"use strict"; const _ = require("lodash"); const people = require("./people"); // For simplicity, we use a list for our internal // data, since that matches what the server sends us. let my_alert_words = []; exports.set_words = function (words) { my_alert_words = words; }; exports.get_word_list = function () { // People usually only have a couple alert // words, so it's cheap to be defensive // here and give a copy of the list to // our caller (in case they want to sort it // or something). return [...my_alert_words]; }; exports.has_alert_word = function (word) { return my_alert_words.includes(word); }; exports.process_message = function (message) { // Parsing for alert words is expensive, so we rely on the host // to tell us there any alert words to even look for. if (!message.alerted) { return; } for (const word of my_alert_words) { const clean = _.escapeRegExp(word); const before_punctuation = "\\s|^|>|[\\(\\\".,';\\[]"; const after_punctuation = "\\s|$|<|[\\)\\\"\\?!:.,';\\]!]"; const regex = new RegExp( "(" + before_punctuation + ")" + "(" + clean + ")" + "(" + after_punctuation + ")", "ig", ); message.content = message.content.replace( regex, (match, before, word, after, offset, content) => { // Logic for ensuring that we don't muck up rendered HTML. const pre_match = content.substring(0, offset); // We want to find the position of the `<` and `>` only in the // match and the string before it. So, don't include the last // character of match in `check_string`. This covers the corner // case when there is an alert word just before `<` or `>`. const check_string = pre_match + match.substring(0, match.length - 1); const in_tag = check_string.lastIndexOf("<") > check_string.lastIndexOf(">"); // Matched word is inside a HTML tag so don't perform any highlighting. if (in_tag === true) { return before + word + after; } return before + "" + word + "" + after; }, ); } }; exports.notifies = function (message) { // We exclude ourselves from notifications when we type one of our own // alert words into a message, just because that can be annoying for // certain types of workflows where everybody on your team, including // yourself, sets up an alert word to effectively mention the team. return !people.is_current_user(message.sender_email) && message.alerted; }; exports.initialize = (params) => { my_alert_words = params.alert_words; }; window.alert_words = exports;