* Eliminate space around emoji
* More improve emoji style
* Make more compatible with Twemoji
* Make scss-lint happy
* Make not modify normal emoji's behavior
* Decrease status__action-bar's margin-top to 5px
* Make the test be passed
* Revert "Make the test be passed"
This reverts commit 54a8c60e5907ef20a5ceb5ab2c86a933e06f3ece.
* Revert "Make not modify normal emoji's behavior"
This reverts commit 6a5bdf0c11df16ebd190cb3ab9d2e8f1349f435a.
* Work around Twidere and Tootdon bug
Tootdon and Twidere construct @user@domain handles from mentions in toots based
solely on the mention text and account URI's domain without performing any
webfinger call or retrieving account info from the Mastodon server.
As a result, when a remote user has WEB_DOMAIN ≠ LOCAL_DOMAIN, Twidere and
Tootdon will construct the mention as @user@WEB_DOMAIN. Now, this will usually
resolve to the correct account (since the recommended configuration is to have
WEB_DOMAIN perform webfinger redirections to LOCAL_DOMAIN) when processing
mentions, but won't do so when displaying them (as it does not go through the
whole account resolution at that time).
This change rewrites mentions to the resolved account, so that displaying the
mentions will work.
* Use lookbehind instead of non-capturing group in MENTION_RE
Indeed, substitutions with the previous regexp would erroneously eat any
preceding whitespace, which would lead to concatenated mentions in the
previous commit.
Note that users will “lose” up to one character space per mention for their
toots, as that regexp is also used to remove the domain-part of mentioned
users for character counting purposes, and it also erroneously removed the
preceding character if it was a space.
* Show the local couterpart of emoji when it exists in admin/custom_emojis
* Fix indentation
* Fix error
* Add class table-action-link to Overwrite link
* Make it enable to overwrite emojis
* Make Code Climate happy
* Resolve remote accounts when mentioned even if they are already known
This commit reduces the risk of not having up-to-date public key or protocol
information for a remote account, which is required to deliver toots
(especially direct messages).
* Do not add mentions in private messages for remote users we cannot deliver to
Mastodon does not deliver private and direct toots to OStatus users, as there
is no guarantee the remote software understands the toot's privacy. However,
users currently do not get any feedback on it (Mastodon won't attempt delivery,
but the toot will be displayed exactly the same way to the user).
This change introduces *some* feedback by not processing mentions that are
not going to be delivered. A long-term solution is still needed to have
delivery receipts or at least some better indication of what is going on, but
at least an user can see *something* is up.
This commit reduces the risk of not having up-to-date public key or protocol
information for a remote account, which is required to deliver toots
(especially direct messages).
* Update OC: time format
Correction for time format according to: https://opinion.jornalet.com/conselh-linguistic-de-jornalet/blog/2379/la-notacion-oraria-en-occitan
Harmonisation words in menu and confirmation windows
* Update for unlisted custum emoji + #5577
* correction subjonctiu
It's either siasque or siague
* Corrections
Any : qual que, in two words, else it means "some".
And "siasque" with S even if I don't pronounce it at all.
* Update oc.json
Glitch::KeywordMute's name is inferred as glitch_keyword_mutes, and in
templates this turns into e.g. settings/glitch/keyword_mutes. Going
along with this convention means a lot of file movement, though, and for
a UI that's as temporary and awkward as this one I think it's less
effort to slap a bunch of as: options everywhere.
We'll do the Right Thing when we build out the API and frontend UI.
Also make the keyword-building methods private: they always probably
should have been private, but now I have encoded enough fun and games
into them that it now seems wrong for them to *not* be private.
It is possible to cache a Regexp object, but I'm not sure what happens
if e.g. that object remains in cache across two different Ruby versions.
Caching a string seems to raise fewer questions.