From subs.js we don't redundantly try to remove an element
from ths sidebar; we just trigger the event.
In stream_list.js we continue to remove the element from
the DOM, and we also remove the widget from our internal
Dict of sidebar rows, so that if we re-subscribe, we know
we'll automatically re-build the widget from the template
and the latest data from stream_data.js.
We used to have hacky code where various functions would call
build_stream_sidebar_row() to get a jQuery object, and then they
would attach the jQuery object to the "sub" object from stream_data.js.
Now build_stream_sidebar_row() localizes the hack of attaching
a UI object to the "sub" object to just one function (and we can
clean this up in a follow-up commit).
Also, the UI object is now a JS object that can close on some useful
state information like the stream name and encapsulate how we
toggle the inactive_stream class.
Finally, we don't have build_stream_sidebar_row() needlessly append
list items to $('#stream_filters') when we know that our callers are
going to re-build the list anyway.
The code removed in this commit added pinned streams to a list
of elems, only to have them added again by the next block of code
(but more concisely). Through some strange quirk of appendTo() this
never created user-facing bugs, but you could clearly see in the console
that it was doing double work.
It used to be the case that you would get new messages for a
huddle, but the huddle wouldn't show up on your buddy list until
the every-50-seconds mass update of the buddy list.
Now we make sure to work with non-stale jQuery objects, and,
more importantly, we resize ourselves if we add new huddles.
(The resize issue arises due to some complicated heuristics
where we don't want group PMs to take up too much of the buddy
list for users who don't have many in their history.)
This fixes a bug with the group pm section of our
buddy list. It wasn't updating when you fetched
old private messages.
We had been calling activity.process_loaded_messages() as
part of message_store.do_unread_count_updates(), which was
called sometimes unnecessarily and sometime not called when
we needed to get huddle info.
Now we call it when we need it most, which is when you
click on "Private Messages".
This restyles the message_controls options to center them horizontally
while fixing them closer to the right side of the edge, along with just
replacing the edit button with a preview source button once editing is
disabled.
This moves the edit button to underneath the timestamp such that when
you hover over a message now the timestamp hides itself and the edit
button appears (if editing is allowed).
Fixes#1733 and other annoying issues with this field.
* Fixes handling of multiple stream links and invalid stream names.
* Fixes text regex so it handle hash sign the right way.
* Adds tests for these stream link cases.
Changes editibility type from NONE to FULL, and makes Save and Cancel
buttons work. Exposes a new bug, which is that changing the topic changes
the topic for the recipient row, rather than the message. See #2278.
The widget that gets built in topic_list.build_widget()
now knows how to add itself to its parent element and expose
an interface to retrieve the parent.
For cases where we are zoomed in to a stream and then go
to a different narrow (Home, PMs, etc.), we now let
topic_list.zoom_out orchestrate the removal of the topic list
instead of stream_list.zoom_out.
This will help us when we move to a world where topic_list
redraws topic lists on zoom-in/zoom-out, because we won't
waste effort rebuilding lists that are about to be removed.
The flow for topic list zooming is kind of complicated now, but
it's mostly a consequence of the way the UI works.
* stream_list tells topic_list to set up the topic list
click handlers to have callbacks to stream_list
* topic_list click handlers call to stream_list zoom methods
to hide/show all the other streams
* stream_list zoom methods call back to topic_list methods to
redraw topics as needed (this isn't happening yet, but allowing
topic_list.js to know that it's zoomed will set the stage for
this to happen in a more controlled manner)
We no longer use active_stream_name(), which was mostly a
duplicate of narrow.stream(). For nonsensical queries like
"stream:foo stream:bar" the behavior may change slightly here.
We know that we don't handle non-sensical queries particularly
well, but at least if we always go through narrow.stream(),
the behavior will be consistent.
I did test this with some sensible compound narrows, like searching
for a keyword within a stream.
In 25b28bf82c and then
cb1bc70ab0, we attempted to make long
code blocks scroll in a reasonable fashion, without much success.
This change causes code blocks to be line-wrapped, without needing to
set `overflow-y: hidden` for paragraphs (which cause problems with
taller elements like emoji that overlfowed wrong). Our octopi finally
have legs again.
It's not clear that this is the final answer, but it's the best
version we've found so far.
After adding the ability to add stream links to messages using
the following pattern '#**stream_name**' there was a problem
with rendering this using our markdown engine because '**' means
bold text so that would render just to bold text.
To solve this I had to add regular expression in marked.js to match
that pattern and when it matches I call handleStreamLinks in echo.js
which will correctly render it to HTML.
Fixes#2218.
[tweaked by tabbott to url-encode the stream name in the URL and
adding the missing "#" in the display].
We now use stream_id as our key to rename streams, which
should prevent a few race conditions long term. (We are
still possibly contending with other events that use
stream_name as a key, so this is not perfect.)
If I try to send a message to an unknown user (which is possible
for some types of realms), then I simply ignore them during the
send codepath, so that I don't later need to patch up their attributes.
