User was able to click delete button multiple time which could cause
multiple delete requests. This commit disables and hides the delete
message button after the first click and shows a spinner until http
the delete request responds.
Also adds a casperjs test to ensure that spinner becomes visible and
delete button becomes invisible after clicking on delete button for
first time and hides spinner and show delete buttton when message is
deleted.
Fixes: #11219.
This fixes a section of code that hasn't really
been turned on yet. We decided to rename
"info" to "status_text", and I apparently missed
this. We don't have any UI to set these yet,
so it was a harmless bug.
I'll try to get some better test coverage on this
when I tweak the buddy list to show user status.
This commit takes away the ability for non-admin members to create
streams where only admins can post messages by hiding the option from
them.
Fixes#11290.
You can now pass in an info field with a value
like "out to lunch" to the /users/me/status,
and the server will include that in its outbound
events.
The semantics here are that both "away" and
"status_text" have to have defined values in order
to cause changes. You can omit the keys or
pass in None when values don't change.
The way you clear info is to pass the empty
string.
We also change page_params to have a dictionary
called "user_status" instead of a set of user
ids. This requires a few small changes on the
frontend. (We will add "status_text" support in
subsequent commits; the changes here just keep
the "away" feature working correctly.)
We had a bug where if you started typing a message
and then used quote/reply (after the fact), we
would overwrite the user's original message.
The bug was kind of subtle--the internal call
to "respond" to the message would select the message
text, and then `smart_insert` would replace the
selection, unless it was Firefox.
Note that we now also allow you to cross-post
replies, which is a plausible scenario, although
possibly unintentional at times, too. I'm erring
on the side of giving the user control here, but
I'll add a warning in the next commit. Our compose
fade feature should also prevent unintentional
mixes here, too.
We often need to go to the server to get raw content.
The exceptions are messages for which we've already
fetched the raw content for some other reason (maybe
a previous quote-and-reply) or which are locally echoed.
Whether we can get the raw content locally or from
the server, the replace_content() logic is the same.
NOTE: If you revert this commit, you want to revert
the immediately prior commit as well. The history
is that Ishan made some improvements to the widget,
but there were some minor bugs. I decided not
to squash the commits together so that the git
history is clear who did what. (In particular, I
want questions about the JS code to come to me if
somebody does `git blame`.)
Anyway...
This is a fairly significant rewrite of the polling
widget, where I clean up the overall structure of
the code (including things from before the prior
fix) and try to polish the prior commit a bit as
well.
There are a few new features:
* We tell "other" users to wait for the poll
to start (if there's no question yet).
* We tip the author to say "/poll foo" (as
needed).
* We add edit controls for the question.
* We don't allow new choices until there's
a question.
This also fixes few unusual UI issues like an invitation got failed when
certain emails can't be invited then the error box is left with "warning"
even when next request got succeed and another case when invitation got
succeed after failing it's still reported with "alert-error" class alert
banner.
It's no longer used, as can be seen in
2d52463b61, in past we use `type` for
specifiying whether status is 'subscriptions-status' or else, which isn't
used now, hence `type` is removed here.
This reverts the temporary fix done in commit
46f4e58782 and replaced it with the fix that
non-admins should be able to see a dropdown to select a non-admin type of
invited user i.e. normal member or guest user.
This commit fixes a bug that caused:
1: A valid full name on an onboarding form to be cleared after an
invalid submission.
2: Incorrectly cleared name populated from LDAP which was janky from
UX perspective.
Ideally we should disable name change for LDAP as next login
will overwrite any changes but I think that can be done in a
separate PR.
Fixes: #10867.
On the backend, we extend the BlockQuoteProcessor's clean function that
just removes '>' from the start of each line to convert each mention to
have the silent mention syntax, before UserMentionPattern is invoked.
The frontend, however, has an edge case where if you are mentioned in
some message and you quote it while having mentioned yourself above
the quoted message, you wouldn't see the red highlight till we get the
final rendered message from the backend.
This is such a subtle glitch that it's likely not worth worrying about.
Fixes#8025.
These mentions look like regular mentions except they do not
trigger any notification for the person mentioned. These are
primarily to be used when you make a bot take an action and
the bot mentions you, or when you quote a message that mentions
you.
Fixes#11221.
Users can preview their profile from user settings. If user
open preview profile modal from user settings, then closing
preview profile modal should redirect them to settings modal
again (since probably they want to keep editing).
