Previously, updating the UI when streams are muted was split between
two places: The server_events.js code path, which updated the checkbox
state and other parts of the app, and checkbox click handler, which
toggled the disabling of the notification settings checkboxes.
Move these to all live in a single place.
It's 2022 and the WHATWG no longer recognizes the term URI. Everything
is now a URL or a type of URL. Which is great because it's way less
confusing. Details here:
https://url.spec.whatwg.org/
We are going to move to this code organization for
managing streams:
stream_create.js
stream_create_subscribers.js
stream_edit.js
stream_edit_subscribers.js
The modules stream_create.js and stream_edit.js historically
manage the entire process of creating and editing stream
data (respectively).
Going forward both will delegate most of the subscriber-specific
pieces to either stream_create_subscribers or stream_edit_subscribers.
The stream_*_subscribers modules will be somewhat similar in
nature, but the way that we manage subscribers at creation time
is a bit different than how we manage subscribers at edit time.
This commit refactors the code to directly pass sub object to
selected_stream_title template instead of passing name, is_web_public
and invite_only as different parameters.
We were showing # for all types of streams in the title at the top
in the right column of stream settings overlay. This commit fixes
it to show globe icon for web-public streams and lock icon for
private streams.
The old name was confusing, since the contents
of the div aren't just a table, and we have
smaller elements that actually do list a bunch
of subscriptions in tabular format.
Even though we intend to shortly share lots of code
for editing stream subscribers with the create-stream
UI, we don't want to confuse click handlers and
containers too much.
This is a fairly straightforward extraction.
It's good to test this with Iago, and then go into
Manage Streams and add/remove subscribers for a stream
like devel.
I copy/pasted two small functions that will soon
diverge from stream_edit. The get_stream_id function
will either use a module variable (since we're
generally only editing subscribers for one stream, and
we already have the singleton assumption with
`input_pill`) or a more strict CSS selector. And then
get_sub_for_target depends on get_stream_id. We may not
always need full subs, anyway, and when we adapt some
of this code for creating streams, things are likely to
change.
I stopped exporting a couple functions that have no
callers outside of this module.
The main entry point for the module is
enable_subscriber_management.
We continue to export invite_user_to_stream and
remove_user_from_stream, which should possibly be just
pulled into their own module to lessen some
dependencies, but they don't have too much baggage,
since they just wrap channel calls.
The name here is accounting for future plans where
we will share code for both of these use cases:
* editing subscribers on current stream (now)
* editing subscribers on new stream (upcoming)
This has two long-term goals:
- avoid circular dependencies between
stream_ui_updates and stream_edit
- facilitate code reuse for adding subscribers
to a new stream (i.e. using same widget for
when you edit subscribers)
This commit changes the behavior of subscriber list to
always be sorted by name instead of sorting them by email
when emails are accessible.
This change is fine because we will be using user-level
email address visibility and in that case the email of
some users will be visible and email of some will be not.
We show "Email" column heading always in users list and
subscriber list irrespective of the email-address visibility
setting after 46660e5, so we do need to pass show_email
parameter to render_admin_tab and render_stream_settings.
The stream creation form also uses the same stream_types template as
the stream privacy modal, however, it currently does not setup its own
handler for displaying the "N:" input when
".stream_message_retention_setting" is changed.
Previously, if one opened the stream creation form, then opened the
stream edit modal, and then went back to the stream creation form, the
drop down would correctly also .show() the input, because the handler
here would also target that selector. This is incorrect since we can't
always expect the stream_edit modal to be opened first, stream_create
should set up its own handlers.
Hence, as a prep commit to fixing stream_creation, and to ensure we
don't add duplicate handlers, in this commit we change all selectors
that targeted ".stream_message_retention_setting" to
"#stream_privacy_modal .stream_message_retention_setting" in this
file.
This commit has the following changes -
- Adds dropdown for changing create_web_public_stream_policy and this
dropdown is visible only if settings.WEB_PUBLIC_STREAMS_ENABLED and
enable_spectator_access is set to True. This dropdown is live-udpated
on changing enable_spectator_access setting.
- The web-public stream option in stream creation form and stream privacy
modal is hidden if one of settings.WEB_PUBLIC_STREAMS_ENABLED or
enable_spectator_access is set to False except in stream privacy modal
when the stream is already web-public so that the user is not confused by
none of the options being selected.
- We disable the web-public stream option in stream creation form and
in stream-privacy modals of stream which are not already web-public
when the user is not allowed to create web-public streams as per
create_web_public_stream_policy setting.
- We use on_show parameter to hide or disable the options in stream-privacy
modal because we use the visible property of element to remove the bottom
border from last element in the stream-privacy choices and thus we have
to wait for the modal to be visible.
Fixes#20287. Fixes#20296.
A user wouldn't differentiate between a "normal" modal and a "settings"
modal. If one shows up instantly, one would expect all the others to do
the same. The difference between Bootstrap fade and non-fade is pretty
noticeable (300 ms for fading).
This is a prep commit for the Micromodal migration which will have 120ms
as the animation time which wouldn't feel slow.
We attach the DOM for the modal to the body element
to avoid style interference from other elements and having to choose
a separate parent element for every single dialog_widget.
This is a prep-commit which simplifies changes when we add
web public streams condition here. Since our linter forces us
use switch then, we use it beforehand to simplify changes.
We pass user_settings object to all_notifications and
get_notifications_table_row_data such that we can use these
functions for realm-level settings also.
This commit updates both the stream-level and realm-level message
retention setting to use 'unlimited' instead of 'forever' to set
message retention setting to "retain messages forever".
Our logic for filtering subscribed users in stream setting was
buggy and gave irrelevant filters based on email matching.
We correct it by using same logic as we use for filtering in
buddy list.
We do following changes in this commit to have a uniform file
structure for stream setting templates.
* Move change_stream_info_modal.hbs to stream_settings folder.
* Rename subscription_stream_privacy_modal.hbs to
stream_privacy_setting_modal.hbs.
* Move stream_privacy_setting_modal.hbs to stream_settings folder.
This commmit does following two changes to subscription_settings.hbs:
* Rename subscription_settings to stream_settings to have a uniform
naming pattern for stream settings.
* Move it to stream_settings folder.
We used html_submit_button to pass text to be present in the modal
submit button. There are only two possible options as of now -
"Confirm" and "Save changes" and the correct one can be determined
using is_confirm_modal parameter. So, we remove this paramter for
now and we can add it later if we have more type of modals using
this widget.
This commit renames the variables, functions used in confirm_dialog.js
and classes and ids used in confirm_dialog.hbs.
This change is made so that we can easily migrate edit_fields_modal to
use this same code with some more changes.
We will change the file names and correspondingly import variables in
the next commit.
We use subs as a common variable name for a collection of stream
data structure used in settings, in lot of modules. So this
rename clears a bunch of related shadowed variables.
We had a common title `stream settings` for two cases
when no stream was selected and also when settings for
a particular stream were shown.
To improve this situation we now show `Settings for {stream_name}`
when settings for a particular stream are shown.
We move away from a single scrollable page to have a tabs settings
structure instead.
This commit consists of the minimal changes required to set up toggler
component. And the subsequent commits would include all the UI UX
changes required for updating the layouts.
Co-authored-by: Ryan Rehman <ryanrehman99@gmail.com>
This commit renames confirm_dialog_yes_button class to
confirm_dialog_submit_button. This will help in keeping
a general class name when deduplicating the code for
confirm_dialog and edit_fields_modal.