This way it's more obvious what's going on.
Note that, in this case, the expectations were **not** true before
visiting the page, so we aren't fixing a flaky test.
Since the PR "Do not use third-party cookies in embedded videos #5548", the logic from
"embed_videos_helper" was extracted to the "embedded_video_component" and the
"videoable" model concern.
However, during this refactor, the "regex" method, which uses record.class:: to handle
video embeds, was left inaccessible for Legislation Proposals.
This commit fixes the issue by including the concern in the Legislation Proposal model.
This was accidentally introduced in commit 64aa1ffe0. Pronto didn't
detect it because the line itself was fine; the problem lied in its
place within the file.
This rule was added in rubocop-capybara 2.19.0. We were following it
about 85% of the time.
Now we won't have to check both have_css and have_selector when
searching the code.
In order to leave the page using turbolinks and then going back, we were
clicking on the "Help" page link, but this link doesn't have to be
available on every Consul Democracy installation.
So we're using the link to the homepage instead.
This rule was added in rubocop-rspec 2.12.0, and we were already
following it most of the time.
However, the rule isn't working correctly in some cases, such as input
selectors, so we aren't enabling it.
Note we're excluding a few files:
* Configuration files that weren't generated by us
* Migration files that weren't generated by us
* The Gemfile, since it includes an important comment that must be on
the same line as the gem declaration
* The Budget::Stats class, since the heading statistics are a mess and
having shorter lines would require a lot of refactoring
For the HashAlignment rule, we're using the default `key` style (keys
are aligned and values aren't) instead of the `table` style (both keys
and values are aligned) because, even if we used both in the
application, we used the `key` style a lot more. Furthermore, the
`table` style looks strange in places where there are both very long and
very short keys and sometimes we weren't even consistent with the
`table` style, aligning some keys without aligning other keys.
Ideally we could align hashes to "either key or table", so developers
can decide whether keeping the symmetry of the code is worth it in a
case-per-case basis, but Rubocop doesn't allow this option.
* Add Tables option to Redcarpet in Legislation draft
* Allow table tags in Admin Legislation Sanitizer
* Add Test to render markdown tables in Legislation drafts
* Add Test for Admin Legislation Sanitizer
We include test for image, table and h1 to h6 tags and additional tests to strengthen the allowed and disallowed parameters
* Add Table from markdown test in System and Factories
* Add test to render tables for admin user
* Remove comment line about Redcarpet options
* Edit custom css for legislation draft table to make it responsive
Previous to this commit the geozone link shown in the
legislation proposal page was pointing to the proposals
process feature instead to the legislation proposals.
Rubocop was complaining about a Layout/ExtraSpacing in a couple of
places.
These issues weren't detected by Pronto because they didn't affect lines
changed in the pull request. These lines were fine until we removed the
lines next to them in commits 4b42a68b6 and 00f0c4410.
This way we don't have to write `"spec/fixtures/files"` every time.
Note this method isn't included in factories. We could include it like
so:
```
FactoryBot::SyntaxRunner.class_eval do
include ActiveSupport::Testing::FileFixtures
self.file_fixture_path = RSpec.configuration.file_fixture_path
end
```
However, I'm not sure about the possible side effects, and since we only
use attachments in a few factories, there isn't much gain in applying
the monkey-patch.
Users don't care about database content; they care about what they see
on the screen.
Writing tests this way we also avoid potencial database inconsistencies
due to accessing the database after starting the browser.
JavaScript is used by about 98% of web users, so by testing without it
enabled, we're only testing that the application works for a very
reduced number of users.
We proceeded this way in the past because CONSUL started using Rails 4.2
and truncating the database between JavaScript tests with database
cleaner, which made these tests terribly slow.
When we upgraded to Rails 5.1 and introduced system tests, we started
using database transactions in JavaScript tests, making these tests much
faster. So now we can use JavaScript tests everywhere without critically
slowing down our test suite.
Content like lowercase letters with `text-transform: uppercase` or
spaces after elements with `display: block` or "You're on page:" are not
seen that way by users with a browser supporting CSS.
So we're testing what most users actually experience.
The user experience with JavaScript enabled is actually very bad;
there's a usability issue here because it's impossible to change an
answer once a "radio button" is selected, which goes against the
standard practice on basically any HTML form.
Issue 4123 already mentions this problem. Until we fix it, we're
disabling JavaScript in these tests.
Using `<a>` tags with no `href` means these elements cannot be activated
by keyboard users, so we're replacing them with buttons.
In the future we probably want to add more consistency so all toggle
buttons use the same code. We might also add styles depending on the
`aria-expanded` property.
Now we check the given record or name is a relatable instance or class
to avoid trying to render goals for records which don't have a goals
association.
Note for now we are ignoring the case where we pass a controller_path
for an unsupported class (for example, `legislation/proposals` or
`budgets/headings`) because we never use it. We might need to revisit
this case in the future.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
On commit 1a902a96 we removed this helper to make use of polymorphic
routes but when it's called for Legislation::Proposal fails as the
namespace does not match the model namespace.
Now we recover the removed helper but only the parts that do not work
with polymorphic_url helper.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
I'm not sure why we were using squares to style these lists see commit
bbacd4546b) but I don't think it's very important and it breaks
displaying the list of related SDGs.
So tests won't fail when an institution changes the default organization
name.
The tests are also easier to understand now, since it's more obvious
where the "CONSUL" text is coming from.
It was removed in commit 128a8164 because we hadn't reviewed it nor
tested it properly. We're now adding it again, fixing the issues we've
found while reviewing.
We need to use page body event delegation so it will work with any
element even with the ones added through ajax, in this case the
annotation comments box form. By doing this way we do not need
this code on the server response anymore.
Furthermore JS events defined at ajax responses are not part of
application javascript and are lost when restoring a page from
browser cache, you can try to apply the same event delegation
technique to the `erb` file and it wont work just because events
added dinamically are not treated the same than `application.js`
code.
To reproduce the error:
1. Load an annotatable draft version
2. Move to any other page
3. Go back
Now "Publish comment" button wont work.
If we do not destroy annotator app before storing the page at
browser cache we will unnecesarily initialize annotations twice (or
more) duplicating Annotator HTML markup and causing
unexpected errors.
Without this commit you will find an error when restoring a page with
annotator, you can click on any annotation and you will see the annotation
comments are being loaded twice.
IMO this is an idempotency issue within Annotator JS library.
We were treating legislation proposals as if they were proposals,
omitting the "legislation" namespace, and so we were flagging/unflagging
proposals when we wanted to flag/unflag a legislation proposal.