Even though the field is supposed to resize itself to match the text
inside, vertical scrollbar would sometimes appear when the user has
zoomed in. Some calculation probably handles fractions of pixels
incorrectly (might be a bug in OOUI or a browser bug).
Since this field has no limit on max rows, we can just hide the
scrollbar. This can't be fixed in OOUI itself, since its autosize text
fields usually have a limit to how tall they are allowed to grow
before a scrollbar is used.
Bug: T267609
Change-Id: Id36ed417c4678e469a6c05715404e330064c2017
Matches what we end up posting. Leave context-aware code
commented out as this issue is not settled yet.
Change-Id: I7360e53d5d7823b2b52318005459212a21a6edc2
Ideally the edit autosummary would be generated in the same
way as in the old wikitext editor: from the wikitext of the
heading. But on the JS side, we don't have access to the
wikitext, or to the PHP method that generates autosummaries.
This might seem crazy at first, but ultimately the point of
the autosummaries is to link to the section heading by its
'id' attribute, so it is perfectly reliable.
Doing it this way depends on $wgFragmentMode being set to
[ 'html5', 'legacy' ] or [ 'html5' ], otherwise the escaped IDs
are super garbled (particularly in non-Latin-alphabet languages)
and can't be unescaped reliably. Conveniently, we already
require that since 9ee0fd69f5.
Bug: T264561
Bug: T266725
Change-Id: I7d35098d672d0edb50d49e22de1686d5cc83b60e
After recent changes allowing ThreadItems to have IDs, they can now
also have warnings about duplicate IDs.
Bug: T267035
Change-Id: If3edfe34e6e29741e29fac8946a3c88badc4ab7f
Also, stop the dialog-prevent-show event from switching editor_interface
just because it's tied to the `editor-switch` feature.
Bug: T259673
Change-Id: I2acf9d79add281ed0f62f022e44bb18948ceafc8
Use the same logic for marking ranges in the document, and ensure
that the heading range does not include section edit links or
section numberings.
Change-Id: I782caafc34fee2a822b0a17b24dd6b9528202eca
Skipping them could result in incorrect handling when RESTBase HTML is
outdated.
When a result for a given comment is not found, display an error
instead of assuming it is not transcluded.
Bug: T262065
Change-Id: I14a7a0a25d5181b5c49bd5677f0c002dce5a3cb9
We depended on the oldid (wgCurRevisionId) changing after a reply is
posted, but it will not change if we posted to a transcluded page.
Bug: T266275
Change-Id: I1baa1f2227134b73fd663de2fee3ea96a2f9b183
We avoided fixing these because it causes changes in just about all of
the test data, which is annoying when reviewing or blaming changes.
But the previous several commits also caused changes in just about all
of the test data, so we might as well do this too.
Change-Id: I83b64d83b6f12c04dc06c0cadff7cdd89417e137
To avoid old threads re-appearing on popular pages when someone
uses a vague title (e.g. dozens of threads titled "question" on
[[Wikipedia:Help desk]]: https://w.wiki/fbN), include the oldest
timestamp in the thread (i.e. date the thread was started) in the
heading ID.
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: If918bfd5e025248923d1939bc86916697ead95a0
Sequential numbers aren't great because they change when an earlier
comment is archived. Parent comment/heading IDs should change less
often.
This also makes much more sense for disambiguating subsections,
e.g. a dozen identical ===Votes=== sections for a dozen proposals.
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: I466454984fd919ebef35f2b37ddb5d86dc842996
Our threads now also contain all replies to their sub-threads.
This is similar to how sections work in MediaWiki, where the parent
section also contains the content of all the lower-level sections.
We're going to need this for notifications about replies in a thread.
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: I241fc58e2088a7555942824b0f184ed21e3a8b6f
Previously, only comments could have IDs, because we only needed IDs
for replying. But we might also use them for notifications soon.
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: I1bcad02bf17ab54bc5028a959543c10f0430836b
The output of CommentFormatter::addReplyLinks() and consequently
ThreadItem::jsonSerialize() can end up in the HTTP cache (Varnish) on
Wikimedia wikis. We need to consider that when changing that code.
Introduce a concept of legacy ID (generated by the older algorithm
after it changes), add some placeholder code that will generate them
in the future, and update some code to find comments by either normal
or legacy IDs.
Add dire comments in a bunch of places (as if that ever helps).
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: I4368f366800ab21b8b184b09378037614fdecd33
"This modifies the original objects…" – I feel like this is obvious
now, but maybe it wasn't so obvious when this code was structured
differently before a2431fe006. Also,
it refers to a variable that doesn't exist.
"FIXME this will clone the reply…" – No, actually, it will not.
It would if replies were associative arrays, but they are objects,
and have always been, ever since the PHP parser was merged in
7b7a2cd69c. Maybe they were arrays
once in Roan's mind before he pushed that for review.
Change-Id: I1348e111699fdbde99cd1f9ef45d8f465f7391b0
* Add the preference
* Only display it when the reply tool is enabled
* Use it when opening the reply tool
* Save it when the menu is toggled from the reply tool interface
Bug: T261539
Change-Id: Icb8fa6b3f1e9a3644669f21b08f34ea8c175f2f9
Always select the default reply if it looks unchanged, i.e.
we see '...*/ Reply' at the end of the summary.
Bug: T263062
Change-Id: I0a79d9e5072d9d9df16c93435502f67524e2d2bc
Through trial and error, I found that adding `display: inline-flex;`
avoids the issue, and does not seem to have any negative effects in
Chromium or other browsers.
Bug: T260072
Change-Id: I9a9ca1fdb57bb7dd6c1a0a70e330a2a503c8ec8e