This commit fixes above issue.
This adds the same style of "Saving"/"Saved" loading spinners we use
elsewhere in our settings.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to fix issues with the notifications
being on the wrong screen for reactiving/deactivating users; this was
done by introducing the get_status_field helper function and using it
everywhere.
The legacy "Updated Successfully" message shown after saving changes,
is removed, and replaced with our standard "Saving" spinner and
animation.
Fixes: #11177.
This code will correctly render emoji to the message textarea based on
whether emoji was selected from message composition form or message
edit form.
Fixes part of #11188.
AFAIK I should this never fail, hence the blueslip.error line. But it
is failing in practice when rendering user groups after looking them
up by ID, and the error handling should definitely be softer.
Our recent work on inviting users as guests accidentally set the
invite_as argument in a way that would fail for non-admin users.
Fixes#11283, fixes#11255.
We do this because now we send a message to stream if a reminder
is set and won't need the notification above the compose box saying
that we set a reminder. We would still need that notifications for
the send later feature so we make the construct conditional.
In between releases, the following commit introduced
a bug where we agressively scroll to the top every
place we call `ui.update_scrollbar`:
092b73d0b7
The main symptoms were that the left and right sidebars
would go to the top for things like selecting a topic,
getting activity updates from the server, and resizing
the window. It was very jarring.
The recent commit looked innocuous--the root of the problem
was the original API expressed an intent to scroll to the
top, but didn't actually do it, so it was a bug in hiding.
There are **some** occasions where it's actually appropriate
to scroll to the top, mostly around search filtering, and
in those places we now call the new `ui.reset_scrollbar`
function.
This is a bit of an emergency fix, so particularly with
the settings stuff, we may get more reports of glitches here.
The important thing here is that you almost never want to
reset the scrollTop for sidebars.
This seems like a small change (apart from all the
test changes), but it fundamentally changes how
the app finds "topic" on message objects. Now
all code that used to set "subject" now sets "topic"
on message-like objects. We convert incoming messages
to have topic, and we write to "topic" all the way up
to hitting the server (which now accepts "topic" on
incoming endpoints).
We fall back to subject as needed, but the code will
emit a warning that should be heeded--the "subject"
field is prone to becoming stale for things like
topic changes.
We recently added a feature to warn users that they
may need to scroll down to view messages that they
just sent, but it was broken due to various complexities
in the rendering code path.
Now we compute it a bit more rigorously.
It requires us to pass some info about rendering up
and down the stack, which is why it's kind of a long
commit, but the bulk of the logic is in these JS files:
* message_list_view.js
* notifications.js
I choose to pass structs around instead of booleans,
because I anticipate we may eventually add more metadata
about rendering to it, plus bools are just kinda brittle.
(The exceptions are that `_maybe_autoscroll`, which
is at the bottom of the stack, just passes back a simple
boolean, and `notify_local_mixes`, also at the bottom
of the stack, just accepts a simple boolean.)
This errs on the side of warning the user, even if the
new message is partially visible.
Fixes#11138
We now have two functions:
add_new_messages
add_old_messages
This is a lot easier on the eyes, and it will also
prevent us from exceeding line length in future commits.
We also remove an unneeded stub in the narrow_activate
tests.
This commit makes it a bit more explicit about
why we're updating 2 or 3 message lists every time.
It looks funny now to repeat the home-list updates
in both sides of the conditional, but this will be
more obvious in a subsequent commit, where we want
to capture return values from rendering.
In a recent commit we allowed for `scroll_amount`
to be zero (as an indirect consequence of letting
`scroll_limit` be zero without early exiting).
See 0f75be3e8e
We want to short circuit the call to
`system_initiated_animate_scroll`, partly to save
unnecessary computation, but in particular to avoid
invoking the suppress-pointer-update logic.
It's convenient to have visible_bottom as well
as top/height, and the extra computation is
trivial (it's just arithmetic, no extra jQuery
involved).
There's some minor cleanup here too.
Guest users can not add subscribers to subscribed or unsubscribed
streams. Therefore hide add-subs html element if current user
is guest user.
Tweaked by tabbott to use the early-return pattern.
Add explanation in popover on disabled add-subscriptions input elements,
admin can't add subscribers to non subscribed private streams, only
subscribed users can.
