776aa6)
One of the ugly parts of message_list.js is how it re-uses the message objects
from the server to hold handlebars template parameters. These objects are
shared between different message lists and re-renders, but are mutated by the
rendering process. The `dom_id` attribute is normally unset on summary rows,
and should not be used in the template. But when a message comes in with a
`dom_id` from another render, it can end up on the summary row, breaking
`rows.get()`.
(imported from commit ef6af65d5e995dffbd7234547786d6ea861920da)
Fixes the blueslip error on "i" in empty narrow.
Also removes a then-uncessary check from do_narrow_action as suggested
by acrefoot.
(imported from commit 10b1f702b535b4eef54e500ccef93b6a5280e953)
Summarized messages are not shown and cannot be selected. If
`opts.use_closest === false` and you try to select a summarized
message, we still have to use the closest instead of failing.
Eventually, we'll make summary rows selectable, but that would be
rather involved since selections are managed by ID, summaries exist only
in the DOM, and many parts of the code get the selection and expect
it to be a message.
(imported from commit 998c4f24aece84528cc9da53a47f9e4f5391702d)
On a page load or reload, the browser will, at an idle time, scroll to
the top of the page. We can't intercept this browser-induced scroll,
so to make sure it doesn't in interfere with our scrolling to the
correct place in your message feed, we let the browser scroll happen
before the work we do on page load.
(imported from commit f5f441ab90bcdb8404e05caea3c6da81a3a6fc1e)
This commit makes keep_pointer_in_view() less aggressive when
the pointer is toward the top of the screen. If the pointer is toward
the top of the screen, then as long as it's fully on the screen, we
don't pull the rug out from under the user and change the pointer.
An important benefit of this change is that we fix trac #1608,
which was a bug where autoscrolling interacted with
keep_pointer_in_view() to push messages past the top of the screen
before they were read.
(imported from commit e39926df99bfaedd5c0757f1241887ccd9b93fab)
The helper functions now return true when a message is on
screen, not when it's off screen, and the names have been
changed accordingly. I also eliminated the at_end parameter,
which was kind of abstract, by having message_is_far_enough_up
and message_is_far_enough_down handle those details.
(imported from commit cdb1543e430f49f23eb1b3a88d9aaff95ce7ca74)
* Move the state into a closure to duplicate it for multiple queues
* Use _.debounce instead of manual setTimeout fiddling
* Have it handle manipulating the message flags
(imported from commit 938f51fd666131a3cec5901d3f3fdd39e203b462)
Functions were supposed to check that messages were unread before
passing them to process_read_messages, but some didn't.
The `mark_messages_as_read` function was essentially that, so
take that name.
(imported from commit 2917fe30d2defb8a047ec32e1bc70d379779276b)
When you read messages in a narrow and then un-narrow, collapse
adjacent messages read in the narrow into a summary row that can
be clicked to expand those messages.
Scoped to staging with feature flags.
The implementation of this within our current MessageList is rather ugly.
(imported from commit bcb3a39d8c0c334136fe86318f18ead03f0f50bf)
Adding a span for CSS reasons in the presence list indicator
broke the click handler if you clicked the presence circle directly.
(imported from commit 1aa28755d849a1f2a5a06aeb4cc27ca368730c35)
If you entered "stream:Denmark " in the search box, we would show
you two suggestions for "stream Denmark", despite our duplicate
detection, because we didn't canonicalize the suggestion that is
literally based off the user typed query, and so the other way
of generating the "stream Denmark" suggestion created a duplicate.
Now all the suggestions we generate are canonicalized, so the
generalized duplicate detection can work.
(imported from commit 52bf08ccf9bb2e2260ca8c20690169aead3732ab)
This was introduced in a71867c2435790, intended to fix#1287.
Very subtle bug. The problem was that we were attaching a click handler
to two selectors, a link, and a div that the link is inside of.
Since the link was a descendant of the other selector, clicking the link
created TWO click events, and the second click on a stream box while
already narrowed to that stream jumped you to the end.
