This test verifies the following line of code:
$(document).trigger($.Event('subscription_remove_done.zulip', {sub: sub}));
Before this change, the mocking mechanism used `$(document).on(...)`
to set the function that gets called on trigger, but it didn't clear
any of the other handlers.
Since all we care about is making sure that the event gets triggered,
we now just override `$(document).trigger`.
This function was removed in favor of loading everything in
ui_init.js. The asynchronous nature of jQuery 3 document-ready
events may cause an undesirable order in which these are executed.
Unicode emojis when rendered should display canonical short name.
Similarly, the alt text should be of the format `:<short_name>:`.
For both of these we currently display the actual unicode symbol.
As some systems don't have the fonts necessary for displaying them
properly, they are rendered as empty square blocks. This commit also
ensures that the markup generated for emoji generated by canonical
name and by an unicode emoji is same.
Fixes: #5555.
The dispatch.js tests now no longer go through server_events.js,
so the tests are isolated from some of the setup you have to
do for the main event loop. They now directly call into
server_events_dispatch.js.
jQuery's behavior in methods that, because of their nature, don't need to
return anything is to return the element itself in the jQuery object form.
Now the zjquery element is returned when one of these methods is called.
There are some cases when the jQuery dollar
function is called with an element as argument.
If such element has already been created using
zjquery, we should simply return it.
On some developer machines, casper was having trouble clicking on
a hidden button. Added a step to make sure the button was visible
before being clicked on.
Also removed an unnecessary log line.
Instead of having a custom (duplicate) matching function in
search suggestion, it was refactored to use the function in
people.js. This also gets the diacritic-ignoring feature
of the function in people.js.
Fixes#5315.
Having get_full_time produce a date string non-compliant with RFC2822 or
ISO 8601 caused problems when showing edition timestamps on a message's
edit history.
Now it returns an ISO 8601 date string (1978-10-31T13:37:42Z).
Flaskbotrc is a file containing config of all active
outgoing webhook bots. It is used to provide configuration
of all active outgoing webhook bots to zulip-bot-server.
The node tests have purged modules from cache that were
included via things like set_global(), but calling require
directly would leak modules into the next test, which made
a couple tests only work when you ran the whole suite. I
fixed those tests to work standalone. And then I now make
dependencies explicitly clear the require cache before we
require them in namespace.js.
For bots and users who have not logged in for a long time the presence information is not known. For the these users make the presence indicator hidden.
Added a dropdown in the organization settings page with a search-box and
required styles. Also added an element to disable it. Added a method to
populate the dropdown using list_rendering.js. Also altered response to
the event of deletion of the notifications stream on the frontend. On
selection of a new stream or on clicking 'Disable', a patch request is
made with stream-id to /json/realm.
Fixes: #3708.
This involves updating filter.js, mostly. The
tests were updated appropriately for this change,
which also involved changing a caspar test for
narrowing.
This was never a feature in the old search_suggestions
version, so a new helper function for it was added.
Relevant tests were also added, maintaining 100% coverage.
The get_person_suggestions and get_group_suggestions functions
were updated to the new system. Support for negation is also
added in the new system.
Relevant tests were also updated. Also, note that the function
get_private_suggestions was removed, as it was rendered
obsolete by these updates.
Special filter was updated to work even when it is not the first
token in a search query. Furthermore, the default query was
moved around to work with the changes to come for the new
suggestion system.
A test also had to be modified to work with the new system.
Add `remove_alert_word()` function which uses the correct data flow
while removing an alert word.
`alert_words_ui.js` was structured differently from most of the other
settings. It was not using the triggers from the server for running
the success/failure handlers.
We now make it so that $('foo').addClass(whatever) and similar
functions properly return the wrapper object for chaining
purposes. We may eventually want to change the wrapper object
to automatically dispatch to the first child object, but this
should work for now.
Rationale: For the more off-to-the-side edit history view, changes
are easier to digest by highlighting deleted content in red followed
immediately by added and changed content in green.
TODO: Toggle for showing the edited messages without highlighting;
deleted content would not be shown in this view.
The floating_recipient_bar is cloned from recipient_bar elements.
The cloning created elements in the DOM with duplicate id
attributes, specifically <span id="timerender{id}">, which
contains the date of the message stream. The timerender span
will now use class="timerender{id}" instead.
Fixes#4997.
Fixes#5128.
Previously, if we had both a date and a subscribe bookend, they would
appear in one order after new messages were sent (bookend_bottom of
the top group), and another after a reload (bookend_top of the bottom
group). This makes the experience consistently a bookend_top.
