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.
We've found a couple major issues that we need to fix:
* TRAVIS_COMMIT_RANGE being computed incorrectly in some cases (?!)
* The imperative linter could use some work.
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 makes it possible for the Zulip mobile apps to use the normal web
authentication/Oauth flows, so that they can support GitHub, Google,
and other authentication methods we support on the backend, without
needing to write significant custom mobile-app-side code for each
authentication backend.
This PR only provides support for Google auth; a bit more refactoring
would be needed to support this for the GitHub/Social backends.
Modified by tabbott to use the mobile_auth_otp library to protect the
API key.
We'll need to implement a version of the simple decoding/decryption
logic used by this library in the mobile code as well, but that should
be simple enough.
The integration guide has now been updated to reflect the recent
decision to store webhook fixtures in
zerver/webhooks/<webhook_name>/fixtures/ as opposed to
zerver/fixtures/<webhook_name>/.
The webhook walkthrough has now been updated to reflect the recent
decision to store webhook fixtures in
zerver/webhooks/<webhook_name>/fixtures/ as opposed to
zerver/fixtures/<webhook_name>/.
All webhook fixtures in zerver/fixtures/<webhook_name> have now
been moved to dedicated webhook-specific directories under
zerver/webhooks/<webhook_name>/fixtures, where <webhook_name> is
the name of the webhook.
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.
When you subscribe to a stream, we now set a newly_subscribed
flag on the object, and we return true during the is_active()
call.
This solves the problem that immediately after you subscribe, you
don't have any messages in the stream, so it would appear active
by our old criteria.
This is still something of a workaround, as once you reload, the
stream will become inactive again, unless other messages come in.
A more permanent solution here would be to have the backend
indicate newly subscribed streams to us (apart from the initial
event), but we may not really need that in practice.
It turns out the check to make sure that "social" filtered to
the bottom could give a false positive, since it was already
alphabetically at the end of the list.
So, I call the stream "cars" now instead, so that it only comes
after "Denmark" if the is_active flag gets respected.
I also check for the divider tags now.
This completes a major redesign of the Zulip login and registration
pages, making them look much more slick and modern.
Major features include:
* Display of the realm name, description and icon on the login page
and registration pages in the subdomains case.
* Much slicker looking buttons and input fields.
* A new overall style for the exterior of these portico pages.
This makes the height of the list-items all 24px and changes
the home icon to be a slightly larger 16px instead of 14px which
looked visually smaller than the other icons.
This new feature makes it possible to request a different set of
initial data from the event_types an API client is subscribing to.
Primarily useful for mobile apps, where bandwidth constraints might
mean one wants to subscribe to events for a broader set of data than
is initially fetched, and plan to fetch the current state in future
requests.
For our Git integrations, we now only display the number of commits
pushed when the pusher also happens to be the only author of the
commits being pushed.
Part of #3968.
Follow-up to #4006.
For Git push messages, we now have a single space character between
the name of a commit's author and the number of commits by that
author, plus a period at the end.
Part of #3968.
Follow-up to #4006.
We now use the name of the author of a commit as opposed to the
committer to format Git messages with multiple committers.
Part of #3968.
Follow-up to #4006.
- Add aggregated info to real-time updated presence status.
- Update `presence events` test case with adding aggregated
information to presence event.
- Add test case for updating presence status for user which
send state from multiple clients.
Fixes#4282.
The new logic has 4 tiers of priority:
* Whether a match is found in the name, start of description, middle
of description, etc.
* Importance to the user / activity -- more specifically, the order
used in the left sidebar. This means pinned streams first, active
streams, then inactive streams.
* Subscriber count: How big is the stream? Bigger is better.
* Alphabetical ordering is a final tiebreak.
Fixes#4508.
There is a mechanism to prevent a user from "clicking" on a message
if they drag over it, to allow people to copy message contents without
triggering the compose box to open.
In the case that a user would start dragging from outside a message
and finish dragging within a message, data on where the cursor started
at is missing.
This is fixed by checking if start data exists and if it doesn't, we
just throw a drag distance of Infinity which will tell the program to
not count the action as a "click" on the message. This now does not
have an uncaught error because it instead validates "start" as existing
before attempting to access its properties.
Due to a past refactoring, the from_reload argument to do_hashchange
changed from having true/undefined as the possible values to
true/false instead. The check that sets the from_reload and
first_unread_from_server narrow options was thus incorreclty treating
from_reload of false the same as a from_reload of undefined.
As a result, if the browser had been loaded with a
page_params.initial_narrow_pointer (aka via the background reload code
path), then for the duration of that browser session, every time one
narrowed via a hashchange rather than an explicit click handler (which
apparently includes clicking on a PM thread in the left sidebar), we'd
end up narrowing with a then_select_id of the that initial narrow
pointer, not the correct first unread message.
The fix is simply changing the check for truthiness, not undefined, in
do_hashchange.