Originally we wanted it to be short, since we were worried about attention
spans. But it seems like people are willing to read quite a bit when
choosing a chat product, and our "10 second" pitch should just be a video,
rather than a small amount of text.
This fixes the issue on subdomain.zulipchat.com/login/ where the
organization name will have characters such as the lowercase "g"
cut off near the bottom due to the line-height being too small and
the overflow being hidden.
This re-arranges the properties to fix that issue.
This adds a centered layout for mobile and responsive screens where the
emoji picker is guaranteed to be in the center of the screen, and the
rest of the screen darkens behind it.
Fixes: #6291.
We want to scroll the left sidebar to the top as soon as the user
zooms in on a stream, and we don't want to wait for the server,
otherwise we'll get jumpiness.
This commit is a bit complicated, because we do full redraws of
the topic list frequently, and we don't want to randomly obliterate
our "No more topics found" message, so we need to keep a bit of
extra state around.
We now use a template to render the "more topics" link.
We also remove an unnecessary conditional and an unnecessary
attribute.
Finally, our unit tests are a bit more granular now.
This will make testing a bit easier (we can stub stuff before
building the widget), and it will eventually give us more control
on redrawing the topic list.
We were parameterizing max_topics, but it made the calling sequences
unnecessarily complicated. We don't ever override the value, not
even in tests, so now we just set in build_list().
This puts build_list on the widget object, which will make it a
bit easier to unit test, and it's more consistent with the rest of
the function. This also reduces the scope of the `my_stream_name`
variable and moves the initialization of `self.topic_items` into
build_list.
If a user re-narrows to another stream before our server gives
us more topic history, or they zoom out, we can avoid drawing
the topic list. Note that our data structures will still be
updated, although the only time that really matters is for
the corner case of a low-traffic stream. For a low traffic
stream that only had 3 or 4 topics in the original message
fetch, but has longer history, the next time you open the
stream in the sidebar, even when you're zoomed out, you will
see more topics.
Despite a few warts, we are going forward with getting topic
history from the server when you click "more topics." This
commit simplifies the code by removing the feature flag
checks.
Our old optimizations to prevent re-rendering of locally echoed
messages created a lot of code complexity. This commit is an
experiment to simplify the code, which it clearly does. The
danger of re-rendering messages is flicker, but our message
view has changed since the original local echo code was written.
It's kind of confusing to have a filter function that has massive
side effects. Now we just have a simple loop where we triage
some messages into non_echo_messages and do an early-exit in the
loop function. This change also introduces the more explicit
variable name of `non_echo_messages`; before we were shadowing
`messages`.
This fixes the characters like “g” and “l” from overflowing the input
bounds while maintaining the previous height of the input box itself.
Fixes: #6665.
This removes the `box-sizing` attribute on the spectrum input that was
causing the characters to overflow the bounds of the padding, which
would cut off things like the bottom of a “g” or the top of an “f”.
Fixes: #6361.
It's unlikely to be of any real consequence, but this code bugged me
in that it makes a whole set before throwing it away to make nearly
the same set.
Sadly Python's comprehensions lack a way to write these cleanly as one
comprehension; but with no extra code complexity we can make the
temporary a genexp, which does the job.