We should not allow every function who wants to narrow to All
messages to come up with their own method to do so. This
commit makes existing such functions use hashchange library to
do so.
Remove click event on All message button, it already contains
an <a> tag which navigates correctly.
We always use hashchange.go_to_location method now to open the
info_overlay, this makes sure that the url hash are reliable and
hotkeys don't get confused if an overlay is open or not.
We don't want to change hash to "" (this also doesn't navigates
us to 'All messages' view, hence the bug was not noticed.) on
exit of info_overlay.
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
* 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 fixes a bug where you can’t open the same overlay twice in a row
in IE 11, which doesn’t support HashChangeEvent.oldURL; it was exposed
by commit 05be16e051 (late 2018).
While here, parse the hash from oldURL in a less ad-hoc way.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This commit was originally automatically generated using `tools/lint
--only=eslint --fix`. It was then modified by tabbott to contain only
changes to a set of files that are unlikely to result in significant
merge conflicts with any open pull request, excluding about 20 files.
His plan is to merge the remaining changes with more precise care,
potentially involving merging parts of conflicting pull requests
before running the `eslint --fix` operation.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
With webpack, variables declared in each file are already file-local
(Global variables need to be explicitly exported), so these IIFEs are
no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
The comment that jQuery “doesn’t have” this was nonsense: jQuery
supports every event the browser does.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Apparently, we didn't have one of these, and thus had a moderate
number of generally very old violations in the codebase. Fix this and
clear the ones that exist..
The Casper code that I eliminated here seems to be
bogus, in that I don't think it really waited for
all the clicks.
I **think** the intent of the test was to verify that
when you leave settings and go back into it, it remembers
the panel. I was able to verify this manually.
We have an upcoming change that lets us use the
back button after going arrowing through multiple
settings pages.
Without first adding this commit, we would have an
infinite loop when you came back to '#settings' and
then '#settings' would rewrite the url with the current
hash.
Just replacing the browser state allows the browser
to do the right thing.
The history protocol is pretty well supported:
https://caniuse.com/#search=history
We can eliminate the janky `setup_page` methods
and just pass in section from `hashchanged`.
This sets us up to handle browser history more
nicely when you load '#settings' and we could essentially
redirect you to '#settings/your-account' (or similar
things). A future commit will address that.
We also use `launch` as the new entry point, which
is more consistent with other modules.
The goal here was to enforce 100% coverage on
parse_narrow, but the code has an unreachable line
and is overly tolerant of bogus urls. This will
be fixed in the next commit.
We stopped setting this nearly five years ago, as part
of bd9cccffce
The big conditional that I removed here should have
always evaluated to false, as I understand the code.
Presumably either the browsers handle # -> '' redirects
better now, or we address this somewhere else in our
codebase.
This change removes all the complexity around
get_hash_group(), and we now only go into the
"same overlay" logic within Settings or within
Manage Organization, but not between them.
This means if you're in Settings but hit the back
button to something under "#organization" we now
do "more stuff", since we want to err on the side
of reloading sections, etc.
There's not much flicker in my testing, and
this is not a super common transition, anyway.
Even prior to my recent change in settings_panel_menu.js,
we were assigning window.location.hash a value that doesn't
have a '#' prefix. This probably doesn't matter too much
for the browser, but it does confuse our own checks about
whether we're redundantly updating browser history.
Now we prefix the settings hash with '#' and we encorce
this convention with a blueslip error.
Just calling update_browser_history is sufficient
here, and we end up short-circuiting some code
in hashchanged():
* we don't need to set state.old_hash, because
that's what update_browser_history does
* we bypass the is_overlay_check, which is always
false in this context
This diff looks a bit more complicated than it really is.
We had a bug where we'd call subs.change_state for
non-streams-related changes. The bug probably barely
impacted customers, since it's hard to get into that
situation unless you're in "Settings", and then the
code mostly did nothing. There's still a deeper issue
of what we actually do want to for settings changes,
but this fix does not address that.
We invert the conditionals related to internal state
changes, so that we can handle internal state changes.
And we make sure to only call subs.change_state if our
"base" is "streams".
This is mostly extracting the code within the `if`
block, as well as setting `base`, which wasn't used
elsewhere.
Also, the `else` no longer calls `is_overlay_hash`,
which was a redundant check.
This commit prepares the frontend code to be consumed by webpack.
It is a hack: In theory, modules should be declaring and importing the
modules they depend on and the globals they expose directly.
However, that requires significant per-module work, which we don't
really want to block moving our toolchain to webpack on.
So we expose the modules by setting window.varName = varName; as
needed in the js files.
