We now use "settings-field-label" and "modal-field-label"
class on label elements in settings and modals respectively
to add the bottom margin which was previously done by
"dropdown-title" class as it is better to have more
generic names to use on label for all type of inputs.
This commit adds bottom margin to label elements of
different inputs by adding "modal-field-label" class
to the label elements. Some of them already have the
margin due to having dropdown-title class.
This commit adds bottom margin to label elements of
settings inputs in personal, organization, stream
and group settings using the recently added
"settings-field-label" class.
Most of the settings are dropdown settings, so the
label for them already had a margin as they use
"dropdown-title" class.
There is no need to have hr element below the "Field choices"
heading in custom profile edit form and this also makes it
consistent with the new custom profile field form.
This commit removes classes like "title", "input-label"
and "emoji-theme" from label elements in settings and
modals as these are classes are neither used in JS
nor to apply any CSS.
This only every did a single extra fetch, and now that this fetch is
in the same direction as our main fetching sequence, no longer is
meaningfully different from just specifying a different value of
consts.maximum_initial_backfill_size.
Previously, when a message is edited, it is locally echoed with its
pre-edit content.
This is because previously, when we tried to render the edited
message of the edit box during local echo, in order to update
the content, flags, and is_me_message properties of the message
object with that of those returned is markdown.render(), we used
the spread operator and created a new message object, and updated
the existing message object with this new one.
This was misconverted, since edit_locally() method already has a
fully-rendered message object to start with, and is just doing a
rerendering, it should be mutating what message it received, rather
than constructing a new local variable.
This removes the common min-width being used across all popovers and
instead sets the min-width according to a popover's requirements.
This allows for greater control over the popovers since we have a
variety of use cases for them — which a single common min-width cannot
accommodate.