Added new file to test stream sort. Specifically,
it tests the `sort_group` function's ability to put
streams into the corect pinned/normal/dormant category,
filter them based on keyword, and sort alphabetically.
We use zjquery now for testing stream_list.js, which runs faster
than the real jQuery and allows some test isolation. The nature
of the test is basically the same, but we don't actually render
templates. Instead of making assertions about the DOM, we are
now making assertions about how the stream lists get constructed
from other elements.
In pm_conversations.js, added function to make a user a PM partner and
another function to check if a user is a PM partner. A PM partner is
someone with whom the user has been in a PM with.
In recent_senders module, added a data structure to hold timestamps of
users' latest message in a topic. Also added a function to compare 2
users based on above timestamp. Added a function to process messages for
the data structure and a call in add_message_metadata. Also added node
tests for insertion of data into recent_senders.senders.
This covers all blueslip errors and warnings
in people.js. These do not need to be tested
to rigorously and just need to be covered to
get people.js to 100% coverage.
We now specifically wait for the length to decrease by one. This seems
like a more deterministic condition to wait on.
Previously we were waiting till the id of the deleted message remained
visible; intuitively, this should have worked but it seems that there
is some race condition that was causing the test to fail sporadically.
We now stub templates.render() to see what data gets passed in
to the template, rather than using jQuery to inspect the DOM that
gets created. This changes the nature of the test to be less about
integration with the templating layer and more about how we pass
data into the template.
To compensate, we add more assertions to the relevant test
in templates.js.
This makes it possible for Zulip administrators to delete messages.
This is primarily intended for use in deleting early test messages,
but it can solve other problems as well.
Later we'll want to play with the permissions model for this, but for
now, the goal is just to integrate the feature.
Note that it saves the deleted messages for some time using the same
approach as Zulip's message retention policy feature.
Fixes#135.
This moves all the code dealing with emoji_picker
navigation and click/enter events to emoji_picker.js.
Some of the code still delegates back to reactions.js
in some way.
The navigate() code really does nothing reaction-specific,
nor does filter_emojis(), nor do some of their helpers.
This was mostly moving code, but I also did some
s/reaction// or s/reaction/emoji/ in names.
This change sets us up to de-duplicate some code. It
changes behavior for the edge case situation where
you had the reaction menu open but then decide to
click on one of the existing reactions. This change
closes the emoji popover, which is probably the
correct behavior.
timerender.js render_now() will always include older
years when rendering the date stamp on the recipient bar
and the date rows above messages.
Fixes#4843.
This reverts commit c7f710b8d4.
Because the back end still stores muted topics fundamentally using
stream name as a key, trying to cut over the client to use stream
id was just making things more brittle. Mutes would work after
renaming the stream, which was progress in the change that we
revert here, but only until page load. The other problem, which
is more severe, is that the order of page loading functions would
cause no mutes to happen at page load time. This could be fixed
to some degree, but we should do a deeper fix on the back end.
This commit changes the key for recent_topics to be a
stream id. For streams that have been renamed, we will now
get accurate data on recent topics and active streams as
long as stream_data.get_stream_id(stream_name) returns a
valid value.
This commit changes stream_data.in_home_view() to
take a stream_id parameter, which will make it more
robust to stream name changes.
This fixes a bug. Now when an admin renames a stream
you are looking at, it will correctly show itself to
be un-muted. (Even with this fix, though, the stream
appears to be inactive.)
Some callers still do lookups by name, and they will
call name_in_home_view() for now, which we can
hopefully deprecate over time.
Rather than having get_stream_li() look up stream id using
stream name, we force the callers to pass in the stream id.
This adds an extra line to most of the callers for now, but
this will eventually change as we fix some of the callers to
have their callers pass in stream_id.
In places where we now call stream_data.get_stream_id() to
get the stream id, we will be more resilient toward stream
renamings, at least until the next reload, since
stream_data.get_stream_id() can resolve old names that
are stored when we process stream-rename events.
We now use stream ids to filter messages in narrowing
situations, instead of doing stream name comparisons.
This partially fixes certain stream-renaming scenarios, since
we will be able to match the stream id for an out-of-date
stream operand, but it doesn't fix some other stuff, such
as the query that the server gets.
This is not a user-facing change, but it starts us down the
path to having the JS client be able to look up old stream
names for situations like people clicking old external links
or for live-update scenarios.
This adds the current_user_has_reacted_to_emoji() helper.
This new helper is easier to use and slightly more efficient
than calling get_user_list_for_message_reaction() and then
indexOf().
This also replaces one call to get_user_list_for_message_reaction()
with a list of user_ids that we already had locally.
The node tests were improved a bit here, including a minor
whitespace fixup.