We no longer store pm_recipient_count on person objects, but we
instead use a Dict to store them. Then the new API is this:
people.get_recipient_count()
people.incr_recipient_count()
We now send dictionaries for cross-realm bots. This led to the
following changes:
* Create get_cross_realm_dicts() in actions.py.
* Rename the page_params field to cross_realm_bots.
* Fix some back end tests.
* Add cross_realm_dict to people.js.
* Call people.add for cross-realm bots (if they are not already part of the realm).
* Remove hack to add in feedback@zulip.com on the client side.
* Add people.is_cross_realm_email() and use it in compose.js.
* Remove util.string_in_list_case_insensitive().
This alert bar thing was buggy and didn't look that good, so let's
just remove it. We can always write a nicer thing advertising the
desktop app later.
Currently, message_edit.edit_message accesses elements of
message_edit_form.handlebars by a number of different means, and in a number
of different places. This commit is the first of two that standardizes it.
Previously we disabled fields in message_edit_form.handlebars that you
couldn't edit. This meant you could see the content of the field, but not
copy it. This commit marks those fields as readonly instead.
Previously,
* We displayed "(no topic)" in .message_edit_topic when there was no
topic;this commit changes that to a placeholder.
* We showed the .message_edit_topic_propagate dropdown when the user
cleared .message_edit_topic, despite the fact that one cannot save
or propagate an empty topic. This commit fixes the behavior.
Fixes#1273.
This change makes most of the logic on set_count() live
on our per-stream topic list widget. We can find the
jQuery object directly now rather than using the
complicated iterate_to_find() method.
We don't want to prepend new subscribers to our list of
subscribers in the settings page when they hit enter; we
want to wait till we get the event from the server.
This is a fairly new regression that was added when we
live-updated peer subscriber changes.
The issue is that if you post a very long line of code it will overflow
the .message_content div and force the width of the main message page
to be as long as the line of code.
Fixes: #2156
This fixes and issue where the change_stream_privacy template had its
own duplicate copy of the data-stream-name attribute, which wasn't
updated when streams were renamed.
Fixes#2016.
This fixes the z-index of the lightbox overlay, which previously
appeared behind the header, and the muting notification to be above
everything else on the page.
Fixes a regression introduced in
08b61c1b3d, where .alert-bar-container
would be above the menu, and thus block highlighting of the top item
("Manage streams") in that menu.
This also brought along:
iterate_to_find (copied, see large comment explaining why)
activate_topic (extracted from a one-liner)
set_count (formerly stream_list.set_subject_count)
For get_topic_filter_li, we now pass in stream_li instead of
stream to decouple parent/child responsibilities between the
components.
Also, I made some s/subject/topic/ fixes.
This creates the new topic_list.js module, and the first
function that we extract is topic_list.update_count_in_dom().
This function needed to be decoupled from some non-topic-list
stuff which was overly complicated.
I make server_events slimmer by not handling a specific
property when subs.update_subscription_properties() should
do all the dispatching (and mostly did).
And then since update_subscription_properties() has
a "sub" already, I can call directly to stream_list code
and remove a function from subs.js. Since I lose the
wrapper function in subs.js, I rename the stream_list
function as part of this commit.
The only code that gets slightly heavier here is that
we have two lines in the 'pin_to_top' case instead of one.
All of the eventual callers to prepend_subscribers()
and format_member_list_elem() call people.get_by_email()
anyway, so now we do it one place. The one exception
was using page_params.fullname, which is awkwardly
different than what we call that variable elsewhere
(fullname vs. full_name).
Previously, all of the callers of message_edit.save() would check if
it returned true, and if so, call message_edit.end(). This resulted
in various bugs in the past, so we switch to the much cleaner model of
just calling .end() inside .save().
message_edit_form.handlebars already has a message_edit_topic that
refers to the topic edit section of message editing, and this made
things very confusing.
This fixes the following issues:
1. Photos are no longer resized larger than their native resolution.
2. Photos with transparency now have a checkerboard behind them to
signal an alpha of less than one.
We get events to delete subscribers for streams we are not
necessarily subscribed to, and it is now important to
process those events to produce the correct UI for showing
the number of subscribers to streams.
Passes the allowed domains for a realm to the frontend, via
page_params.domains. Groundwork for allowing users to add and
remove domains via the admin setting page, rather than via the
realm_alias.py management command.
Because jQuery passes the actual hashchange event to an onhashchange
handler, the `if reload` checks in the `hashchanged` function were
always returning true, resulting in the wrong logic being used for
computing where to send the user in the event that they edited the
hash in the browser to change their narrow.
Previously we showed an "Edit" item in the actions popover menu when a user
could edit the content or topic of a message, and nothing otherwise. We now
show "Edit", "Edit Topic", or "View Source" in the popover menu for every
message, depending on the editability of the message, and present an
appropriate version of message_edit_form when the menu item is clicked.
Finishes #1604 and #1761.
We compute the editability of messages in several places around the
frontend; standardize the definitions and store in
message_edit.get_editability. This commit should not change app behavior.