We hid letters originally because it wasn’t a mature feature. We rolled
it out by letting teams choose to use it (#1803)
and then automatically giving it to new teams (notifications-api/#1600).
This commit doesn’t change who has access to letters, but it does make
it more discoverable by revealing it in the UI. This is the same thing we do for emails/texts, where even if you switch them off they still show up on the dashboard and usage
page.
Having the service floating about as JSON is a bit flakey. Could easily
introduce a mistake where you mistype the name of a key and silently
get `None`.
Also means doing awkward things like `if 'permission' in
current_service['permissions']`, whereas for users we can do the
much cleaner `user.has_permission()`.
So this commit:
- introduces a model
- adds a `.has_permission` method similar to the one we have for users
Numbers over a billion overflow the two column layout. Numbers over one
hundred thousand overflow the three column layout.
This commit makes the type size smaller in these cases, so that the
numbers still fit in the boxes.
The layout of the totals on the dashboard was getting horizontally
squashed on older versions of IE.
This was something to do with the `grid-row` CSS class no longer being
applied when AJAX updated the page. Grid columns don’t work properly
unless they’re contained in a grid row.
This commit wraps the `div` with `grid-row` in another `div`. Not
totally sure why this works, but it’s something to do with how the
DiffDOM algorithm is working. Seems like the simpler the diff it has to
compute, the better chance it has of not messing things up.
The diffDOM Javascript sometimes throws an error if it can’t calculate
a diff between the original content of the page and the updated HTML
delivered via AJAX. The problem seems to be when there’s not one,
consistent top-level element for it to base its calculations on.
This commit:
- makes sure that all AJAX-delivered partials have a wrapping `<div>`
- that this `<div>` has a consistent class name to make it clear why
it’s there
we don't want to use the old statistics endpoints any more
also a couple of quality of life changes
* moves some logic out of the _totals.html template
* tidies up statistics_utils
Previously, the AJAX update for the dashboard was returning a big blob
of JSON with one key.
This commit splits it up to return:
- one key for each section of the page
- each containing a smaller chunk of HTML rendered from a partial
The jobs page was already working this way (pretty much) but just needed
a little tweaking to get it the same.
Previously the structure was
```
dashboard.html
|_ today.html
|_ some random html
|_ a few things split into partials
```
This commit simplifies the structure to just be:
```
dashboard.html
|_ partial
|_ partial
|_ …
```