User flair was given by user's primary group. This PR separates the
two, adds a new field to the user model for flair group ID and users
can select their flair from user preferences now.
In some conditions, pages were skipped. This was implemented in the past
in f490a8d, but then reverted in 04ec543, because sometimes it was stuck
reloading the first page.
The code that loads more results was simplified and a lot of duplicate
code was removed. The logic to remove users who changed their vote was
also introduced again, but just for the regular polls.
Partially revert f490a8d39a because we aren't able to
load more than the initially preloaded voters.
We were always trying to load the 1st page of voters.
Also removed the "remove users who changed their vote" logic as it was not properly working in multiple choices polls.
cc @nbianca
* FIX: Fetch last page again if incomplete
The next fetched page number used to increase continuously even if the
last page was incomplete and fetching it again could have new voters.
* FIX: Do not display twice a user who changed vote
A user could appear under two voting options when they changed their
vote because pressing the Load More Voters button updated only the
current option.
This encompasses a lot of work done over the last year, much of which
has already been merged into master. This is the final set of changes
required to get Ember CLI running locally for development.
From here on it will be bug fixes / enhancements.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
Using arrow functions changes `this` context, which is undesired in tests, e.g. it makes it impossible to setup things like pretender (`this.server`) in `beforeEach` hooks.
Ember guides always use classic functions in examples (e.g. https://guides.emberjs.com/release/testing/test-types/), and that's what it uses in its own test suite, as do various addons and ember apps.
It was also already used in Discourse where `this` was required. Moving forward, it will be needed in more places as we migrate toward ember-cli.
(I might later add a custom rule to eslint-discourse-ember to enforce this)
In newer Embers jQuery is removed. There is a `find` but it only returns
one element and not a jQuery selector. This patch migrates our code to a
new helper `queryAll` which allows us to remove the global.
This is long overdue. We had a lot of (not linted) code to initialize
our test suite as part of the Ruby `test_helper.js` bundle.
This refactor moves that out to a `setup-tests` module, which imports
all the modules properly, rather than using `require`.
It also removes the global `server` variable which some tests were using
for pretender. Those tests are fixed, and in the case of widget tests,
support for a `pretend()` was added, which mimics our acceptance tests.
One problematic test was removed, which overwrites `/posts` - this could
break tons of other tests depending on order.
This is where they should be as far as ember is concerned. Note this is
a huge commit and we should be really careful everything continues to
work properly.
This PR removes the user reminder topic timers, because that system has been supplanted and improved by bookmark reminders. The option is removed from the UI and all existing user reminder topic timers are migrated to bookmark reminders.
Migration does this:
* Get all topic_timers with status_type 5 (reminders)
* Gets all bookmarks where the user ID and topic ID match
* Loops through the found topic timers
* If there is no bookmark for the OP of the topic, then we just create a bookmark with a reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic and it does **not** have a reminder set, then just
update it with the topic timer reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic with a reminder then just discard the topic timer
* Cancels all outstanding user reminder topic timers
* **Trashes (not deletes) all user reminder topic timers**
Notes:
* For now I have left the user reminder topic timer job class in place; this is so the jobs can be cancelled in the migration. It and the specs will be deleted in the next PR.
* At a later date I will write a migration to delete all trashed user topic timers. They are not deleted here in case there are data issues and they need to be recovered.
* A future PR will change the UI of the topic timer modal to make it look more like the bookmark modal.
The poll breakdown modal replaces the grouped pie charts feature.
Includes:
* MODAL: Untangle `onSelectPanel`
Previously modal-tab component would call on click the onSelectPanel callback with itself (modal-tab) as `this` which severely limited its usefulness. Now showModal binds the callback to its controller.
"The PR includes a fix/change to d-modal (b7f6ec6) that hasn't been extracted to a separate PR because it's not currently possible to test a change like this in abstract, i.e. with dynamically created controllers/components in tests. The percentage/count toggle test for the poll breakdown feature is essentially a test for that d-modal modification."
* Remove unused Discourse.SiteSettings
* Remove `Discourse.SiteSettings` from many tests
* REFACTOR: `lib:formatter` was using a lot of leaky state
* Remove more `Discourse.SiteSettings` from tests
* More SiteSettings removed from tests
This new iteration of select-kit focuses on following best principales and disallowing mutations inside select-kit components. A best effort has been made to avoid breaking changes, however if you content was a flat array, eg: ["foo", "bar"] You will need to set valueProperty=null and nameProperty=null on the component.
Also almost every component should have an `onChange` handler now to decide what to do with the updated data. **select-kit will not mutate your data by itself anymore**
* Calling `Discourse.reset()` creates a new container
We should run our de-initializers only after acceptance tests,
since initializers are not run outside of acceptance tests anyway,
and the container at this point can be passed properly to the
`teardown()` method.
* Remove `Discourse.reset` from tests
This would cause a new container to be created which leaks many objects.
* `updateCurrentUser` is more accurate than `replaceCurrentUser`