5babe54310
The weekly stream traffic is a better tiebreaker for stream typeaheads than subscriber count, as it's more directly a measure of a stream's current relevance. Normally stream traffic and subscriber counts are closely correlated, but a good example for me is the #twitter feed on czo, which only has 80 subscribers, but which gets more traffic than our #integrations stream (with 16k subscribers). I would rather see #twitter win the tiebreaker (if it even got to the tiebreaker). The main motivation behind this fix, though, is to break our dependency on peer_data, which has some upcoming changes that will introduce some performance tradeoffs, and I want one less place to audit. Also, it will be easier long term to share this code with mobile if we don't require mobile to pull in our peer_data dependency. (The webapp has different forces than mobile that dicate our data structures.) |
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.circleci | ||
.github | ||
.tx | ||
analytics | ||
confirmation | ||
corporate | ||
docs | ||
frontend_tests | ||
locale | ||
pgroonga | ||
puppet | ||
requirements | ||
scripts | ||
static | ||
stubs | ||
templates | ||
tools | ||
zerver | ||
zilencer | ||
zproject | ||
zthumbor | ||
.browserslistrc | ||
.codecov.yml | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.eslintignore | ||
.eslintrc.json | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitlint | ||
.isort.cfg | ||
.mailmap | ||
.npmignore | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.pyre_configuration | ||
.sonarcloud.properties | ||
.yarnrc | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
Dockerfile-postgresql | ||
LICENSE | ||
NOTICE | ||
README.md | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
Vagrantfile | ||
babel.config.js | ||
manage.py | ||
mypy.ini | ||
package.json | ||
postcss.config.js | ||
prettier.config.js | ||
setup.cfg | ||
stylelint.config.js | ||
tsconfig.json | ||
version.py | ||
webpack.config.ts | ||
yarn.lock |
README.md
Zulip overview
Zulip is a powerful, open source group chat application that combines the immediacy of real-time chat with the productivity benefits of threaded conversations. Zulip is used by open source projects, Fortune 500 companies, large standards bodies, and others who need a real-time chat system that allows users to easily process hundreds or thousands of messages a day. With over 500 contributors merging over 500 commits a month, Zulip is also the largest and fastest growing open source group chat project.
Getting started
Click on the appropriate link below. If nothing seems to apply, join us on the Zulip community server and tell us what's up!
You might be interested in:
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Contributing code. Check out our guide for new contributors to get started. Zulip prides itself on maintaining a clean and well-tested codebase, and a stock of hundreds of beginner-friendly issues.
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Contributing non-code. Report an issue, translate Zulip into your language, write for the Zulip blog, or give us feedback. We would love to hear from you, even if you're just trying the product out.
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Supporting Zulip. Advocate for your organization to use Zulip, write a review in the mobile app stores, or upvote Zulip on product comparison sites.
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Checking Zulip out. The best way to see Zulip in action is to drop by the Zulip community server. We also recommend reading Zulip for open source, Zulip for companies, or Zulip for working groups and part time communities.
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Running a Zulip server. Use a preconfigured DigitalOcean droplet, install Zulip directly, or use Zulip's experimental Docker image. Commercial support is available; see https://zulip.com/plans for details.
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Using Zulip without setting up a server. https://zulip.com offers free and commercial hosting, including providing our paid plan for free to fellow open source projects.
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Participating in outreach programs like Google Summer of Code.
You may also be interested in reading our blog or following us on Twitter. Zulip is distributed under the Apache 2.0 license.