For many years we have been excluding the current user
from the buddy list, since their presence is kind
of implicit, and it saves a line of real estate.
This commit removes various user-is-me checks
and puts the user back for the following reasons:
* explicit is better
* newbies will be less confused when they
can see they're actually online
* even long-time users like myself will
feel more comfortable if it's just there
* having yourself in the buddy list facilitates
things like checking your presence or sending
yourself a message
* showing "me" reinforces the meaning of the
green circle (if my circle is green and I'm
active, then others with green circles must
be active too)
* If you're literally the first user in the
realm, you can now see what the buddy list
looks like and try out the chevron menu.
The biggest tradeoff here is the opportunity cost.
For an org with more people than fit on the screen,
we put the Nth person below the fold to show "me".
I think that's fine--users can still scroll or
search.
This commit doesn't do anything special with the
current user in terms of sorting them higher in the
list or giving specific styling.
Fixes#10476
We reduce nesting of code by just early-exiting
for the `is_current_user` check.
This also forces us to be a bit more thorough
with our tests if we want to maintain line
coverage.
For message groups, I just changed the internal name
to "topic_links".
For uses of "subject_links" that are tied to how the
server names fields, I introduced these wrappers:
* util.set_topic_links(obj, topic_links)
* util.get_topic_links(obj)
These can be used for either messages or events.
This is a nice performance optimization for the rare case where the
user does quote-and-reply on a message, aborts the compose, and then
re-does the quote-and-reply.
We split out two new functions and call them
everywhere that we used to call add_display_time():
- `update_group_time_display`
- `update_timestr`
We also make some of the local vars more consistent,
as well as doing more explicit clearing of vars than
`delete`.
Splitting these functions will allow us to muck with date
dividers without affecting the `update_str` functionality.
Previously, when a new stream was created on a client other than the
current one, the browser would first receive the "stream_created"
event, and make up a client-side display color at that time to use in
the "stream settings" view (it doesn't yet know the color that was
selected when the user was actually subscribed, because it doesn't
even know yet that the user is being subscribed to this stream), and
then moments after it'll receive a "susbcribe" event letting the
client know that the user is subscribed (and specifying the color to
use).
However, due to an argument not being passed through properly and a
missing rerender, we were not properly updating either the data
structures or doing a stream colors rerender in order to show the new
color.
This fixes the issue reported in
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/48-mobile/subject/stream.20colors/near/660170
Use the placeholder `[Quoting…]` when quoting and replying before the
quote has been added to the message. Also, add tests to the
`compose_actions` Node tests for the new behavior.
Fix#10705.
Guest users can't access subscribers of any(public or private)
non-subscribed streams. Therefore, hide subscribers list
of all non-subscribed streams from guest users in UI.
Fixes#10749 (the previous parts were fixed already).
This will change the hash of the URL when a new tab
gets selected. Vice versa when the billing page is opened
the appropriate tab is selected according to hash of
the URL. This means when the card gets updated the
page would be reloaded correctly to show #payment-method
tab.
When a user clicks the compose `+` button, create a popover at the
bottom right of the screen including buttons for opening a new stream
message or a new private message.
Guest users can't subscribe themselves to streams, so we shouldn't
display the subscription button at end of stream message view.
Fixes part of #10749.
Guest users can't subscribe themselves to any stream, so we hide the
"Subscribe" button. Previously, it was showing Subscribe button after
a guest user unsubscribed from a stream.
Fixes part of #10749.
The "notification settings" page previously advertised support for
mobile push notifications via checkboxes, even if the server hadn't
yet been registered for push notifications. This was a frequent
source of onboarding pain for new Zulip organizations.
We fix this by providing a clear warning and disabling the relevant
inputs on the settings pages.
Modified significantly by tabbott to correct some tricky logic errors
as well as some copy-paste bugs.
Fixes#10331.
We want to avoid `blueslip.error` in cases where
the root cause could just be bad data that is
human-entered.
There are a few callers here who **should** be
sending good data all the time, but hopefully
they either have good test coverage, other
obvious failure symptoms, or, ideally, just
do what the user would mostly expect in the
face of bad data.
This supports guest user in the user-info-form-modal as well as in the
role section of the admin-user-table.
With some fixes by Tim Abbott and Shubham Dhama.
This is the natural behavior that most users will
probably expect. If you need to go to All Messages when
topics are zoomed in, you can just hit ESC twice.
Before this change, if you hit ESC, then hotkey
code would call search.clear_search, which would
call narrow.deactivate(), which would then use
`$('#search_query')` to clear a value, but then
let search.clear_search blur the input and
disable the exit button. It was all confusing.
Things are a bit more organized now.
Now the code works like this:
hotkey.process_escape_key
Just call narrow.deactivate.
$('#search_exit').on('click', ...):
Just call narrow.deactivate.
narrow.deactivate:
Just call search.clear_search_form
search.clear_search_form:
Just do simple jquery stuff. Don't
change the entire user's narrow, not
even indirectly!
There's still a two-way interaction between
the narrow.js module and the search.js module,
but in each direction it's a one-liner.
The guiding principle here is that we only
want one top-level API, which is narrow.deactivate,
and that does the whole "kitchen sink" of
clearing searches, closing popovers, switching
in views, etc. And then all the functions it
calls out to tend to have much smaller jobs to
do.
This commit can mostly be considered a refactoring, but the
order of operations changes slightly. Basically, as
soon as you hit ESC or click on the search "X", we
clear the search widget. Most users won't notice
any difference, because we don't have to hit the
server to populate the home view. And it's arguably
an improvement to give more immediate feedback.