Summary:
- The main purpose of this is to be able to properly register the editor for the markdown plugin (and any other plugins to come)
- Refactors ComposerView and Contenteditable ->
- Replaces Contenteditable with an InjectedComponent for a new region role:
"Composer:Editor"
- Creates a new component called ComposerEditor, which is the one that is
being registered by default as "Composer:Editor"
- I used this class to try to standardize the props that should be
passed to any would be editor Component:
- Renamed a bunch of the props which (I think) had a bit of
confusing names
- Added a bunch of docs for these in the source file, although
I feel like those docs should live elsewhere, like in the
ComponentRegion docs.
- In the process, I ended up pulling some stuff out of ComposerView and
some stuff out of the Contenteditable, namely:
- The scrolling logic to ensure that the composer is visible while
typing was moved outside of the Contenteditable -- this feels more
like the ComposerEditor's responsibility, especially since the
Contenteditable is meant to be used in other contexts as well.
- The ComposerExtensions state; it feels less awkward for me if this
is inside the ComposerEditor because 1) ComposerView does less
things, 2) these are actually just being passed to the
Contenteditable, 3) I feel like other plugins shouldn't need to
mess around with ComposerExtensions, so we shouldn't pass them to the
editor. If you register an editor different from our default one,
any other ComposerExtension callbacks will be disabled, which
I feel is expected behavior.
- I think there is still some more refactoring to be done, and I left some TODOS
here and there, but I think this diff is already big enough and its a minimal
set of changes to get the markdown editor working in a not so duck
tapish way.
- New props for InjectedComponent:
- `requiredMethods`: allows you to define a collection of methods that
should be implemented by any Component that registers for your
desired region.
- It will throw an error if these are not implemented
- It will automatically pass calls made on the InjectedComponent to these methods
down to the instance of the actual registered component
- Would love some comments on this approach and impl
- `fallback`: allows you to define a default component to use if none were
registered through the ComponentRegistry
- Misc:
- Added a new test case for the QuotedHTMLTransformer
- Tests:
- They were minimally updated so that they don't break, but a big TODO
is to properly refactor them. I plan to do that in an upcoming
diff.
Test Plan: - Unit tests
Reviewers: bengotow, evan
Reviewed By: evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2372
Summary:
Until now, we've been hiding transactions beneath the surface. When you call persistModel, you're implicitly creating a transaction.
You could explicitly create them with `atomically`..., but there were several critical problems that are fixed in this diff:
- Calling persistModel / unpersistModel within a transaction could cause the DatabaseStore to trigger. This could result in other parts of the app making queries /during/
the transaction, potentially before the COMMIT occurred and saved the changes. The new, explicit inTransaction syntax holds all changes until after COMMIT and then triggers.
- Calling atomically and then calling persistModel inside that resulted in us having to check whether a transaction was present and was gross.
- Many parts of the code ran extensive logic inside a promise chained within `atomically`:
BAD:
```
DatabaseStore.atomically =>
DatabaseStore.persistModel(draft) =>
GoMakeANetworkRequestThatReturnsAPromise
```
OVERWHELMINGLY BETTER:
```
DatabaseStore.inTransaction (t) =>
t.persistModel(draft)
.then =>
GoMakeANetworkRequestThatReturnsAPromise
```
Having explicit transactions also puts us on equal footing with Sequelize and other ORMs. Note that you /have/ to call DatabaseStore.inTransaction (t) =>. There is no other way to access the methods that let you alter the database. :-)
Other changes:
- This diff removes Message.labels and the Message-Labels table. We weren't using Message-level labels anywhere, and the table could grow very large.
- This diff changes the page size during initial sync from 250 => 200 in an effort to make transactions a bit faster.
Test Plan: Run tests!
Reviewers: juan, evan
Reviewed By: juan, evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2353
The install-task has two instructions that add an extra "resources" to the iconName directory and thus the icon doesn't work. The resulting nylus.desktop has an invalid path for the icon.
Summary:
- Adds a couple of helper methods to theme manager and updates how
a theme package is enabled to be consistent with how we actually want to
activate themes.
- Adds small select component to choose a theme or install a new one.
Test Plan: - Manual
Reviewers: evan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2355
Summary:
- Make sure user can log in using exchange
- Adds some test helpers for the test
- Updates eslint.json and cleans up lint errors
Test Plan: - Integration Tests
Reviewers: evan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2346
Summary:
- Update Account model witha default alias and DraftStore methods that
construct new messages to use default alias if available.
- Update AccountDetails page and add selector to select default alias
Test Plan: - Unit tests
Reviewers: evan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2352
- When prop specified to not allow empty selection it should also
prevent it from being cleared when pressing Esc while focusing the list
- Adds a default value to the edit item input
- Updates specs
- Updates styles
Linux returns ['asked', 'acidify', 'Assad'] for the string "asdfk"
which seems normal to me. Why do OS X and/or Windows return [] for
that string? That seems weird, so I just broke the spec to run different
specs on different platforms.
The "it provides options for misspelled words" still fails with
"asdfk" supposed to supply no corrections, which I find unlikely in
the real world, and Hunspell provides corrections.
The Linux component of Atom's spellchecker depends on Hunspell for
corrections. It requires a dictionary to be set, unlike Mac OS X
and Windows that have spellcheckers built in to the OS, and they
have the dictionaries built-in as well. This commit uses Atom's
spellchecker default dictionary method (which I wish was a public
API) to reset the dictionary to its default setting. It also ignores
the dictionaries available command for the Linux platform, which
seems to always return an empty Array.