Fixes#10593
There's a subtle change here in how we handle the
hypothetical case that the selected message is above
the top of the feed. Instead of early-exiting
from _maybe_autoscroll(), we just treat the limit
as zero, which will have the same effect.
We also change a var name be just `scroll_limit`
instead of `available_space_for_scroll`. A longer
name would be valuable if it were somehow more
specific, but it was needlessly verbose.
The idea is to use this field for storing the best matching alias
to be displayed in search results. In subsequent commits I will
replace the search and rendering logic to use this field instead
of creating new objects on each search.
Since we have already added the `invite_as` field to models, we can now
replace usage of `invite_as_admin` properly with its equivalent `invite_as
== PreregistrationUser.INVITE_AS['REALM_ADMIN']`.
Hence, also removed now redundant `invite_as`.
This couples the behavior of Enter to Save with Enter to Send.
Extracts and exports functions responsible for checking if enter
does send/edit and handling default behavior otherwise.
Changes made in static/js/message_edit.js and
static/js/composebox_typeahead.js
Fixes#10320.
This adds two functions to static/js/composebox_typeahead.js.
should_enter_send(event) checks if enter should actually send.
handle_enter(textarea,event) emulates browser's default behavior
if enter doesn't send.
These two are just straight extractions of portions of the compose box
logic.
It's a bit dangerous for the user to hit escape
to close the feedback widget, since it can
disappear suddenly, but users will try it, and
we should just close the widget.
(Hitting escape should be a noop if the box
is closed, but now it goes to "All Messages".)
We only need these once, not during every show()
call. We actually were only setting up the
click handlers one time, but we had redundant
mouse handlers.
More importantly, we stop a runaway timer
that tries to fade out our feedback widget
every 100ms or ten times per second!
A few things are still hard coded, but the class exposes
show() and dismiss() now.
The show() method is configured with callbacks for
populate() and on_undo().
We calculate a few values higher up in the function.
This reduces a bit of code duplication and removes
a somewhat janky expression that happens against
a mutated list.
I use shorter var names in frb_botom() and do early
return in obscured_recipient_bar().
Also, we always call exports.hide() if we don't find
a valid recipient bar to "float."
There is no reason not to initialize people.js
super early in the process, as it only reads
data from page_params. Also, other modules
are likely to want its data during their own
initialization steps.
This is the preferred way to check that a user
id belongs to the current user.
We have a recent bug where the current user's
circle doesn't turn green right away. It's not
clear this is the fix, though. (It's hard to
repro locally.)
This is mostly for testing purposes. The code
structure here is pretty stable--we will probably
always use level() here to either sort or
group users, and being able to test it directly
is nice, rather than bringing in all the other
machinery.
This makes it possible it include our standard markdown formatting in
one's custom profile fields, allowing for links, emphasis, emoji, etc.
Fixes#10131.
While we're at it, we remove the JSON parsing that was part of the
user field code path, since this function isn't responsible for
rendering user fields.
Apparently, our custom profile fields feature was parsing the "user
list" field type in multiple places, and ignoring the results in one
of them. That code had been causing some confusion; the correct
solution is to just delete it, since the template rendering process
ignores that value for this field type.
Our logic for doing pageup/pagedown calculation inside compose was
written too tightly, and ended up breaking the keys inside message
editing.
Fix this by using generic selectors that don't hardcode compose.
Previously, messages with more than one line did not parse '/me' at
the beginning of the message. Since there's a reasonable way to
render multi-line messages, this commit adds support for doing so.
This change does potentially break with the expected behavior of other
slash commands, but it seems worth providing useful functionality over
a blind focus on consistency.
Fixes#11025.
If branch for showing the profile details would
not have executed if the subdomain was root ("").
The check was changed to check for select input
instead of checking for subdomain.
This avoids a bunch of potential confusion around users trying to
interact with these UI in situations that don't make sense.
(E.g. showing a menu to start editing the message when the menu is
already open).
Fixes#3802.
We instead get the specific fields from message
that we use. This is particularly helpful
for subject -> topic migration; we no longer
have to account for "subject" fields in
client-side templates.
This continues the effort to isolate "subject" references
to util calls.
Also, we fix a comment.
Finally, we use canonicalized operators in a switch
statement.
As part of giving the stream/topic fields in the
compose box longer ids, I broke the autocomplete
code that handles re-focusing the cursor after
a user hits enter. The worst symptom of this was
that we tried to send a message before compose
finished (although it wouldn't fully deliver the
message).
