This commit simplifies the initial state of the invite modal when it's opened to make it one click away from creating an invite link. The existing options/fields within the invite modal are still available, but are now hidden behind an advanced mode which can be enabled.
On the technical front, this PR also switches the invite modal to use our FormKit library.
Internal topic: t/134023.
This adds dedicated routes for /login and /signup, replacing the use of modals. Currently, this is behind the experimental_full_page_login feature flag. It also includes some small consistency fixes related to formatting, spacing, icons, and the loading of certain elements
When a post has some replies, and the user click on the button to show them, we would load ALL the replies. This could lead to DoS if there were a very large number of replies.
This adds support for pagination to these post replies.
Internal ref t/129773
FIX: Duplicated parent posts
DEV: Query refactor
Replaces the existing topic map with the experimental-topic-map made by @awesomerobot.
---------
Co-authored-by: awesomerobot <kris.aubuchon@discourse.org>
This PR introduces FormKit, a component-based form library designed to simplify form creation and management. This library provides a single `Form` component, various field components, controls, validation mechanisms, and customization options. Additionally, it includes helpers to facilitate testing and writing specifications for forms.
1. **Form Component**:
- The main component that encapsulates form logic and structure.
- Yields various utilities like `Field`, `Submit`, `Alert`, etc.
**Example Usage**:
```gjs
import Form from "discourse/form";
<template>
<Form as |form|>
<form.Field
@name="username"
@title="Username"
@validation="required"
as |field|
>
<field.Input />
</form.Field>
<form.Field @name="age" @title="Age" as |field|>
<field.Input @type="number" />
</form.Field>
<form.Submit />
</Form>
</template>
```
2. **Validation**:
- Built-in validation rules such as `required`, `number`, `length`, and `url`.
- Custom validation callbacks for more complex validation logic.
**Example Usage**:
```javascript
validateUsername(name, value, data, { addError }) {
if (data.bar / 2 === value) {
addError(name, "That's not how maths work.");
}
}
```
```hbs
<form.Field @name="username" @validate={{this.validateUsername}} />
```
3. **Customization**:
- Plugin outlets for extending form functionality.
- Styling capabilities through propagated attributes.
- Custom controls with properties provided by `form` and `field`.
**Example Usage**:
```hbs
<Form class="my-form" as |form|>
<form.Field class="my-field" as |field|>
<MyCustomControl id={{field.id}} @onChange={{field.set}} />
</form.Field>
</Form>
```
4. **Helpers for Testing**:
- Test assertions for form and field validation.
**Example usage**:
```javascript
assert.form().hasErrors("the form shows errors");
assert.form().field("foo").hasValue("bar", "user has set the value");
```
- Helper for interacting with he form
**Example usage**:
```javascript
await formKit().field("foo").fillIn("bar");
```
5. **Page Object for System Specs**:
- Page objects for interacting with forms in system specs.
- Methods for submitting forms, checking alerts, and interacting with fields.
**Example Usage**:
```ruby
form = PageObjects::Components::FormKit.new(".my-form")
form.submit
expect(form).to have_an_alert("message")
```
**Field Interactions**:
```ruby
field = form.field("foo")
expect(field).to have_value("bar")
field.fill_in("bar")
```
6. **Collections handling**:
- A specific component to handle array of objects
**Example Usage**:
```gjs
<Form @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=1) (hash bar=2))}} as |form|>
<form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection|>
<collection.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
<field.Input />
</collection.Field>
</form.Collection>
</Form>
```
Continued work on moderate flags UI.
In this PR admins are allowed to change the order of flags. The notify user flag is always on top but all other flags can be moved.
- removes `will-change: auto;` which is a performance hack which should be avoided and is probably causing more harm than good here
- lowers swipe velocity to 0.4 to ensure the modal can be dismissed with the thumb
- uses JS CSS animate API to animate the backdrop opacity
- uses the height of the modal container to have more precise values when computing backdrop opacity
- animate the modal container instead of the wrapper
- removes a useless template-lint-disable directive
- simplify the closing animation
- various small code tweaks to limit indirection
DropdownMenu component is meant as a way to describe the content of menus.
Syntax:
```
<DropdownMenu as |dm|>
<dm.item class="test">
First
</dm.item>
<dm.divider class="foo" />
<dm.item class="bar">
Second
</dm.item>
</DropdownMenu>
```
This commit adds a new option `@modalForMobile` for `<DMenu />` which allows to display a `<DModal />` when expanding a menu on mobile.
This commit also adds a `@views` options to toasts which is an array accepting `['mobile', 'desktop']` and will control if the toast is show on desktop and/or mobile.
Finally this commit allows to hide the progressBar even if the toast is set to `@autoClose=true`. This is controlled through the `@showProgressBar` option.
This commit mainly improves three things:
- slide up/down animation of the modals on mobile, also allowing swipe down to close the modal
- body scroll locked modals, it means that only the body of the modal can scroll
- a new `<:headerPrimaryAction>` block for `d-modal` which when present will move the cancel button to the left of the modal title, and this primary action to the right of the title
This reverts commit d0d4a363d4. This causes issues for people that have specified explicit font sizes in their browser - reverting while we investigate. https://meta.discourse.org/t/300374
Previously we had an iOS-specific sizing rule which would increase inputs to `1.07em`, which would bring them over the 16px 'zoom on focus' threshold in some (but technically, not all) situations.
This commit does two things:
1. Updates the sizing rule from `1.07em` to `max(1em, 16px)`. Essentially: use the cascaded font size, unless it is smaller than 16px
2. Applies that sizing rule on all platforms. This will make Discourse design/theming more consistent across different devices
It also removes some associated CSS rules which no longer make sense.