The team page was a bit of a mess:
- invited and active tables didn’t line up
- lots of things were wrapping onto two lines
- the empty fields for when a user didn’t have permissions looked broken
This commit splits each row of the table (not actually a table any more)
onto two lines. First line has the user’s info, second has their
permissions and any associated actions.
We were using a bunch of different styles for form error messages,
including:
- having the name of the field in the error, or not
- can not/cannot/can’t (GDS content styleguide recommends using
contractions)
Because ‘Send text messages’ isn’t very helpful if you’re looking to
edit a template.
It also helps front-load the navigation, ie ‘Team’ is the first word,
rather than the more generic ‘Manage’.
The yes/no pattern didn’t work too well, because:
- it didn’t read naturally as a question and answer
- often users left them completely unclicked if they didn’t want to set
the permission (rather than clicking no)
This commit changes both the invite and edit user pages to use
checkboxes to set permissions. If also rewords these pages to read more
naturally, and explain what the permissions mean.
This meant changing some of the view logic around invites and
persmissions, and I ended up refactoring a bunch of it because I found
it hard to understand what was going on.
On the send messages and manage team pages we have big green buttons for
adding/inviting a new template or team member.
On the add template page it was at the bottom, and often got missed.
On the manage team page it was at the top, but maybe too prominent because it’s
big and green.
This commit tries putting it in the top right of the page instead (except when
the template page is empty, in which case it’s unchanged).
This commit only deals with acceptance by
users who are already in system.
Changed invite client to return invited user objects
instead of dictionaries.
Added commented out test. fixed up fixtures to return invited user
object for invites
The ‘manage templates’ page was almost identical to the ‘send text messages’
page.
This commit consolidates them into one and makes them all hang together.
Part of this means tweaks to the javascript so that files upload as soon as
you’ve chosen them.
This takes the original prototype version of this page, and, using the same
fake data (ie nothing is wired up):
- adds an invite users page
- adds an edit (and delete) user page
Both these pages allow the user to set another user’s permissions.
This commit adds images for the ticks and crosses, so we have control over their
appearance.