The search bar for picking message reactions now is case-insensitive,
since that's a better user experience, and there isn't a clear use
case for capital letters in emoji names.
Fixes#4666.
This is a much less annoying behavior than the Chrome browser default.
Explanatory comment added by tabbott, thanks to Steve Howell for the
research.
Fixes#4604.
This enforces a max-width of 1024px on the #settings overlay.
This commit also cleans up the "Your Account" tab to display
correctly without the avatar bleeding over to the next line.
Both callers to get_user_list_for_message_reactions() already
had a message object, so there was no need to pass in an id
just to fetch it from message_store again, so now the first
parameter is message, not message_id.
This adds the current_user_has_reacted_to_emoji() helper.
This new helper is easier to use and slightly more efficient
than calling get_user_list_for_message_reaction() and then
indexOf().
This also replaces one call to get_user_list_for_message_reaction()
with a list of user_ids that we already had locally.
The node tests were improved a bit here, including a minor
whitespace fixup.
We used to render the subscriptions_settings template for every
stream when you loaded "Manage Streams," which can be very slow
for a big realm. Now we only render the right pane on demand.
The function stream_data.add_admin_options() got removed as
part of a somewhat recent fix. This caused a console error, and
the modal would not go away.
We now call the new stream_data.update_calculated_fields().
This commit only addresses the recent regression. We still have
the known issue that public/private changes do not get
live-updated for other users.
This changes the styling of the user profile popup to be responsive
to mobile devices. In this case it is converted to a modal form using
flex to center it on devices with screen sizes under 768px in width.
Fixes#4669.
This is a follow-up to merging the compose and reactions emoji
pickers. The logic for what happens when the user picks an emoji via
the hotkeys (i.e. hits `enter`) was still attempting to add a reaction
to the currently selected message unconditionally.
This commit adds a check in the two `enter` key code paths, and does
the correct thing in each case.
Fixes#4736.
The click target was still for #hamburger even though it has since
been changed to .hamburger. This fixes the selectors to make it work
with the new className declaration over ID.
Rather than checking every modal individually in hotkey.js for
handing the escape key, we now use the modals API:
is_active: says whether any modal is open
close_active: closes the active modal
We were mapping the escape key to fake-click a redundant
click handler when the settings pages were open. This fix
lets the actual click handling work via modals.js, and it
lets keyboard handling directly calls modals.close_settings().
This is one of the last major endpoints that were still done in the
pre-REST style.
While we're at it, we change the endpoint to expect a stream ID, not a
stream name.
This commit removes all references to feature_flags.local_echo.
It's been a core feature for about four years, so I think we
can safely say the experiment was successful.:)
The function modals.is_active() can see if modals are open
without having to look at the DOM. This should make it snappier
to type in the compose box. Even if the speedup is pretty minor,
not having to worry about jQuery slowness should make it easier
to diagnose future compose box issues.
The new function gets used in other places, too, where performance
isn't so much an issue.
The list_render class "list" prop was immutable so when the
data prop would be updated it would not appropriately update
the data inside the primary list for filtering.
This commit also fixes an issue where if a jQuery selection was
passed in, all the nodes rather than just the first get copied over.
This doesn't completely fix settings responsiveness, but it's a big
step along the way. Outstanding issues include:
1. When switching tabs from settings to organization, it will launch
the first item which is more annoying in this view since it brings you
into that tab. Haven’t decided on an elegant solution to this yet.
2. Sidebar scrolling doesn’t work. I have to restructure how the top
section and bottom sections of content are displayed to fix this.
Likely by enforcing min-height of 100% - bottom height on the top piece.
3. Most of it is actually reasonably responsive but some isn’t, and
should be fixed on a case-by-case.
This focuses the body content of the informational overlay after
going to it from "?" so that you can use up and down arrows to then
scroll the content easily.
Fixes: #4480.
This was a regression introduced in ba7b7a9. The ID of the
edit boxes were changed in that commit, but this event
listener was not updated to reflect that.
This fixes an issue where browsers without local storage (aka the
Zulip ancient QT-based desktop app) would throw an exception trying to
reload in modern Zulip.
Previously, we'd log an exception whenever an invalid hashchange
reload token appeared, which is probably a bit excessive given that
this can happen without anything being wrong.
We instead just log something for debugging in the blueslip log and
make sure the #reload hash is cleared.
This is the first part of handling an annoying race that would cause
us to try drawing the right sidebar using (in part) users that we
haven't learned about yet (because we were offline/suspended when they
were created, and we haven't quite realized our event queue is gone yet).
The avatars were previously their natural width, however the avatars
should always be 100% width since the height and width of the images
are known to always be equal.
Before this commit, hovering over the blank area of a stream
would not reflect its "clickability". This behavior is
inconsistent with other clickable lists, such as the user sidebar.
This commit changes the cursor to a pointer when hovering over a
stream and removes annoying pointer-default-pointer changes when
hovering with the mouse over multiple users in the user sidebar.
This removes scaling from the emojis by changing the background size to
a lower value and then allowing for the widths and heights of the
emojis to be proportionally smaller.
