This commit modifies the linkifier-edit modal to use newly added
edit_fields_modal framework.
One important change is that we remove the "edit-linkifier-status"
element as the corresponding "edit-fields-modal-status" element
is added in edit_fields_modal.hbs and we also modify the css
accordingly. This "edit-fields-modal-status" is used only for
this modal and remains empty for others, so this change does not
cause problems with other modals.
There is another element which uses "edit-linkifier-status" as a
class, but the css we defined was for "edit-linkifier-status" as
id, so the css change is also safe.
This commit modifies the modal for editing bot information to
use edit_fields_modal framework.
We also change the id of form element of this modal such that
it makes sense with the actual use of modal and there is no
problem with this change as styling of this modal is not
affected.
We create a new widget edit_fields_modal such that this common
framework can be used in bot-edit modal, linkifier-edit modal
and user-edit modal, which have very similar implementations.
The "edit-fields-modal-status" is used only for edit-linkifier
modal and remains empty for others, so this change does not
cause problems with other modals.
This commit moves the compose_error function to its own module, which
will be useful for future work splitting the compose module.
We also simplify compose_not_subscribed_error to call the
compose_error show function.
Add a new `verify_signup` helper function, which currently implements
enough functionality to be used by `test_signup_existing_email`.
This is the first step towards #7564.
This commit fixes the bug with the delete button of both profile
picture and realm-logo buttons. The button was shifted downwards
and was caused due to line height change in 5d64c21c38.
Found the correct value of 20px by checking the line-height in
one test organization on zulipchat.com where the button position
looks correct.
This is a prep commit in preparation of splitting
create_stream_policy into create_private_stream_policy
and create_public_stream_policy.
This extracts it in a way to make it possible to easily test
different stream policies in the upcoming stream policy split.
This is a prep commit in preparation of splitting
create_stream_policy into create_private_stream_policy
and create_public_stream_policy.
This extracts it in a way to make it possible to easily test
different stream policies in the upcoming stream policy split.
This is a prep commit in preparation of splitting
create_stream_policy into create_private_stream_policy
and create_public_stream_policy.
This extracts it in a way to make it possible to easily test
different stream policies in the upcoming stream policy split.
test_create_stream_policy_setting (in class StreamAdminTest) and
test_user_settings_for_creating_streams (in class SubscriptionAPITest)
test essentially the same thing.
So, remove one of them.
Removing test_create_stream_policy_setting makes sense,
since class StreamAdminTest tests things admins can do, whereas
non-admin users can create streams.
test_invite_to_stream_by_invite_period_threshold (in class StreamAdminTest)
and test_user_settings_for_subscribing_other_users
(in class SubscriptionAPITest) test essentially the same thing.
So, remove one of them.
Removing test_invite_to_stream_by_invite_period_threshold makes sense,
since class StreamAdminTest tests things admins can do, whereas
non-admin users can invite other users.
This was used to test can_create_stream property of a guest user.
There are better ways to test it, which are already implemented in
test_can_create_streams.
This commits adds the support to copy a topic link
to the clipboard by introducing a new "Copy link to topic"
topic sidebar action which is placed below the
"Mark all messages as read" action.
Basically, this does the same job as right clicking upon the
topic name and selecting "Copy link".
Closes#18946
This PR adds a basic .md template that is followed by lot of /api
pages. Since we have recently done the migration work to ensure that
our REST API documentation pages for individual endpoints are almost
all identical files following a common pattern, we can now get the
payoff of deleting them all in favor of a shared template.
This removes 2000 lines of somewhat finicky configuration from the
codebase, and thus should save significant effort when documenting new
API endpoints in the future.
The markdown files for endpoints or other pages which deviate from the
standard template remain, and the docs are instead generated from
those files using the existing system.
The returned values of get_path function would be
expanded soon, and defining a dataclass would make
the code cleaner for returning and using the fields.
As a part of goal of moving towards a common template,
the hardcoded python tabs need to be removed to ensure
that endpoints which don't have python examples can be
covered by the common template as well.
This commit also modifies the markdown extension for python
examples to render empty string in case the examples don't
exist, which would allow it to be called whether the endpoint
has python examples or not.
Currently, the message that no parameters are accepted by
the endpoint is displayed if there are no parameters in
OpenAPI data, but it is possible that information is
encoded in x-parameter-description (example in upload-file
endpoint), and we want to display that information rather
than the message.
Added an if condition to check the same.
We use the "does not accept any parameters" language in the common
template that we'll be migrating to shortly, so we remove this
variance (And adjust its test).
We show a spinner inside the button instead of hiding the button
and then showing the spinner in the bottom area. We also disable
the button to avoid repetitive clicking by user.
This removes some complexity from the event_queue module.
To avoid code duplication, we reduce the `is_notifiable` methods to
internally just call the `trigger` methods and check their return value.
* Modify `maybe_enqueue_notifications` to take in an instance of the
dataclass introduced in 951b49c048.
* The `check_notify` tests tested the "when to notify" logic in a way
which involved `maybe_enqueue_notifications`. To simplify things, we've
earlier extracted this logic in 8182632d7e.
So, we just kill off the `check_notify` test, and keep only those parts
which verify the queueing and return value behavior of that funtion.
* We retain the the missedmessage_hook and message
message_edit_notifications since they are more integration-style.
* There's a slightly subtle change with the missedmessage_hook tests.
Before this commit, we short-circuited the hook if the sender was muted
(5a642cea11).
With this commit, we delegate the check to our dataclass methods.
So, `maybe_enqueue_notifications` will be called even if the sender was
muted, and the test needs to be updated.
* In our test helper `get_maybe_enqueue_notifications_parameters` which
generates default values for testing `maybe_enqueue_notifications` calls,
we keep `message_id`, `sender_id`, and `user_id` as required arguments,
so that the tests are super-clear and avoid accidental false positives.
* Because `do_update_embedded_data` also sends `update_message` events,
we deal with that case with some hacky code for now. See the comment
there.
This mostly completes the extraction of the "when to notify" logic into
our new `notification_data` module.
Click handler added for cancel button in stream creation form
incorrectly assumed data-dismiss to be present only in that
form inside `.subscription`. We now handle editing stream
properties like stream privacy and stream name/description
by making use of modal widget. So this assumption creates
a bug where closing these edit modal closes complete stream
edit pane. It was added in 1886f0a015.
We fix this by binding this handler to data-dismiss element
inside stream creation form.
We had our input elements for stream settings inside li tags
and their alignment was managed using CSS. We move away from
this HTML structure to have inputs and labels inside divs for
two reasons. First is that if we want to later refactor the HTML
to have some different design, then having them inside `ul`
requires complex changes to CSS and eventually we would have
to move away from using `li`s for the part that is changed to
have a different design. Second `li`s are generally not used
to organize input elements.
Above is an explanation of why this change is a preparatory
commit for shifting to have a tabbed design in the stream edit page.
So following changes are done to have a more consistent
HTML structure in stream types modal:
* Added modal-body and removed the non-standard
usage of the unordered list for settings header and inputs.
* Updated relevant CSS rules to have the same design during refactor.
Co-authored-by: Pragati Agrawal <pragati22066@gmail.com>
We had a lot of functions and click handlers that were only
involved with user profile modal and were not related to
popovers logic in any way. So we extract these functions
into a separate module `user_profile.js`.