The new code should be a bit easier to grep for
if we rename these fields again, as we explicitly
use selector syntax.
Previously, we were searching the whole message_row object for emoji,
mentions, etc., which has a bunch of UI elements that can't contain
the syntax we want to modify. This should be a slight improvement in
the performance of message post-processing, which runs a lot of times
and thus is fairly important.
This check caused us to only run the code inside that block if the
message mentioned the current user (since that's when the `mention`
class is added to the main message row).
While this was a useful performance optimization, it probably was a
small one, not worth it for the correctness cost.
This adds a new realm_logo field, which is a horizontal-format logo to
be displayed in the top-left corner of the webapp, and any other
places where we might want a wide-format branding of the organization.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to rebase, fix styling, etc.
Fixing the styling of this feature's loading indicator caused me to
notice the loading indicator for the realm_icon feature was also ugly,
so I fixed that too.
Fixes#7995.
Logic for checking if the last message in the current table is visible was
already written in message_viewport.js; Code in notifications.js is changed
to reduce redundancy.
We are trying to carve room for a more specific
"user_status" concept, which refers to statuses
that users specifically set, like "I'm away".
So we call this function "update_presence_info",
which reflects that it's more about actual
"presence"--i.e. the user really is present
in the browser, even though the actual human
may not want to be disturbed.
The current user gets excluded from all non-empty
searches, even ones that match the user, since
it can look funny when the user's at the top of a
search, and you'd never need to search for yourself
(again, since the current user is at the top of
the buddy list).
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..
We move all of its logic into settings_sections.
Note that this is slightly more than a refactor.
We are slightly more aggressive about resetting
sections. For example, if you go into Settings,
then exit the overlay, then go into Manage
Organization, we will now reset sections for both
groups.
We now rely on set_up() methods to call their
own module-specific versions of maybe_disable_widgets()
in the codepath for admin_sections.load_admin_section().
And then for live updates, we just explicitly call
all four modules that support maybe_disable_widgets().
This should make switching between sections slightly faster,
and it also reduces the risk of module A messing with
module B's state. (Granted, we have lots of other ways
that modules can mess with each other's state.)
Bootstrap's typeahead is the main part of the project that we've
forked, and moving it to its own module should help unlock our ability
to upgrade bootstrap itself.
Since we're adding this to a large number of portico pages, there's no
guarantee that these pages actually have a CSRF input.
Though given that the logout template contains a CSRF input,
realistically it should always be present.
We weren't using the actual sorted data to find
the last element. This probably worked by accident
in some cases, but this commit makes it more
deterministic.
We want the return value from this for the next
commit, so we no longer call `format_drafts` indirectly
from `populate_and_fill`, and we rename the latter
to `render_widgets`.
We had an anonymous callback for drafts that was
hard to read. It's much easier to flatten the code,
give functions actual names, and stub them as needed
in the unit tests.
Since we're adding this to a large number of portico pages, there's no
guarantee that these pages actually have a CSRF input.
Though given that the logout template contains a CSRF input,
realistically it should always be present.
If a user has an old mention and has since been renamed, there's
really nothing for us to do to render it; we should just return as
though we have no data.
The `replying_to_message` field was used in some
early versions of compose fade, but it has no more
use in the current code.
The drafts implementation didn't really make any sense,
anyway, as we were claiming to reply to the same
message we were drafting.
A common source of confusion for new users is sending a message when
you're scrolled up in the message feed; in this case, it's nice to
communicate to the user why the message is not in view.
Fixes#10792.
Restructured by tabbott to replace overly complex logic for getting
the position of the new message with a `message_list.get_row()` call.
Now, we correctly avoid calling various password quality/strength
functions in the registration flow in the event that there isn't a
password form on the current page.
Before, some code wasn't inside a block at all, while other code was
using an incorrect check (an empty jQuery object is not falsey).
The overall result was that this would often crash on certain
pages/flows, stopping JS execution and causing various secondary
problems.
The first bug fixed here has been around for a long
time--we were redundantly updating unread counts
indirectly via muting_ui.initialize(). The
unread counts also get updated in
unread_ui.initialize(), when we have more valid
state. (And it's worth noting here that the unread
counts get updated yet again once message fetches
complete.)
The second bug was a very recent regression from
my recent stream name -> stream id cleanup in the
muting system. We now depend on stream_data to
initialize muting data, so we need to initialize
muting.js slightly later in the process.