We should be careful of this in the future — never attach an event
handler to two selectors, one of which is contained in the other.
(imported from commit f428f593280e80c90b2665d1dfbff1df8a39bd35)
When you are narrowed and hit "New stream message", the topic
will autofill. This broke during the subject-to-topic
transition.
(imported from commit a9b471884c5cdae449e02ce7aa782add4a178077)
For now, we just get emails about referrals that we have to follow up
on manually.
I don't love using the name "referral" in some places and "invite" in
others, but we already use the verb "invite" to mean something else
and "invite" is a canonical noun.
(imported from commit 0814c18395952fcdef234c1584984f71ca1b6f37)
This restores the feature that hitting down when you are at the
last message automatically centers the last message. This is not
a pure revert, because some additional code now goes through
navigate.down.
(imported from commit 2db1f247692ba068613a2d6c93f18ca7c13a16b8)
We now only suggest "Home" if you have an empty search box (suggestion #1),
or if you are typing "Home". Before we'd show it as a way to get back
from various narrows. This is trac #1596.
(imported from commit 9228bf45e9aaf9912d83efdf70338abb4b7e054f)
Bug was introduced by 9152e6e128e0ac38d97d893cb8243e3b9185351b, which
requests gravatars at 2x size (for retina displays).
They are now 25px, which is a little on the small side, but will do for
now. Properly centered.
(imported from commit 769b71101d62206cde1341b9b6b11fbb7925ae28)
We always intended to move the pointer up when you were at the
top of the viewport and scrolling up, and we always intended to
move the pointer down when you were at the bottom of the viewport
and scrolling down. We didn't intend to move the pointer up
when you were at the bottom, or vice versa. This commit fixes
that bug, simplifies the code, and inlines the code into ui.js.
(imported from commit 77e2ace9d2fc1025e1349e3be13c76c3a397fd38)
We had a feature that if you hit the down arrow key when you
were at the last message, it would recenter you. Waseem has bought
into temporarily removing this feature. Justifications:
1) We can always put it back.
2) Autoscrolling makes it less relevant.
3) The feature complicated the code a bit.
4) The feature worked different for End than down arrow, due to
a FIXME.
5) It might have been a misfeature for users that want more
control over their own scrolling.
6) You can achieve the same essential effect by using PgDn
or space.
(imported from commit fa6874bb5d29d7057bb1601f0b6d577bac1272c7)
Moved 400+ lines out of search.js into search_suggestion.js. This
leaves search.js primarily responsible for lots of little DOM
interactions, whereas search_suggestion is more about data.
(imported from commit 53d08b29367c0172e483064f213538d45098279e)
1. Change code comment in search.get_suggestion.
2. Remove side effects from search.get_suggestions.
The function get_suggestions() was updating a module-scoped variable
called search_object, but now it returns a dictionary to its caller.
3. Greatly reduce the scope of the search_object var in search.js.
I also clarified the comment around it a bit. We could squeeze
the scope of search_object even further by using a function wrapper, but
this is a big enough win for now.
(imported from commit 4b633dd30ab45d24b85ea1d10df27df5aaa0c959)
For legacy reasons this function used to have convert item to
search_string via the search_object hash, because we used to
have an overly convoluted data model. The mid-July-2013
refactoring on search.js made the data model simple, and this
little bit of cleanup follows up on that.
(imported from commit aeea629862e4307897f24eaa5fc364f2b12a7c52)
This is a bit wasteful on most systems, but will result in their
looking pretty sharp on Retina displays.
(I also go and actually fix up the size we request for a bunch of
these so that they actually match the size of the gravatar in the
document -- previously we were requesting a size 30 gravatar when we
were displaying it in a size 25 space, which leads to unnecessary
ugliness upon resize.)
(imported from commit 9152e6e128e0ac38d97d893cb8243e3b9185351b)
Gone are the days of having to laboriously look up the Unicode
for each icon when you need it!
(imported from commit 35ce9c2626ac1ff0b5f4e7d6679129e8d533033e)
This reverts a prior commit, but the earlier commit is fine
functionally; the earlier commit was a temporary measure.