Fixes#9305.
Empty operators are not allowed while parsing narrowing URLs.
`parse_narrow` stops parsing further if it encounters an empty string
operator.
We consistently either pass a `then_select_id` into narrow.activate,
or were using the select_first_unread option. Now, we just compute
select_first_unread based on the value of then_select_id.
There are several ways we open help for keyboard shortcuts,
markdown help, and search operators.
- from the gear menu
- from the compose box
- from the search box
- hitting ? for keyboard help
- arrowing/clicking through the tabs
This just moves the relevant code into a module and changes a
bunch of one-line calls in various places.
Also adds a custom rule to eslint. Since the recommended way of extending
eslint is to create plugins as standalone npm packages, the separate rule
is published as 'eslint-plugins-empty-returns'.
Fixes#8669.
The narrowing option from_reload was only used in
conjunction with use_initial_narrow_pointer, but the
latter option already takes into account whether a
reload happened.
Due to a past refactoring, the from_reload argument to do_hashchange
changed from having true/undefined as the possible values to
true/false instead. The check that sets the from_reload and
first_unread_from_server narrow options was thus incorreclty treating
from_reload of false the same as a from_reload of undefined.
As a result, if the browser had been loaded with a
page_params.initial_narrow_pointer (aka via the background reload code
path), then for the duration of that browser session, every time one
narrowed via a hashchange rather than an explicit click handler (which
apparently includes clicking on a PM thread in the left sidebar), we'd
end up narrowing with a then_select_id of the that initial narrow
pointer, not the correct first unread message.
The fix is simply changing the check for truthiness, not undefined, in
do_hashchange.
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.
This consolidates all actions to close modals into modals.js and
triggers the correct cleaning/collapsing function dependent on what the
data-overlay attribute is labeled as.
It also ensures these all have an e.stopPropagation().
Fixes#4029.
* Created a drafts modal to display/restore/delete drafts
* Created a Draft model to support storing draft data in localstorage
* Removed existing restore-draft functionality
* Added casper and node tests for drafts functionality
Fixes#1717.
This fixes an issue where Array.prototype.split is called on an
undefined instance due to the EventTarget.oldURL property not being
recorded in IE. We fix this by recording it ourselves.
The new subs.close() function should unify all closing events of the
subscriptions overlay. The function also now tracks whether the
subscription overlay is in a closed or open state.
The slugs for PM-with narrows now have user ids in them, so they
are more resilient to email changes, and they have less escaping
characters and are generally prettier.
Examples:
narrow/pm-with/3-cordelia
narrow/pm-with/3,5-group
The part of the URL that is actionable is the comma-delimited
list of one or more userids.
When we decode the slugs, we only use the part before the dash; the
stuff after the dash is just for humans. If we don't see a number
before the dash, we fall back to the old decoding (which should only
matter during a transition period where folks may have old links).
For group PMS, we always say "group" after the dash. For single PMs,
we use the person's email userid, since it's usually fairly concise
and not noisy for a URL. We may tinker with this later.
Basically, the heart of this change is these two new methods:
people.emails_to_slug
people.slug_to_emails
And then we unify the encode codepath as follows:
narrow.pm_with_uri ->
hashchange.operators_to_hash ->
hashchange.encode_operand ->
people.emails_to_slug
The decode path didn't really require much modication in this commit,
other than to have hashchange.decode_operand call people.slug_to_emails
for the pm-with case.
This is a major change to the /#subscriptions page, converting it to
by a side-by-side list of streams and their settings in an overlay.
There are no new features added/removed, but it's a huge changeset,
because it replaces the old navigation logic and moves the stream
creation modal to appear in the right side of this overlay.
Because jQuery passes the actual hashchange event to an onhashchange
handler, the `if reload` checks in the `hashchanged` function were
always returning true, resulting in the wrong logic being used for
computing where to send the user in the event that they edited the
hash in the browser to change their narrow.
When reloading the page we want to narrow to the location that is
restored from the query parameters. This is only done if we ask narrow
to use the first unread message from the server.
(imported from commit b585ef51cbb85788b24d90d831b42c45fd188569)
Behind a feature flag you can now do searches like this:
-pm-with:othello@example.com is:private
The "-" in front of "pm-with" tells us to exclude messages
with Othello from our search. We support "-" in front of
all operators, although the behavior for "-search:" and
and "-near:" doesn't really change in this commit.
Note that the filtering out of "negated" predicates only
happens on the client side in this commit. On the server
side we ignore negated predicates and send back a superset
of the results.
(imported from commit 6cdeaf32f2d493fbbb838630f0da3da880b1ca18)