The transform: scale property would cause many more repaints in Chrome
and other browsers than should have been necessary which would render
messages above and below the feed light grey boxes that would
momentarily flash as blank before filling with content.
Modified by tabbott to use a percentage in the background-size.
Fixes#4660.
Without changing how we render emoji in messages or changing the data
set used for emoji names, this switches us to the superior
percentage-based system for choosing which emoji from the spritesheet
to select and the iamcal sprite sheets.
It requires some small changes to CSS to ensure emoji are centered
properly in the new design.
Based on Harshit Gupta's work on "Interrelated emoji infrastructure changes".
Tables were previously improperly using the <tbody> to show the headers
so it was not obvious that the styling for <thead> did not represent
the styling of the rest of the tables anymore, so this normalizes
the styling to be consistent with how it looked when the first row
was in the <tbody>.
If we pin a stream, we now scroll up as needed to make sure the
stream is still in view after pinning it. (Note that we don't do
this in the un-pinning case, since users un-pinning stuff may be
doing cleanup on pinned streams they no longer care about.)
Fixes#1714.
When we activate a stream (or one of its topics), we now scroll
the sidebar so that the stream comes into view. We scroll it
just enough to get it to the top or the bottom, depending on
where it had been offscreen before.
- Add file_name field to `RealmEmoji` model and migration.
- Add emoji upload supporting to Upload backends.
- Add uploaded file processing to emoji views.
- Use emoji source url as based for display url.
- Change emoji form for image uploading.
- Fix back-end tests.
- Fix front-end tests.
- Add tests for emoji uploading.
Fixes#1134
This removes the old compose emoji picker in its entirety, changing
the few callbacks needed to launch the reactions-style emoji picker
instead and hook it up properly.
Callbacks for reactions and composing messages are distinguished by
selecting for, respectively, the .reaction and .composition classes.
Fixes#4122.
We are doing this refactor for the sake of keeping our template
consistent with the indentation policy and maintaining its
readability at the same time.
This moves the avatar_ fields in page_params to come from
register_ret. Unlike many fields, changing this had a bit of
complexity, because the avatar update events didn't actually contain
some of the details required for moving these into register_ret to
work correctly without races.
We fix that as part of this change.
Modified significantly by tabbott.
We used to have code scattered in multiple places to
calculate things like admin options, preview urls,
subscriber counts, and rendered descriptions for
streams before we rendered templates in the "Manage
Stream" code.
These are all consolidated into a new function
called stream_data.update_calculated_fields().
This is mostly code cleanup, but it also fixes a bug where
the "View Stream" button would not work for a newly created
stream.
This doesn't quite complete the goals of #4650, which has a plan for
how to remove this entirely, but it causes this problematic code to
now be contained to a very rare case.
Refactored significantly by tabbott just due to rebase age.
Fixes#3629.
Modified composebox_typeahead.js to recognize the triple backtick
and tilde for code blocks, and added appropriate typeahead functions
in that file and in typeahead_helper.js.
Additionally, a new file pygments_data.js contains a dictionary of
the supported languages, mapping to relative popularity
rankings. These rankings determine the order of sort of the
languages in the typeahead.
This JavaScript file is actually in static/generated/pygments_data.js, as it
is generated by a Python script, tools/build_pymgents_data.py. This is
so that if Pygments adds support for new languages, the JavaScript file
will be updated appropriately. This python script uses a set of popularity
rankings defined in lang.json.
Corresponding unit tests were also added.
Fixes#4111.
The function check_stream_existence() temporarliy got moved
to stream_create.js, and our call from compose.js was still trying
to find it in subs.js. Now we move the function to compose.js,
since we no longer use it stream_create.js.
This function is pretty dubious, and we may want to only check
for duplicate stream names locally.
When the user creates a stream, we no longer do a synchronous
check on the back end to find if the stream name already exists.
Instead, we only check our local data, which will prevent many
typical errors, and then we let the back end capture duplicates for
stream names that the client doesn't know about.
We also tone down errors when the stream name is blank--we
only whine about empty streams right before submitting the form.
Also, since our check for duplicate streams is less expensive,
we now capture the "input" event instead of the "focusout" event,
so that if you fix up the name to avoid a collision, you get more
immediate feedback.
When we do detect stream name errors, we conveniently focus the
text field to let the user correct the problem.
It's technically the number of users yesterday. Also, "number of active
users today" suggests something like daily actives today, whereas this graph
currently shows 2-week actives.
Fixes bugs of when multiple messages are being edited simultaneously.
Specifically, typeahead is no longer broken, copying messages to clipboard
is less buggy, and resizing is no longer
broken when multiple messages are being edited.
I changed the watch_manual_resize function to return the listener
functions it creates, and then these are used to remove the event
listeners before the edit box is hidden.
Reusing code from the main compose_message component so that resizing now
behaves correctly. This means that when the user tries to resize vertically,
the autoresize code is disabled, and the textbox reverts to manual resizing.
Fixes#4573
This restructures the <a> tag to be clickable essentially anywhere
within the <li> tags, unlike before where due to it being “inline”, you
had to hover over the text in particular.