When invoking e.g. `can_see?(Foo.new)`, the guardian checks if there's a method `#can_see_foo?` defined and if so uses that to determine whether the user can see it or not.
When such a method is not defined, the guardian currently returns `true`, but it is probably a better call (pun intended) to make it "safe by default" and return `false` instead. I.e. if you can't explicitly see it, you can't see it at all.
This change makes the change to `Guardian#can_see?` to fall back to `false` if no visibility check method is defined.
For `#can_see_user?` and `#can_see_tag?` we don't have any particular logic that prevents viewing. We previously relied on the implicit `true` value, but since that's now change to `false`, I have explicitly implemented these two methods in `UserGuardian` and `TagGuardian` modules. If in the future we want to add some logic for it, this would be the place.
To be clear, **the behaviour remains the same**, but the `true` value is now explicit rather than implicit.
We were only supporting the main name of each HighlightJS language. So, by default, you could not use `js` or `jsx` to highlight Javascript, given they are aliases for `javascript`.
This PR adds a list of aliases as a constant to core (built via a rake task), and then checks against the `highlighted_languages` site settings plus the list of aliases when processing a code block.
Regular users should be redirected to the homepage after the topic is
no longer accessible by them (only staff members can view deleted
topics). There was a problem with permission checking for category
moderators which stopped the redirect from happening.
This patch introduces a new `ServiceJob` class allowing the use of
`with_service` in jobs.
This way, it’s easier to use the chat service objects in jobs and
provides the same level of functionality than the one we have in
controllers.
Small js fix for fast edit to allow posts to save changes when the post contains apostrophes and quotation marks. Replaces unicode characters in text prior to saving the edit.
Includes system tests for fast edit and introduces a new system spec component for fast edit usage.
This commit removes all references to the
`redesigned_user_page_nav_enabled` which was used as a feature flag for
developing the new user profile navigation menu previously.
This commit 57caf08e13 broke
`bin/turbo_rspec` timing recording via `TurboTests::Runner`,
because we changed to using all `spec/*` folders except
`spec/system` as default for the runner, rather than
the old `['spec']` array, which is what `TurboTests::Runner`
was relying on to determine whether to record test run
time with `ParallelTests::RSpec::RuntimeLogger`.
Instead, we can just pass a new `use_runtime_info` boolean to the
runner class and use it when running against the default set of
spec files using `bin/turbo_rspec` and the turbo rspec rake task.
This provides Classic Component decorators for use with native class syntax (e.g. `@tagName`), and also provides native-class-compatible decorators for `@on` and `@observes`.
ruby-prof 1.6.0 was release, but then yanked, causing Bundler to
fail when installing gems.
This change updgrades ruby-prof to 1.6.1 which was released as a
replacement.
Fixes issue introduced in 7ef482a292
where the correct warning message was not shown when enabling auto-join
for public categories when creating a channel. Adds more system specs
as well to avoid regressions.
The new hashtags render with an `<svg>` element inside a `<a>`
tag, which is an icon to indicate the "type" of the hashtag.
In Firefox, this was disrupting both triple-click text selection
and simple dragging cursor text selection. The selection would
stop at the SVG rather than continuing past it. This works fine
in Chrome -- either Chrome is not doing the right thing or Firefox
is.
Either way the issue is fixed by simply making the `svg` an inline
element inside the link, which it should be anyway.
When the `navigation_menu` site setting has been set to `sidebar` or
`header dropdown`, overriding the site setting via the `navigation_menu`
query params did not work.
Follow-up to c47015b861
We need to register a waiter so that any calls to `await settled()` will wait for the `requestAnimationFrame` call to return. Wrapping in `DEBUG` as well as `isTesting()` means that this extra logic will be totally optimized out of production builds.
Using Javascript to read and recalculate sizing is prone to causing 'forced reflows', which are very expensive, especially on slower devices. This PR refactors the slide-in menus so that all of the height calculation is done using CSS. This is made possible by the new dvh (dynamic view height) units and env(safe-area-inset-bottom), both of which are supported on all of our target browsers.
In tests on a moto g50, on a sidebar with 16 categories, 15 tags, and 2 chat channels, this improves the sidebar opening time by around 50ms (6%).
* UX: replace highlight vars in popup menu
* UX: replace highlight vars in autcomplete
* UX: replace highlight vars in menu-panel
* UX: update style guide
* UX: bulk replace highlight vars in various small appearances
Since 359dc1c532, support for the old user
profile navigation menu has been dropped. This commit seeks to remove
code from the client side that still relies on the `currentUser.redesigned_user_page_nav_enabled` prop.
Since 359dc1c532, support for the old user
profile navigation menu has been dropped. This commit seeks to remove
code from the client side that still relies on the `currentUser.redesigned_user_page_nav_enabled` prop.
Why this change?
Prior to this change, we placed the identifier for the tag using
CSS classes like `sidebar-section-link-<tag name>`. However, we found that it wasn't obvious
that an identifier for the tag exists since it is first buried in
the CSS classes and second there isn't a way to describe what the
identifier is. Using data attributes, it makes it more obvious that an
identifier exists and what the identifier represents.
Follow-up to 53eb49de72
Why this change?
Prior to this change, we placed the identifier for the category using
CSS classes like `sidebar-section-link-<category slug>`. However, we found that it wasn't obvious
that an identifier for the category exists since it is first buried in
the CSS classes and second there isn't a way to describe what the
identifier is. Using data attributes, it makes it more obvious that an
identifier exists and what the identifier represents.