We have this strange business requirement that the
blue-ish highlights for the current PM go into the
left gutter and all the way to the right edge.
We also have markup that treats the list of PMs
as a list inside the list item for the "Private
messages", which makes sense logically.
Before this change, the padding was done for the
outer top-left `ul`, but that caused the inner PM
rows not to have that padding when you hovered them.
Now we pad each individual list item and/or inner
list item or div.
Fixes#11879.
We now use 10px to the left of major elements in
left sidebar.
And we then explicitly use 19px for the following:
icons in top left
indent for (more conversations)
stream hashtag icons
stream lock icons
We also kill off 2px of gutter that was caused
by whitespace in the HTML (and was slightly messing
up alignment of names beneath "Private messages").
Finally, we make the topic indent a bit more explicit.
The previous gradient must have been from a previous design; it looked kind
of crazy against our current homepage. This widget also appears on /help,
/integrations, and other pages with a variety of different backgrounds, so a
neutral, muted style is probably safest.
The icon change is just because fa-off seems to be broken/missing. Maybe it
was in Font Awesome 3?
The extra padding line is to supercede padding (I assume) unintentionally
added by `.top-links a` to this widget on /help.
In this commit, I've added a feature to unstar all the starred
messages. This is useful, e.g., for folks who are using starred
messages to keep track of things they should come back when next at
their desktop.
The event flow is the standard one for a feature with a confirmation modal:
(1) User clicks on unstar all messages.
(2) We display a confirmation modal; if the user confirms, we send a
request to the backend to clear all starred messages.
(3) The events system sends that UI update back to us, removing the
stars from the UI.
Fixes#11401.
This is a fairly big commit, but at the end
it simplifies a lot of things.
It's difficult to fix highly coupled code in
incremental steps because, well, it's highly
coupled code.
The main thing this does is give each type of
chevron in the left sidebar its own class
* all-messages-arrow (NEW)
* stream-sidebar-arrow
* topic-sidebar-arrow
Before this change, the "All messages" chevron
was using stream-sidebar-arrow, which was a
strange name for something that's not actually
in the stream sidebar. Obviously this was
cargo culted.
There was not much JS to change here--we just
fix the click handler for "All messsages".
And then there's a one-line change to the template,
and the rest is re-organizing the CSS.
The antialiasing decisions we made for the webapp should be constant
over the entire page, not limited to particular subsections or themes.
If we wanted antialiasing, we should do it on the entire page, not
individual random widgets. But it's not clear we actually want to do
it on the entire page. The `-moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale`
setting now happens by default in OSX Mojave (40% world market share
right now and growing), so there's no reason to override it. And
without retina displays, generally, subpixel rendering provides better
results than antialiasing (which overrides subpixel rendering).
Thanks to Anders Kaseorg for advice on this issue.
It seems like 1871d00bb2 renamed `/help/at-mention-a-user` to `/help/mention-a-user-or-group` but missed this link that shows up on the "You haven't been mentioned yet!" screen. Right now it leads to a "no such article page".
The night logo synchronization on the settings page was perfect, but
the actual display logic had a few problems:
* We were including the realm_logo in context_processors, even though
it is only used in home.py.
* We used different variable names for the templating in navbar.html
than anywhere else the codebase.
* The behavior that the night logo would default to the day logo if
only one was uploaded was not correctly implemented for the navbar
position, either in the synchronization for updates code or the
logic in the navbar.html templates.
Guest users will just get an empty list of default streams; we also
hide the "Default streams" organization view from the guest users UI.
This is for consistency with not providing guest users the full list
of streams in an organization.
Changed <h5> to <p>, and removed the special formatting of
.empty_search_text to make this more in line with the formatting we
generally use with empty narrows.
I'm torn about this, since there is good content here. But ultimately I think
* This page is a lot of work to write and maintain.
* In most cases, the right thing is for people to find the page that
explains the full feature. E.g. if you don't know what an "administrator"
is, the page I hope you find is "Roles and Permissions". For bots, it's
"Bots and Integrations". Writing a punchy short summary for a glossary
that does better than that is possible, but not fast.
* People find things via search, e.g. by Googling "What is X in Zulip",
rather than looking for a glossary.
* This page was written more than 3 years ago, before we had 100+ help
articles. So it may have served a purpose in the past that no longer
exists.
After clicking on checkbox saying "Show text only version" UI was rendered
correctly but after refreshing page keeping checkbox checked, emails were
shown without "text only version" but checkbox value remained checked.
Now after refreshing page checkbox value changes to its default value.
For Google auth, the multiuse invite key should be stored in the
csrf_state sent to google along with other values like is_signup,
mobile_flow_otp.
For social auth, the multiuse invite key should be passed as params to
the social-auth backend. The passing of the key is handled by
social_auth pipeline and made available to us when the auth is
completed.
It looked kinda terrible in between the two
user lists.
There is some discussion here (I have to break the
link into two lines to make gitlint happy):
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/
101-design/topic/user.20sidebar.20in.20left/near/697682
We want the search widget, when visible, to be
outside the scroll container for the stream list.
One obvious use case is if you start scrolling, and
then realize it might be less effort to search.
Also, for user search, it already worked this way.
We have to add a couple resizing hooks here, but
it's not necessary to change the actual resize
calculation, since we move the section inside
of #streams_header, which is already accounted
for.
The only markup change here is to add
a `stream_search_section` class. I don't
know why we use `notdisplayed` here instead of
jQuery, or what `input-append` is for, but I
considered them outside the scope of this change.
We can also remove some crufty CSS that was
compensating for it being inside the container.
This change only impacts users who have the setting
to put the user lists in the left sidebar when they
have a narrow window.
First, we move ".right-sidebar-items" as an entire
group.
Second, we append the items to "#left-sidebar"
instead of ".narrows_panel".
The name `bottom_sidebar` was misleading, because it
includes the entire "normal" left sidebar.
It includes the 4 narrow links at the top plus the
stream/topic list.
We now call is narrows_panel.
Note that the left sidebar sometimes also includes
the user list (with a display setting turned on).
And it will eventually include other views.
We also remove an intermediate value in the resize
calculations.
This changes the border-radius to 6px for the tabbed display, which is not
in line with the current Zulip style for border-radius (4px). However 6px
really looks a lot better for this (possibly because it's a bigger box than
most of our other boxes?)
This code will correctly add video call link to the message
textarea based on whether 'Add video call' was selected from
message composition form or message edit form.
The implementation was semi-rewritten by tabbott to remove an
unnecessary global variable, with fixes for the unit tests from
showell.
Fixes#11188.