This helps the common case of not liking our default of having audible
and desktop notifications enabled, and not making users adjust the
settings on every existing stream to fix it.
(imported from commit be75edb2c1385d1bd9a289416e2dffd8007f5e0a)
As part of this, I also made test_basics() have a third
stream that makes false positives in the test less likely.
(imported from commit d5ba64ec9346741818e30abe9e9594788c339fab)
Now that we no longer use tables for our message list, we can
more logically group messages together.
(imported from commit 9923a092f91a45fe3ef06f2f00e23e4e3fb62a37)
This changes Filter.describe and Filter.operator_to_prefix
to handle negated terms correctly.
(imported from commit 673c0d3a5a77784e95772c14e12534ad2daecda2)
Commit "ecf0eb85 Redesign styles for message pane" removed the
right_part class, updates the tests to not use it.
(imported from commit 277eb3748913895b13ab7bdca11e668033c9f9b3)
Remove the options to narrow by topic/person from the menu,
because there are better ways to do this in the UI, and
remove the time travel option, because the "Link to this
conversation" achieves mostly the same effect.
(imported from commit b7e0cfe64c0760e5a7bf7a8c9c05ed1a5b747300)
For the Filter helper functions above, we generally want to
ignore negated search terms, since their existence should
really only impact filter predicates and nothing else on the
JS side. The exception is search, where even the existence
of a negated search needs to be noted to know that we can't
apply a filter locally.
(imported from commit 8bbb410a85fefed549d359e4c779a134ad830c11)
For negated search terms, we weren't explicitly setting
"negated" to false when callers left it undefined, which was
mostly fine, since undefined is falsey, but it is better to
define it explicitly for debugging/testing purposes.
(imported from commit 68a2790b510d17caed8ca11c38188545d1dcc347)
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)
This this removed one forced relayout of the page on unnarrow. This
saves about 100ms for me.
(imported from commit 0755f425abbe3d99b8a99765549a5bbf3c620b9a)
The filter_term() function was supporting the transition
from using tuples for search terms to using dictionaries,
but now all of the JS code should be dictionary-compatible.
(We had already abandoned the tuples safety net on staging,
and a couple days of use have given me confidence we can
pull the shim code.)
The one side effect this change has is that search terms will be
initialized to {} instead of []. This distinction matters
when it comes to calling JSON.stringify on the search terms.
(imported from commit 1fbe11011d8953dbea28c0657cbf88384d343e00)
When we typed "stream:" into the search bar, the empty operand
triggered an error in the Dict class for an undefined key, because
we were using opts[0] as a "defensive" workaround to opts.operand,
but opts.operand of '' is more correct than opts[0] being undefined.
Now we only fall back to opts[0] whe opts.operand is undefined, and
we emit a blueslip error when that happens.
(imported from commit 88a196d3bc3d67689c36bc036f378da744c652f9)
We have shim code that makes our internal narrow operators
support both a tuple interface and an object interface. We
are removing the shim on staging to help expose any dark
corners of the code that still rely on operators being
represented as tuples.
(imported from commit f9d101dbb7f49a4abec14806734b9c86bd93c4e1)
This is yet another change related to phasing out the
[operator, operand] tuple data structure for representing
terms in a narrow.
(imported from commit 508e58fc4eebae8a24a8ae59919ba5d94fc66850)
The JS code can now call stream_data.get_sub_by_id() to get
a sub from a stream_id. Subs have stream_id due to a prior commit,
and we keep track of the mapping in stream_data's subs_by_stream_id
variable.
(imported from commit 409e13d6d2e79d909441a66c85ee651529d15cd2)
The tutorial introduces "engineering" messages that might not
be in the user's normal subscription, and they would get a gray
border if we did not override the stream color. Before this change,
we accomplished this by overriding the core data structure in
stream_data.js. Now we are a bit more future-proof; we only
override stream_color.default_color.
(imported from commit 0d0845b72f766912679f5aa7641ae9a60fdbb4ce)
Add try/catch blocks to get_updates_success and send a blueslip error on
errors we catch. This will let get_updates_success return successfully
so that the next call to get_updates will start immediately.
(imported from commit 44d8b85d9d8e930a5552a5fbf4af1d0e5e8c07e8)
Add a helper to patch_global to change a global and then reset it to the
original value after a test file is complete.
(imported from commit 1b65ff6ea8693ad61b7f18f35dafa942429252a8)
In the early days of the node tests we didn't have an index.js
driver, so each test set it up its own environment. That ship
has long since sailed, so now we just require assert in index.js
as a global and make it so that the linter doesn't complain.
(imported from commit 1ded3d330ff40603cf4dd7c5578f6a47088d7cc8)