I run into this in some local test. There are two reasons this code
can be reached:
* When a wiki doesn't have the TemplateData extension, the
additional API call from line #154 will fail. But the original
search query succeeded. We have the `originalResponse` and can
return it. This makes the code behave as if the additional
TemplateData API call was never done.
* But what if the original search query failed? We still end in
line #183 – as we should. But this time it can't return anything
but undefined. This will be considered a valid, successful API
response. But it isn't.
There might be a better way to clean up this chain of promises.
This is the smallest fix I found.
Change-Id: I02d3d053156da222ee424382007621f314777015
I tried to review all of them. Some of the changes I did:
* Make sure the `config` parameter is not marked as optional
when it is not.
* Make sure default values are mentioned.
* List individual `@cfg` options when it makes sense.
Note I don't list all options a class could accept (e.g. via all
its parent classes and mixins). That's too much. Instead I checked
how a class is actually used and list only these options.
Even then I don't list everything, e.g. unspecific options
like "classes" that can be used pretty much everywhere.
Change-Id: Idf4fbe1dc3608ace277df9e385f2f140df3a2f50
Reasoning:
* format=json must be the default. Nothing else makes sense in
the context of this code. This should not be a surprise.
* formatversion=2 is only a default when the custom
getContentApi() is used, but not when mw.Api is used. One
might argue that it's safer to always specify formatversion=2.
However, this is not done in other places in this codebase.
It should never be done or always.
* I find it confusing when the action=… is missing. Let's not
rely on this default.
Change-Id: I6ca29f76bffc0849103c5bcff4aaf28fcaaa4c52
Because the API uses a generator, the search results are ordered
alphabetically. The actual search result ranking is in a .index
field. This code accidentially deleted the alphabetically lowest
template instead of the least relevant one.
Change-Id: I79de024feb569e9f06bedab908a6509a4d4fa99b
We do this additional prefixsearch anyway. What we did before
was ignoring the result when it was not a 100% exact match.
Instead we can always add this 1 prefixsearch result when it
was not already part of the CirrusSearch result set.
This won't happen often. Usually the 1st prefixsearch result
was already part of the CirrusSearch result set anyway. But
if it wasn't, that's a serious issue for expert users that
expect the search to behave similar to the suggester at the
top of the MediaWiki interface (which is also a prefixsearch).
Change-Id: I959d2b058a3d64596a8cfbe5476ab351e40f8760
This makes the code more readable and easier to reason about.
The ESLint rule responsible for this code style was removed
just recently.
Notes:
* I focus on classes that are relevant for what the WMDE team
does right now.
* I merge multiple `var` keywords only when the variables are
strongly connected.
* Caching the length in a for loop makes the code hard to
read, but not really faster when it's a trivial property
access anyway.
Bug: T284895
Change-Id: I621fed61d894a83dc95f58129bbe679d82b0f5f5
This will avoid that the search breaks in edge cases where symbols
are used.
Including a fallback for ES5 browsers. The fallback should cover
almost all cases. Worst case would be not adding the asterisk even
though it might be valid.
Bug: T284554
Change-Id: Ie4aee0b77492b7a73bc251a8723a206dbd641600
When the existing search results don't contain an exact match
(see previous patch), perform an additional search for the
title. This uses OpenSearch. This is recommended in multiple
places and also used in the quick search field at the top of
MediaWiki.
Again, I came to the conclusion that an isolated unit test
would be complicated and not test much anyway. Better test
on-wiki.
Bug: T274903
Change-Id: Ib575248e089ff66814400202d224deff6369c772
This code detects a few edge-cases:
1. When some search results are exact matches, make sure they
are always at the very top.
2. When the prefixsearch API is used, e.g. as a fallback,
redirects show up as a separate metadata structure outside of
the pages array. Consider these and stop if there is already
an exact match.
3. CirrusSearch returns redirects as part of the pages array.
When there is an exact match, make these redirects separate
options and add them to the top.
All of this is case-insensitive, on purpose. In case two
templates with different capitalization exist, we rely on
the backend to return both. The code introduced here is fine
with this.
Notes:
* This doesn't guarantee an exact match is always there. This
requires an additional HTTP request and is done in the next
patch.
* I tried to write unit tests for this, but gave up. The setup
is complicated. An isolated unit test would not test much
anyway. Better test this on-wiki.
Bug: T274903
Change-Id: I64e1b5633e7b878a4d0d23d66229ca87e69d0045
These are the most minimal (and therefor most stable,
hopefully) hacks I could come up with so far.
Bug: T274903
Change-Id: I28ba414dd34aad756e29400eb656f0942291a923
Template names sometimes show up twice when searching for a
template in the "Add a template" dialog.
This is a bit hard to test. The code responsible for this
is not in a single place. The feature is in the upstream
TitleWidget class. It's not broken. It makes sense to
provide e.g. "foo" and "Foo" as two separate options when
the user typed "foo", but the page is named "Foo". Both are
valid, and the feature allows the user to pick either.
But the VE widget does it's own normalization. Both entries
are normalized to "Foo". Both do the same. The additional
one is pointless.
You can try this on the actual enwiki: Open VE, insert a
template, search for "Template:nHLE".
Change-Id: I65e706c4d131a2f8c605d7979a02ea56f831bf03
The "redirects" part in a prefixsearch query is always an
array, no matter if formatversion 1 or 2 is used.
The "pages" part is an object with formatversion 1, and an
array with formatversion 2.
As of now this always uses formatversion 1. This is
hard-coded in the upstream TitleWidget class.
Change-Id: I8cde8e104f8a288015da745db41016f6639b453b
Discussed in T274903#7077957. Note this might not be the
"perfect" solution. We are still experimenting, and this is
all hidden behind a feature flag. This is the change with the
most minimal impact. Actively trimming the input is another
solution, but with a bigger impact we might want to discuss
first.
Bug: T274903
Change-Id: I2ed06c04bb96c7b61bd7e87ad001e639ea6d06a2
This parameter name was deprecated and replaced in 1.31. See also
Ie5fe2097cda45968bb080643d3afcac0b2868a6c
Change-Id: Ie9d6c70d3dfe3954504d3d698c122dceede7603d
As configured on-wiki via MediaWiki:templatedata-doc-subpage; this will
probably have a few false positives, but that's worth it.
Bug: T54448
Change-Id: Id91f95b5865e151f8007a2421428aeb82b11b3fd
This only comes back in results from certain modules, so I'm not entirely
sure whether we want to do this in here or mw.widgets.TitleInputWidget.
Bug: T111598
Change-Id: If2916706db359d520c41c2dec7ded44e0d3a56a9
All link input/title input functionality has been moved to core, so
we can replace the link widget, redirect widget and template search
widget with it.
Depends on Ib463e60cad96 in MediaWiki core.
Change-Id: I452f3b86ead403307072cf904f0553c9771f4300
For each template result, ask for the templatedata description. If
that description exists, show it under the template result.
Bug: T53436
Change-Id: If28d1eb082edca6f50c6c15c933a0b7d014eaeaf