This experiment has been disabled for everyone for a while: if we
bring something like this back, it is not likely to be exactly the same,
and will be different enough to require a different implementation.
As it is, the summarization code was making a few code paths (rendering
especially) more complex, and is worth removing for simplicity's sake.
(imported from commit 6ac8cdc9f7077a5a1da01ab4268aba3db0bc43f8)
Previously, we saved the current_msg_list selected id and then
restored it as the home_msg_list selected id, which could result in
the home view loading to the wrong place.
This takes some already bad code and makes it even more in need of
refactoring, but it does fix a pressing bug. We should definitely
refactor both:
* the top of narrow.js
* the save/restore code in reload.js
after this, though.
(imported from commit bb2040219e4f545ba90bb04a696996cec2831484)
This does have a small functional change of using use_closest even for
the current_msg_list.last().id case, but that's harmless; and it does
reduce a lot of code duplication and confusing logic here.
(imported from commit 7c4ecaa197120cc6d5c05ce4887f33c7d94a9c59)
This implementation is somewhat hackish in large part because I think
we're going to be wanting to redo the get_old_messages API somewhat
soon, and this may naturally become a lot cleaner as a result, but
this isn't a lot of code and fixes#2235 part (A) and substantially
mitigates #1510.
(imported from commit 47a2160a44befa9d83190c5cc95b90e92cc5b4cc)
Even in the case where we are running embedded narrows,
we want narrow.operators() to return new-style operators
that you get with Filter objects, so that callees do
not need to support the legacy tuple format.
(imported from commit a6649881a926a2304e9f7cc8ca53b406e2c8828e)
Have narrow.activate() user filter.operators() to produce
operators that have operand/operator fields, so that its callees
don't need to be backward compatible with the tuple format.
(imported from commit e408e33074d1be2d112bb3cdc081ec3616c908ee)
Change the offset to hold of the selected message as an offset from the
top of the screen. Then use the current offset and scrollTop to compute
the new scrollTop.
(imported from commit 718e95d3435c0f84cbb7663a9bb2bc2789314203)
Our logic for unnarrowing when messages were read during the narrow
did not properly use the then_scroll option and thus actually set the
scroll position when they selected a new message. This was
accidentally prevented from being a big problem by the incorrect
scrolling logic that was fixed by:
Only preserve_pre_narrowing_screen_position when preserving pointer.
which caused the browser to scroll _back_ to close to the correct
scroll position (but not the intended scroll position -- it would
usually be a little bit off).
(imported from commit d779de8f89590d242f62d32b22a297bdc096c594)
I think that this will fix the issues we've been having with
hashchange.save_narrow() screwing up the scroll position in the page.
(imported from commit 25af9b7dda2d107220e11dd12b9dc344bc63addc)
Features:
* Only shows messages in the narrow
* New messages in the narrow will arrive as they are sent
* Works even for streams you're not subscribed to
* Automatically subscribes you to a stream on send
* Doesn't update your pointer
* All searches etc. automatically have the narrow added
(imported from commit 2e12b76849f6ca0f53dda5985dad477a04f7bbac)
Trying to condense messages when they are not yet visible just
leads to wasted effort and wrong results.
This commit makes it so that current_msg_list always points to a
visible list, so the code related to message rendering knows when
to call ui.condense_and_collapse(). For activating narrows, we
now let rendering handle the condense/collapse case.
The home view situation is a little trickier, because we render
new messages in the home view even when we're inside inside of a narrow,
presumably to make it fast to switch into the home view. When
we actually go back to the home view, we need to sweep for messages
that might need to be condensed, since they have been originally
rendered while the home view was not visible.
(imported from commit 4da2d278a4353e9e0c2b98cbf8c9dd03b06cd59b)
There are now 2 cases for narrowing:
1. We narrowed, but only backwards in time (ie no unread were
read). In this case, try to go back to exactly where we were before
narrowing. This behavior is unchanged.
2. We read some unread messages in a narrow. Instead of going back to
where we were before the narrow, go to our first unread message (or
the bottom of the feed, if there are no unread messages). This is new.
This means that after catching up through the sidebar, on returning
home you'll be at the bottom of your feed.