These fixes are intertwined, because they were both
somewhat caused by the anti-pattern of having
muting_ui.js initialize unread_ui.js and muting.js,
instead of doing more direct, fine-grained initialization
from ui_init.js.
Essentially we replace this code:
exports.update_muted_topics = function (muted_topics) {
muting.set_muted_topics(muted_topics);
unread_ui.update_unread_counts();
};
with this:
exports.initialize = function () {
exports.set_muted_topics(page_params.muted_topics);
};
And the modules load like this:
stream_data
...
muting
...
unread_ui
And we don't need any page-load initialization for muting_ui,
which is mostly used for Settings/Muted topics.
This function used to be called initialize_from_page_params(),
and we called it indirectly through `subs.js`.
Now we call it directly from `ui_init.js`, which gives us a
bit more control over how things are initialized. In fact,
this sets us up for the next commit, where I fix a recent
regression I introduced.
The data attribute here has some value if you're
inspecting the HTML in the browser, but it's not
worth the extra code.
All the list items have data-stream-id, so there's
no need for the parent to have it.
The stream_list test that was fixed here was sort of
broken. It accomplished the main goal of verifying
what gets rendered, but now the data setup part is
more like the actual app code (and simpler, too).
This fixes the most core data structures inside of
muting.js. We still use stream names for incoming
data to set_muted_topics and outgoing data from
get_muted_topics.
This will make us more resilient to stream name changes.
Before, if you were logged on when a stream rename
occured, topics that were muted under that stream would
appear to be unmuted. (You could fix it with a reload,
but it can be jarring to have a bunch of unread messages
appear in your feed suddenly.)
Fixes#11033
The fixture changes are because self.upgrade formerly used to cause a page load
of /billing, which in turn calls Customer.retrieve.
If we ran the full test suite with GENERATE_STRIPE_FIXTURES=True, we would
likely see several more Customer.retrieve.N.json's being deleted. But
keeping them there for now to keep the diff small.
Like the other similar commits, we were doing the same work in all
code paths, just with a much more error-prone approach.
We can also now remove the now-unused finish_initial_narrow function.
Like the other commits in this series, we were already doing this in
all of the callers of load_messages; this centralizes that logic in a
less ad-hoc feeling way.
We no longer use or need the start_initial_narrow function.
Previously, each individual caller of load_messages that passed
num_before > 0 would do its own manual management of fetch_status;
now, we just do it inside load_messages.
Apparently, the older side of the FetchStatus object for home_msg_list
was incorrectly not being maintained. We got away with this, because
the do_backfill code path (which runs after we're done with the
load_more cycle) will correct the error for found_oldest. But we
didn't have proper handling for history_limited here.
When we're doing the load_more frontfill, we were not correctly
declaring that we were in the process of doing a fetch. Because the
next load_more call clears this state anyway, this was generally a
short race, off-screen, but it is still a data flow bug.
See the upcoming commits for a refactor that will eliminate the
possibility of this sort of bug.
When a user's name is edited, currently we still show the old name is
mentions (though clicking on the item does the right thing).
However, at present, it creates a new problem in search results, where
the highlighting is removed by this substitution.
A bug caused background links to open even when a modal in the user
settings overlay was active in the foreground. This commit fixes this
by disabling mouse events for the background when the modal is active,
and restoring them as soon as the modal starts closing.
Fixes#10654.
This adds a line to static/js/hotkey.js for focusing the "Close"
button. Tweaked by tabbott to make more clear that we don't expect
there to ever be both a close button and a save button, since in that
case this code would be busted.
Fixes: #3830.
The stream/topic edit areas now have these ids:
#stream_message_recipient_stream
#stream_message_recipient_topic
They are pretty verbose, but being able to grep
for these without noise does have some value.
Also, add a new notification sound, "ding". It comes from
https://freesound.org, where the original Zulip notification sound comes
from as well. In the future, new sounds can be added by adding audio
files to the `static/audio/notification_sounds` directory.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott:
* Avoided removing static/audio/zulip.ogg, because that file is
checked for by old versions of the desktop app.
* Added a views check for the sound being valid + tests.
* Added additional tests.
* Restructured the test_events test to be cleaner.
* Removed check_bool_or_string.
* Increased max length of notification_sound.
* Provide available_notification_sounds in events data set if global
notifications settings are requested.
Fixes#8051.
