This commit adds support for the following ordering filters:
1. `order:activity` which orders the topics by `Topic#bumped_at` in descending order
2. `order:activity-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#bumped_at` in ascending order
3. `order:latest-post` which orders the topics by `Topic#last_posted_at` in descending order
4. `order:latest-post-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#last_posted_at` in ascending order
5. `order:created` which orders the topics by `Topic#created_at` in descending order
6. `order:created-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#created_at` in ascending order
7. `order:views` which orders the topics by `Topic#views` in descending order
8. `order:views-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#views` in ascending order
9. `order:likes` which orders the topics by `Topic#likes` in descending order
10. `order:likes-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#likes` in ascending order
11. `order:likes-op` which orders the topics by `Post#like_count` of the first post in the topic in descending order
12. `order:likes-op-asc` which orders the topics by `Post#like_count` of the first post in the topic in ascending order
13. `order:posters` which orders the topics by `Topic#participant_count` in descending order
14. `order:posters-asc` which orders the topics by `Topic#participant_count` in ascending order
15. `order:category` which orders the topics by `Category#name` of the topic's category in descending order
16. `order:category-asc` which orders the topics by `Category#name` of the topic's category in ascending order
Multiple order filters can be composed together and the order of ordering is applied based on the position of the filter
in the query string. For example, `order:views order:created` will order the topics by `Topic#views` in descending order
and then order the topics by `Topics#created_at` in descending order.
This commit adds support for the following date filters:
1. `activity-before:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics that have been bumped at or before given date
2. `activity-after:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics that have been bumped at or after given date
3. `created-before:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics that have been created at or before given date
4. `created-after:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics that have been created at or after given date
5. `latest-post-before:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics with the
latest post posted at or before given date
6. `latest-post-after:<YYYY-MM-DD>` which filters for topics with the
latest post posted at or after given date
If the filter has an invalid value, i.e string that cannot be converted
into a proper date in the `YYYY-MM-DD` format, the filter will be ignored.
If either of each filter is specify multiple times, only the last
occurrence of each filter will be taken into consideration.
- It seems that `window_opened_by/within_window` it not reliable in our current setup/test
- System specs should avoid at all cost to rely on backend state, any change should be visible one way or another on the front to be properly tested
Followup to c03f83bbea.
The `flair_group_id` parameter is now required to show the flair, and this serializer was missing that detail.
This also fixes a typo in the `include_flair_group_name?` method.
Group user event webhooks filtered by group fail silently
because the `group_ids` job arg wasn't being passed into the job.
This change add's `group_ids` to the `EmitWebHookEvent` jobs queued for
`user_added_to_group` and `user_removed_from_group` events.
Large or broken images are removed from oneboxes, but sometimes images
were removed when they were oneboxed too. The reason is that images can
be oneboxed by the AllowlistedGenericOnebox or ImageOnebox and only
AllowlistedGenericOnebox was handled correctly.
1. `this.chat.activeChannel = null` was being done in twice
2. using `willTransition()` and checking transition.to.name prefix for route cleanup rather than using `deactivate()` was unnecessarily verbose and could be premature (if something aborted the transition you'd end up in a broken state)
3. `activeChannel` on Chat service can be null, check for that before accessing
It's very hard to repro but under specific circumstances I suspect it was possible for this sequence to happen:
- set message TEXT
- cooking starts
- set message COOKED through another mean (like a message bus)
- the cooking started sooner finished and erases the cooked set at the step before causing the message to have the incorrect cooked
User status updates come from the server in a map where keys are user IDs.
If user.trackStatus() is called for a user model without an ID, the model
cannot identify its status updates and silently misses them. It's quite hard to
notice that a user rendered in the UI doesn't receive live status updates.
Also, it's not immediately obvious what's the reason of the problem.
A warning will be very helpful here.
Named outlets are deprecated and will be removed in Ember 4.x.
Backwards-compatibility shims are introduced so that plugin overrides to `controller:composer` are ported to `service:composer`.
After removing `TextareaTextManipulation` from `ChatComposer` and using `TextareaInteractor` as a proxy, one function has been forgotten: `paste(event)` which is not available in glimmer components anymore, and even less avaiable now that the mixin is not tied to a component anymore but a real DOM node. As a solution we now add a manual paste event listener which will call `paste(event)`.
Before `pg` gem version 1.4.6 was loading `date` as dependency.
Looks like version 1.5.1 is not doing that anymore. Update was done here: d32709a74f
Therefore, we have to load `date` explicitly.
Adds a bit more information to the categories view for crawlers, for better indexing of deep content.
This only works when the "Subcategories with Featured Topics" is the selected layout.
We call the `/u/search/users` URL when autocompleting users. It returns
user's name, username and avatar template, but not user ID.
We need it to return user IDs in order to display user status in certain situations.
I could add ID to FoundUserWithStatusSerializer, so it will be added only if
user status is enabled in site settings. But I feel that it's good to always return it,
it's not a lot of data comparing to what we already return, and it should be useful
in other scenarios.
This pull request is a full overhaul of the chat-composer and contains various improvements to the thread panel. They have been grouped in the same PR as lots of improvements/fixes to the thread panel needed an improved composer. This is meant as a first step.
### New features included in this PR
- A resizable side panel
- A clear dropzone area for uploads
- A simplified design for image uploads, this is only a first step towards more redesign of this area in the future
### Notable fixes in this PR
- Correct placeholder in thread panel
- Allows to edit the last message of a thread with arrow up
- Correctly focus composer when replying to a message
- The reply indicator is added instantly in the channel when starting a thread
- Prevents a large variety of bug where the composer could bug and prevent sending message or would clear your input while it has content
### Technical notes
To achieve this PR, three important changes have been made:
- `<ChatComposer>` has been fully rewritten and is now a glimmer component
- The chat composer now takes a `ChatMessage` as input which can directly be used in other operations, it simplifies a lot of logic as we are always working a with a `ChatMessage`
- `TextareaInteractor` has been created to wrap the existing `TextareaTextManipulation` mixin, it will make future migrations easier and allow us to have a less polluted `<ChatComposer>`
Note ".chat-live-pane" has been renamed ".chat-channel"
Design for upload dropzone is from @chapoi
This reverts commit d32709a74f.
It is printing deprecation message due to Rails usage of the PG gem. We
need to wait for a new release of Rails to be cut first.
Due to the order we were parsing markdown, bbcode [url] elements were not
handled properly.
`[url]https://example.com/path[/url]` was not currectly parsing cause
linkify was detecting the url as: `https://example.com/path[/url]` which is
legit.
To resolve this I swapped url to use a replace rule, and instead re-parsed
the internal payload and injected the tokens in.
This fix is complex cause we support stuff like
`[url][b]test.com[/b][/url]`
So we need to parse the content inside url `[b]test.com[/b]`
Currently, only user badge grants emit webhook events. This change
extends the `user_badge` webhook to emit user badge revocation events.
A new `user_badge_revoked` event has been introduced instead of relying
on the existing `user_badge_removed` event. `user_badge_removed` emitted
just the `badge_id` and `user_id` which aren't helpful for generating a
meaningful webhook payload for revoked(deleted) user badges.
The new event emits the user badge object.