Revert "Use POST, not PATCH, for patching bots."
This reverts commit c3146b23d5d7d134c2b80507eb87033ca375a4db.
(imported from commit ebfcb2bae72c11767f9750412440d40b7a2a4995)
* Only pop up on mouseover if you haven't completed the step previously,
and only on the first mouseover.
* Dismiss the popover if you click anywhere but the link
Trac #1471
(imported from commit 08904be59c15526f88a2633ebd6f2a046ec62197)
Now the @ has to follow a space, newline or certain punctuation, or be
at the beginning of the message. This addresses the frequent complaint
that typing an email address e.g. scott@zulip.com is hard, because after
the @, it would try to autocomplete.
(imported from commit 043953be3928b0acf2a4ab2b4dd1a80e1a1aa882)
Mark messages as read when with the pointer, but mark all messages
read if the last message is visible.
(imported from commit 4c1a928bd6966111f0f34c5207723656b5f193b9)
In the future, this could come from the server to enable individual
experiments on a per-realm basis.
(imported from commit 8fd1ba1910b3cfd131f58bab8efbd11a42053bc3)
The close() method will let you release handlers, as well as
doing everything clear() does.
(imported from commit 3a67c3f2226918cee10cf43598e0408fb186408a)
The set_up_file_input() function now returns an object to the user
with a clear field. This object will grow soon.
(imported from commit 7b3761eafddb392bd2c84a1685aa8d1811028a0f)
This is a temporary expedient measure to work around our
PATCH not supporting file uploads in our current Django setup.
(imported from commit c3146b23d5d7d134c2b80507eb87033ca375a4db)
This is a compromise between the old color when selected and when not
selected. It makes the border a little easier to see while still being
subtle.
(imported from commit 7177d8f688af3de15f3e309d6a9c7c248acb1db4)
Since we no longer change the selected message's background color, it
doesn't make sense for these other colors to still change when the
message is selected.
(imported from commit a7c387e7d390b7f2973dc6bd3168651d88880139)
Code prior to this commit was functionally working, but semantically
flawed — returning false does not short-circuit _.each like it does with
$.each. It now uses _.every, as suggested by Steve.
In addition I renamed the function to be more descriptive, added a
comment, and eliminated needless double negation.
(imported from commit b0666dfa01b2677b4eaf577fe9ced90ed0db2438)
They are synonyms, and Zukeeper consensus is that _.any makes it clearer
what the function does.
(imported from commit 847383e27ccefeaff1ecff15f4cb4177c9e40c25)
The previous regex didn't escape the period in '.d' and was doing a
case-sensitive match to find the base stream name.
(imported from commit 43ef13733987e50dcead06b7bd3e768cb4395998)
In a few cases the $.each was doing something imperatively that was
terser and easier to understand by using a different Underscore method,
so a few of these I rewrote.
Some code was using the fact that jQuery sets `this` in the callback to
be the item; I rewrote those to use an explicit parameter.
Some code was using $(some selector).each(callback). I converted these
to _.each($(some selector), callback).
One function, ui.process_condensing, was written to be a jQuery $.each
callback despite being in a totally different module from code using it.
I noticed this and updated the function's args.
(imported from commit bf5922a35f257c168cc09ec1d077415d6ef19a03)
Extract some local variables to set up the next refactoring, where
we can parameterize the function.
(imported from commit 1c2801131c19a54713a0d5c2cc26c419412339b0)
The option caused some race conditions on Firefox, and it is
really made moot by the naturalSearch option anyway.
(imported from commit dc7080c905ced9b2f4ad4275d82549acf09a59f7)
This covers most of the module's functionality, with special
emphasis on lines that use underscore.js (_.each and _.filter).
(imported from commit 074181a0273286a258504be634bdd1cead2eecd5)
The width setting was unintentional, and it interferes with
the inline-block settings for the image and bot info.
(imported from commit 741c82829efed00b6d47badcf14b26223b47a7a9)