Adds a new slow mode for topics that are heating up. Users will have to wait for a period of time before being able to post again.
We store this interval inside the topics table and track the last time a user posted using the last_posted_at datetime in the TopicUser relation.
* FEATURE: add penalty options for take action
Add the ability to silence or suspend users from the "take action"
button when moderators are flagging posts. This allows for a more streamlined
active moderation workflow, when moderating against a topic directly.
Allows site administrators to pick different fonts for headings in the wizard and in their site settings. Also correctly displays the header logos in wizard previews.
We previously used the "●" Unicode character for this circle. Using Unicode for this means that it's up to the browser / OS to determine how it renders.
This commit changes it to a CSS shape so that we always get the same rendering regardless of the user's browser / OS.
* FEATURE: Diffrentiate between group + individual mentions
This commit adds the necessary code for Discorse core to differentiate between group + individual mentions in the notification user panel and notification page.
It changes the group mention icon from `at` to `users` as well as adds context as to which group was mentioned in the topic.
* REFACTOR: reworks all the search-advanced-options panel
This commit includes the following changes:
- prevents any mutation of external (to the component) values
- get rid of observers
- uses @action
- minor UI tweaks
- dropped the unecessary debounce
- drops all the legacy code for badges/groups which is not being used
- replaces user-selector by user-chooser and improves multi-select to not show `search` if maximum has been reached
Most importantly this refactor should fix multiple bugs due to _update() being called multiple times if searchTerm was empty and other various bugs where some changes in searchTerm was not applied to the sidebar.
This moves the logic for horizontally placing the topic progress wrapper from the JS component to SCSS. Doing so means it is more easily overridable by themes and plugins.
This also changes the left/right spacing from 1em to 2em for non-mobile screens (it fits better on iPad portrait especially).
This commit adds the `!important` declaration to `.hidden` utility/helper class. Without the `!important` declaration, it is not applied correctly across the site.
After merging this
58fe78bf28 (diff-fed21847d651f6eb2cc76abbd770f5f8)
I noticed that the code I'm removing in this commit is causing text to be truncated a bit early on desktop. So, I'm removing it for now.
The emoji-picker is a specific piece of code as it has very strong performance requirements which are almost not found anywhere else in the app, as a result it was using various hacks to make it work decently even on old browsers.
Following our drop of Internet Explorer, and various new features in Ember and recent browsers we can now take advantage of this to reduce the amount of code needed, this rewrite most importantly does the following:
- use loading="lazy" preventing the full list of emojis to be loaded on opening
- uses InterserctionObserver to find the active section
- limits the use of native event listentes only for hover/click emojis (for performance reason we track click on the whole emoji area and delegate events), everything else is using ember events
- uses popper to position the emoji picker
- no jquery code
Themes can now declare custom colors that get compiled in core's color definitions stylesheet, thus allowing themes to better support dark/light color schemes.
For example, if you need your theme to use tertiary for an element in a light color scheme and quaternary in a dark scheme, you can add the following SCSS to your theme's `color_definitions.scss` file:
```
:root {
--mytheme-tertiary-or-quaternary: #{dark-light-choose($tertiary, $quaternary)};
}
```
And then use the `--mytheme-tertiary-or-quaternary` variable as the color property of that element. You can also use this file to add color variables that use SCSS color transformation functions (lighten, darken, saturate, etc.) without compromising your theme's compatibility with different color schemes.