Searching for the first unread message in a message list with 40,000
messages only takes 17ms according to:
function timeit() {
var t0 = new Date().getTime();
_.find(current_msg_list.all(), unread.message_unread);
var t1 = new Date().getTime();
console.log('Find first unread: ' + (t1 - t0) + ' ms');
}
(imported from commit 87c467578a2cced0aa976d8ae2924371b85d2445)
I'd also like to add a database table to actually store the values
that we get out of this and our send message requests for future
inspection, but for now, grepping logs+statsd is good enough.
(imported from commit 99ef179651850217fe6e82c5e928d122ca91101e)
I renamed ui.process_condensing() to ui.condense_and_collapse(),
and, more importantly, it now takes a list of elements, not a single
element, which allows us to do some computations outside the loop.
(imported from commit d5984088030c2a0d4ec8b258c7fcec3e84caf2b1)
If we load a browser window in a narrowed view and then un-narrow
before the home message list has loaded, we end up attempting to
select message ID -1 from home_msg_list even though it is empty,
triggering a traceback.
(imported from commit eb8b686f6e9c1fa518028e5755ac6196781e92d7)
R means "I want to send a PM, you can guess the destination"
r means "I want send a stream message, you can guess the destination"
C means "I want to send a PM and specify the destination"
c means "I want to send a stream message and specify the destination"
(imported from commit 755c92aed79ab79089b2e35d2c100582f012736a)
This should make it possible to either open these using middle-click
or copy the links for e.g. putting in a bug tracker ticket.
(imported from commit 0c531453cdd7197f932079c245700948b416a3d5)
Narrow.activate was called without an options object in one
obscure location. I'm not sure how it's actually triggered,
since all searches seem to go through the typeahead path with
the "Search for x" option, but someone managed to do it.
(imported from commit 5e0e1bbe7570e5f6a654949547dc164e01125efa)
I switched narrow.by_subject and narrow.by_recipient to use the all_msg_list
instead of current_msg_list, since we wanted to be able to narrow to messages
specifically not in the current_msg_list. However, in searches which revealed
old messages outside the range of all_msg_list (which only has a single contiguous range),
this broke narrowing.
Let's use msg_metadata_cache instead.
(imported from commit 427f717484b4ae83d9bb4cc6e51ce17177d037fe)
Displays a notification above the composebox in cases where the message
is not visible (further down), or where it's outside the current narrow or search.
It also offers a link to the appropriate narrow when it makes sense, and offers
timetravel when appropriate. There is currently a bug with timetravel (and you can
see this when using the popover menu) that makes "narrow to messages around this time"
not work for muted messages.
This resolves Trac #1518.
(imported from commit 391ca0b9c07d91496f6585a4fd8e15723d1170e2)
* Disable for search-like narrows (whitelist stream and home instead of
blacklisting topics and PMs)
* Use home view summarization flag for All Messages
(imported from commit 48bd10ae5da7c7564c2efe86a40078f1a7e96e20)
Add the option "Narrow to just this message" to the chevron
menu. This has two use cases:
* It's an easy way to get a sharable URL for the message.
* It reduces distractions.
For now it is feature flagged to just customer12.invalid and staging.
See #1880.
(imported from commit 897d247176f9024ff825ccd3b338236569eed5ab)
If the user has text in the compose box, don't close or
change the compose box when they narrow.
(imported from commit f9b400f6bac37cb313f1fd87aadb3ba1d3a035ef)
For the two cases where narrowing should open the compose box,
we now put that logic inside of narrow.js.
(imported from commit 570e22e90c2f6d422ba71cce400c075f0b8adf51)
Handle closing the compose box inside of narrow.js, to
ensure consistent behavior for all the narrowing UI options.
(imported from commit f17a687491eb2361c73032cd974cedb2a0a2dd85)
The main user-facing feature here is that users can open narrows
in new tabs or windows. Internally, it makes the HTML more semantic.
One consequence of making these elements into actual anchor tags
is that clicking on them no longer triggers this logic to
close the compose box when you click outside of it:
// Unfocus our compose area if we click out of it. Don't let exits out
// of modals or selecting text (for copy+paste) trigger cancelling.
if (compose.composing() && !$(e.target).is("a") &&
($(e.target).closest(".modal").length === 0) &&
window.getSelection().toString() === "") {
compose.cancel();
}
Instead of patching the above code, I elected to just call
compose.cancel() explicitly in the click handlers for the links
themselves.
We are gonna try to clean up the compose-box behavior globally soon.
(imported from commit c9a01916f1714fe3dd495d25c78cd5e5532105ef)