FEATURE: Only approved flags for post counters
* Why was this change necessary?
The counters for flagged posts in the user's profile and user index from
the admin view include flags that were rejected, ignored or pending
review. This introduces unnecessary noise. Also the flagged posts
counter in the user's profile includes custom flags which add further
noise to this signal.
* How does it address the problem?
* Modifying User#flags_received_count to return posts with only approved
standard flags
* Refactoring User#number_of_flagged_posts to alias to
User#flags_received_count
* Updating the flagged post staff counter hyperlink to navigate to a
filtered view of that user's approved flagged posts to maintain
consistency with the counter
* Adding system tests for the profile page to cover the flagged posts
staff counter
provide the ability to edit theme settings in the json editor, and also copy them as a text file so they can be pasted into another instance.
Reference: /t/65023
- Convert `admin-incoming-email` modal to component-based API
- Testing that the modal was working in local development was extremely challenging due to the need for `rejected` and `bounced` emails. Something that is not easy to stub in a local dev environment. To make this process more smooth for future developers I have added a new rake task:
```
desc "Creates sample email logs"
task "email_logs:populate" => ["db:load_config"] do |_, args|
DiscourseDev::EmailLog.populate!
end
```
That will generate fully functional email logs in development to be toyed with.
<img width="787" alt="Screenshot 2023-07-20 at 3 27 04 PM" src="https://github.com/discourse/discourse/assets/50783505/47b3fe34-cd7e-49a5-8fe6-768c0fbd1aa2">
The gjs/gts formats are a new pattern for authoring Ember components. This commit introduces support for these patterns to our build pipeline for core/plugins, and converts a handful of components to use the new format. It also introduces relevant updates to our linting config, and to our sample vscode configuration.
Co-authored-by: Godfrey Chan <godfreykfc@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Krystan HuffMenne <kmenne+github@gmail.com>
Since 0fa92529ed, helpers can now be implemented as plain JS functions. This makes them much easier to write/read, and also makes them usable in `<template>` gjs files.
Recently we started giving admins a notice in the advice panel when their translations have become outdated due to changes in core. However, we didn't include any additional information.
This PR adds more information about the outdated translation inside the site text edit page, together with an option to dismiss the warning.
011ba5b9 slightly changed the way the staff-action-log route is activated. It's now possible for `deserializeQueryParam` to be called with a null value, so we need to deal with that case.
This route is currently untested - we'll follow-up with another commit to add some.
This PR adds a feature to help admins stay up-to-date with their translations. We already have protections preventing admins from problems when they update their overrides. This change adds some protection in the other direction (where translations change in core due to an upgrade) by creating a notice for admins when defaults have changed.
Terms:
- In the case where Discourse core changes the default translation, the translation override is considered "outdated".
- In the case above where interpolation keys were changed from the ones the override is using, it is considered "invalid".
- If none of the above applies, the override is considered "up to date".
How does it work?
There are a few pieces that makes this work:
- When an admin creates or updates a translation override, we store the original translation at the time of write. (This is used to detect changes later on.)
- There is a background job that runs once every day and checks for outdated and invalid overrides, and marks them as such.
- When there are any outdated or invalid overrides, a notice is shown in admin dashboard with a link to the text customization page.
Known limitations
The link from the dashboard links to the default locale text customization page. Given there might be invalid overrides in multiple languages, I'm not sure what we could do here. Consideration for future improvement.
Follow-up to b27e12445d
This commit adds 2 new site settings `default_sidebar_link_to_filtered_list` and `default_sidebar_show_count_of_new_items` to control the default values for the navigation menu preferences that were added in the linked commit (`sidebar_link_to_filtered_list` and `sidebar_show_count_of_new_items` respectively).
This is the first of a number of PRs aimed at helping admins manage their translation overrides. It simply adds a list of available interpolation keys below the input field when editing an override.
It also includes custom interpolation key.
Fixes an issue where saving a theme translation would reset unsaved
changes made to other theme translations.
Also cleans up unused `saveSettings` and `saveTranslations` actions.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Communities can use sidebar or header dropdown, therefore navigation menu is a better name settings in 2 places:
- Old user sidebar preferences;
- Site setting about default tags and categories.
We have been struggling lately finding site settings due to 30 setting limit
This was introduced for performance reasons a while back but is no longer as
needed given that ember is faster.
Additionally searching is hard, so allow people to use fuzzy search against
setting name.
As part of another regression, we realized that the plugins tab is visible to moderators, but they cannot interact with anything inside without triggering authorization errors.
This change hides the plugin tab for non-admin users.
In some languages, labels on the site settings navigation menu
get truncated. This adds titles to menu items, so users can see
untruncated labels on hover.
Moving the `grantBadge` action out of the actions hash caused it to clash with a method of the same name from the GrantBadgeController mixin. This commit renames the action.