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 prior name of this was a bit inaccurate, as we no
longer ever hide the menu item for non-admins. Also,
it belongs more naturally in `gear_menu.js` at this point.
Also, we remove one call to this, which was in a place
where it was no longer necessary.
We now run the code to disable widgets every time
we reload a section, which was the original intention
of the code, but the call to it only happened when
you first launched the page.
We also continue to run this logic for live updates
of is_admin, although it's worth noting that the
code still only handles the "demotion" case of going
from admin to non-admin. (If somebody makes you an
admin, you continue to need to reload to get
widgets enabled.)
This ensures the "account settings" UI for managing a user's own email
address uses the delivery email, since that's what users care most about.
Eventually, we'll need to add support for at least viewing both email
addresses in "account settings", but this is the right long-term
behavior.
This new setting is still hidden in the UI when not in the development
environment, because the feature isn't ready for production, but
merging this will help simplify future work on the feature.
Previously, Topic editing was offered in the UI even to message
senders and organizations admins only if the message was no more than
one day old. This was correct for the "community topic editing" case,
but not for message senders and organization admins.
While we're at it, this also centralizes some previously haphazard
logic to always call message_edit.is_topic_editable().
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to fix the logic.
Closes#10568.
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.
Also adds relevant tests and documentation. We currently
do not narrow to a new topic, and instead just narrow to
the stream. Similarly, we do not narrow to a PM if any of
the recipients are invalid.
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.
We ignore keystrokes like alt-left-arrow and alt-right-arrow,
so that the browser can do back/forward.
We may need to refine the handling of ctrl/alt/shift in the
future, but now we only support single-key operations.
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.
This code brings the focus to the first input field with errors rather
than just the first input field present in the form after the sign up
form is rendered again after invalid data is submitted.
Note from tabbott: This still doesn't handle the ToS checkbox being
the source of the error, but that's an independent issue.
Fixes#10869.
Positioning using flexbox makes life much easier for everyone. With
this change we make positioning of icon relative to the label in the
dropdown menu much easier to do and alter if required. We now no
longer need to fiddle with tedious pixel measurements for placing the
icon in the right place.
As a result of this commit we had to change a click event binding
back to be associated with .dropdown-toggle class rather than being
associated with the h3, i because of the re-arrangement of the
dropdown configs.
Here we just fix the behaviour of angle icon which is present
in the integration categories dropdown. It used to change direction
from down to right only if "All" options from the dropdown was
selected (which is also the initial and default option). This behaviour
was pretty inconsistent and looked odd. Rather than having a direction
changing icon here, it migth be just better to stick with just the
down facing angle arrow. Arrow direction in general represents in
which direction the dropdown is gonna open up (in addition to the
fact that a dropdown exits here).
We make the integration categories dropdown gradually slide down/up
rather than appearing instantenously. I believe this gives a better
look to the dropdown and how it behaves.
We also fiddle a bit with the code relating to angle icon in the
dropdown. Basically though its behaviour was already buggy and
will be addressed in an upcoming commit, we try to maintain whatever
behaviour it had before introduction of the annimation effect.
The issue here was that if we opened up integrations page in
responsive mode (so the integrations category sidebar turns into a
dropdown) and click a few centimeters outside the actual dropdown
or perhaps the dropdown menu when its open, it is possible to toggle
or select a integration category.
What this essentially means is that clicking in blank area outside
visible boundaries of dropdown menu its possible to interact with it.
Fix: We change elements on which the click event is tied to and
adjust a bit of CSS for relevant elements so things look as they
used to but function in correct or better manner.
What is the buggy behaviour?
Before this commit if you were to open the integrations docs page
in a smaller window so that the integrations categories sidebar
changed into a dropdown (so that our page is responsive to
screen size), one would notice that selecting a category from the
dropdown menu didn't make dropdown to auto collapse. This feels very
uncomfortable from users prespective since an ugly dropdown with all
the categories sticking around uncollapsed kind of defeats the purpose
of having a dropdown.
Fix: We make the categories dropdown toggle/auto collapse upon
selection of a category.
Fixes part of #10026.
Adds additional option to typeahead:
`tabOpensEmptyTypeahead`(default: false):
tabOpensEmptyTypeahead overrides helpOnEmptyStrings.
This commit sets helpOnEmptyStrings to false and
tabOpensEmptyTypeahead to true. Now typeahead will
open on an empty string only if Tab has been pressed.