This is required to get historical messages that might be within the
message ID range of your home view.
I think we could avoid calling load_old_messages on every narrow by
tracking when the user last subscribed to each stream, and if the user
subscribed before the first message in the current home view message
window (aka the messages used for the fast-path narrowing), don't call
load_old_messages. This would happen almost every time. But it would
require a schema change to do this.
We also remove the load_more_messages call from hashchange.initialize.
It is no longer required now that we're calling load_old_messages on
each narrow anyway.
(imported from commit 1c78c183e61392429592ae89d566315be7be8999)
This should fix the problems we've been having with out-of-order
message deliveries, and is also an important prerequisite for showing
historical messages.
(imported from commit 77a18a526bf8ec4f1f70b776ac8b7e189d00bcf4)
This is a V1 of this feature. For now, the only way to expand is by narrowing
to the stream---future revisions may add a manual toggle if it is found to be
useful.
Additionally, showing per-subject unread counts will be coming in a future revision
as well.
(imported from commit fb5df0d27e928fa3b0f32b9ff2c1c508202cf7e5)
This commit will incorrectly list past-online users as active, a shortcoming that is
addressed in the next commit
(imported from commit b018767df686f88c0ca939c067c573e4d7cea357)
Otherwise it applies to all password-type <input>s, which is not necessarily
what we want.
(imported from commit da2bb86961f4ff1dcc48e89e51abac6dbea79548)
We now have the bar color to indicate (for most users) whether the password is
valid, so revert to the default validation behavior and don't validate before
the first blur.
(imported from commit 5c2f6e05a8796033942a2af62f244b61459ff1bb)
And scroll there on any error (previously, we would scroll only if we end up
submitting the form).
(imported from commit 63597c4da78ac92cd5c2314d6d174d178b1caaf3)
It seems to have no effect and does not appear anywhere else in our repository
or in jquery.validate.min.js.
(imported from commit c4d2f730f3b680e15af17cefee34f6930e64ade0)
Otherwise, if you get an error those e-mails are still around the next
time you try to invite someone.
(imported from commit b521a74f4d6c0d67271f804221f519d1aa7551ff)
This fixes user-visible browser errors caused by trying to use the id
of messages in an empty message list.
One error could be triggered by trying to go to the end of your feed
with the End key during a reload.
Another could be triggered by trying to narrow to a stream or subject
using hotkeys while in an empty narrow.
(imported from commit a0e5456fd3b475aecac6eddd7104772baaf3aeb8)
I noticed that on chrome, calling narrow.deactivate() actually ended
up calling itself recursively due to the hashchange code not correctly
handling the fact that in Chrome if you set
window.location.hash = '#';
and then read out the value, you get '' back out.
(imported from commit 9b5047fbe0e2ac1846e5325d066c72306634c523)
What was happening is that if you un-narrowed immediately after
receiving a message (e.g. because you just sent it), the autoscroll
animation from the zfilt table would still be running after you return
to the home view, resulting in the viewport being scrolled to an
apparently random point in the home view (even though the pointer was
still in the right place).
This cancels the autoscroll animations whenever you do one of:
(1) hashchange (e.g. to go to the settings page)
(2) select a message (covers narrowing/unnarrowing as well as keyboard hotkeys)
(3) mousewheel scroll
since those are basically the cases where we set the viewport
scrolltop directly.
Arguably this should instead be something where we somehow detect
which scroll events are triggered by what and cancel for any scroll
event not from the animation or rererendering, but that seems hard.
(imported from commit f776021303404c87b36241c733b3d1bcb083163b)
When testing locally this bar sort of lies, because the actual bottleneck
is Django→S3.
In prod, our connection to S3 will supposudly be really fast so this won't
matter.
(imported from commit c9f4b4882cbfdf3bbb8180f1500f35d8481c1f39)
This allows users to drag and drop content onto the compose box, storing
their data in Amazon S3.
New dependencies:
- python-boto
(imported from commit 339874e483db5c36312c9ceae56db29da6ca0d99)