Explicitly stubbing i18n in 48 different files
is mostly busy work at this point, and it doesn't
provide much signal, since often it's invoked
only to satisfy transitive dependencies.
This commit was originally automatically generated using `tools/lint
--only=eslint --fix`. It was then modified by tabbott to contain only
changes to a set of files that are unlikely to result in significant
merge conflicts with any open pull request, excluding about 20 files.
His plan is to merge the remaining changes with more precise care,
potentially involving merging parts of conflicting pull requests
before running the `eslint --fix` operation.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Even though this variable was only assigned once, it was accessed
before its initialization, so it couldn’t be converted directly to
`let` or `const`. Use `let` with an explicit `null` to make it
clearer what’s going on and satisfy ESLint. (Why not `undefined`?
There’s an ESLint rule against that too.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Apparently, we didn't have one of these, and thus had a moderate
number of generally very old violations in the codebase. Fix this and
clear the ones that exist..
Explaining the problem a bit: When we narrow to a stream/private message
using `q+Enter`/`w+Enter` compose box opens which isn't desirable here.
The bug here was the propagation of event after getting handled in
`keydown_util.handle` to `hotkeys.process_enter_key`.
Fixes: #9679.
In our toggler component (the thing that handles tabs in things
like our markdown/search help, settings/org, etc.), we have
a callback mechanism when you switch to the tab. We were
being tricky and only calling it when the tab changed.
It turns out it's better to just always call the callback,
since these things are often in modals that open and close,
and if you open a modal for the second time, you want to do
the callback task for whichever setting you're going to.
There was actually kind of a nasty bug with this, where the
keyboard handling in the keyboard-help modal worked fine the
first time you opened it, but then it didn't work the second
time (if you focused some other element in the interim), and
it was due to not re-setting the focus to the inner modal
because we weren't calling the callback.
Of course, there are pitfalls in calling the same callbacks
twice, but our callbacks should generally be idempotent
for other reasons.
This run_test helper sets up a convention that allows
us to give really short tracebacks for errors, and
eventually we can have more control over running
individual tests. (The latter goal has some
complications, since we often intentionally leak
setup in tests.)
We now have components.toggle simply return an object, without
putting the object into a lookup table. The consumers of the
objects have all been changed to just store the object in their
own module scope.
The diff is a bit hard to read here, but it's mostly de-denting
code and removing these things:
- we don't have opts.name
- we don't have __toggle.lookup
- we don't have keys
- we don't create a sibling object to the prototype object
This is a recent regression where we I refactored the toggle
component. For some reason the old code was waiting until
after the callback to set some of its state, and I did the
same thing when I simplified how the state was stored.
Under the old code, this didn't manifest as a bug, although
the old code was problematic for other reasons.
This "fix" doesn't actually change anything user facing, as the
follow up commit fixes the proximal problem more directly. And
the toggle component is still prone to people writing code that
tries to inspect the state of the widget as it's being built.
This is a pretty thin abstraction to prevent having to put
magic numbers in code, doing the which/keyCode hack, and remembering
to all preventDefault.
Hopefully we'll expand it to handle things like shift/alt keys
for components that want their own keyboard handlers (vs. going
through hotkey.js).
This adds some helpers to avoid some duplication, and we also
now track the selected idx directly, since it's all under our
control.
The main addition is `select_tab`, which we now use for some
things that used to simulate clicks.