Allows quick inline replies in chat push notifications. This will allow users
in compatible platforms (Windows 10+ / Chrome OS / Android N+) to reply
directly from the notification UI.
Probable follow ups include:
- inline replies for posts
- handling failure of reply
- fallback to draft creation if business logic error
- store and try again later if connectivity error
- sent inline replies lack the in_reply_to param
- i18n of inline reply action text and placeholder
* FEATURE: revamped wizard
* UX: Wizard redesign (#17381)
* UX: Step 1-2
* swap out images
* UX: Finalize all steps
* UX: mobile
* UX: Fix test
* more test
* DEV: remove unneeded wizard components
* DEV: fix wizard tests
* DEV: update rails tests for new wizard
* Remove empty hbs files that were created because of rebase
* Fixes for rebase
* Fix wizard image link
* More rebase fixes
* Fix rails tests
* FIX: Update preview for new color schemes: (#17481)
* UX: make layout more responsive, update images
* fix typo
* DEV: move discourse logo svg to template only component
* DEV: formatting improvements
* Remove unneeded files
* Add tests for privacy step
* Fix banner image height for step "ready"
Co-authored-by: Jordan Vidrine <30537603+jordanvidrine@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: awesomerobot <kris.aubuchon@discourse.org>
Also, the change in insert-hyperlink (from `this.linkUrl.indexOf("http") === -1` to `!this.linkUrl.startsWith("http")`) was intentional fix: we don't want to prevent users from looking up topics with http in their titles.
The dots in the splash were previously hard-coded (v1). This PR makes progress towards making them be based on current theme colors.
Note that this is an improvement and not the "final" version. We're going to dynamically generate the splash file and the base64 URL later on.
We previously relied on CSS animation-delay for the splash. This means that we can get inconsistent results based on device/network conditions.
This PR moves us to a more consistent timing based on {request time + 2 seconds}
Internal topic: /t/65378/65
We currently remove the splash screen once Discourse starts booting.
This can be an issue on very slow devices, which can take up to 6 seconds. This PR ensures that we don't remove the splash until the browser has finished parsing all of the site's assets. It won't impact fast devices.
Internal topic /t/65378/60
This commit does six things
* changes the animation for the splash screen. To a more subtle animation.
* defers displaying the splash by 1.5 seconds
* defers displaying the splash "loading" text by 2.5 seconds
* defers removing the splash until all Discourse initializers have run
* fixes a display issue in Firefox
* Inlines the SVG as a base64 and inlines the required CSS.
The encoded SVG is hard coded for now, but we will use a helper to generate that based on the file after some testing.
This PR introduces a new hidden site setting that allows admins to display a splash screen while site assets load.
The splash screen can be enabled via the `splash_screen` hidden site setting.
This is what the splash screen currently looks like
5ceb72f085.mp4
Once site assets load, the splash screen is automatically removed.
To control the loading text that shows in the splash screen, you can change the preloader_text translation string in admin > customize > text
Now that we've switched to Ember CLI, these things are no longer used.
- These sprockets manifests are superceded by the assets generated by ember cli
- These vendored scripts are now fetched by ember-auto-import at compile time
* The `javascript:update` rake task failed because recent versions of chart.js use a lowercase filename (`chart.min.js` instead of `Chart.min.js`)
* Changed `loadScript()` to use lowercase keys to lookup scripts
* `svg-arrow.css` seems to have changed slightly (linebreak at the end of file)
Note this commit also introduce a new {{d-popover}} component, example usage:
```hbs
{{#d-popover |state|}}
{{d-button label="foo.things" class="d-popover-trigger"}}
<div class="d-popover-content">
Some content
<div>
{{/d-popover}}
```
When creating files with create-multipart, if the file
size was somehow zero we were showing a very unhelpful
error message to the user. Now we show a nicer message,
and proactively don't call the API if we know the file
size is 0 bytes in JS, along with extra console logging
to help with debugging.
Occasionally there will be a misconfigured CORS rule or a different
network failure when loading one of the media optimization WASM scripts.
This commit handles load failures and sends a new installFailed message
from the service worker, so that we don't error and hold up the rest
of the uploads if this occurs; the worker will just not process anything
and will keep trying to install itself with subsequent uploads until it succeeds.
This commit also removes the redundant useUppy variable in the worker
this should have been removed a while ago in f70e6c302f
Previously, `loadLibs` was called inside the `optimize` function of
the media-optimization-worker, which meant that it could be hit
multiple times causing load errors (as seen in b69c2f7311)
This commit moves that call to a specific message handler (the `install` message)
for the service worker, and refactors the service for the media-optimization-worker
to wait for this installation to complete before continuing with processing
image optimizations.
This way, we know for sure based on promises and worker messages
that the worker is installed and has all required libraries
loaded before we continue on with attempting any processing. The
change made in b69c2f7311 is no
longer needed with this commit.
When we are calling the loadLibs function, which in turn calls:
importScripts(settings.mozjpeg_script);
importScripts(settings.resize_script);
For the media-optimization-worker service worker, we are getting
an error in Firefox, which balks at wasm_bindgen, a global
variable defined with let, being redefined when the module loads.
This causes image processing to fail in Firefox when more than one
image is uploaded at a time.
The solution to this is to just check whether the scripts are
already imported, and if so do not import them again.
Chrome doesn't seem to care about this variable redefinition
and does not error, and it seems to be expected behaviour that
the script can be loaded multiple times (see https://github.com/w3c/ServiceWorker/issues/1041)
Short URLs were resolved before diffHTML was loaded and content was
swapped by it, which meant that no URLs were found and the URLs remained
unsolved. This caused image elements to be blank.
* DEV: Updated diffHTML to 1.0.0-beta.20
This change only applies when uppy is calling the media-optimization-worker.
Since the old way of calling the worker via jQuery file uploader will
be removed soon, there is no point coming up with some random string
to use in place of the file name for the promise resolvers there, we
can live with this for now.