Note that, for everything to work consistently, we need to make sure
that the default locale is one of the available locales.
Also note that we aren't overwriting the `#save ` method set by
globalize. I didn't feel too comfortable changing a monkey-patch which
ideally shouldn't be there in the first place, I haven't found a case
where `Globalize.locale` is `nil` (since it defaults to `I18n.locale`,
which should never be `nil`), so using `I18n.default_locale` probably
doesn't affect us.
This syntax has been added in Ruby 3.1.
Not using a variable name might not be very descriptive, but it's just
as descriptive as using "block" as a variable name. Using just `&` we
get the same amount of information than using `&block`: that we're
passing a block.
We're still using `&action` in `around_action` methods because here we
aren't using a generic name for the variable, so (at least for now) we
aren't running this cop on controllers using `around_action`.
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
Currently the application does not send any email to confirm the
account for already confirmed users. But we show a notice message
that may look like you will recive one:
"If your email address exists in our database, you will receive
an email with instructions for how to confirm your email address
in a few minutes."
In this commit we keep the original message, but send an email to
the user informing them that their account is now registered.
This way no one can know if someone else's account is confirmed and
we don't have to worry about GDPR either.
Co-Authored-By: taitus <sebastia.roig@gmail.com>
We modified the link that previously redirected us to the "My content"
page to redirect us to the new page for managing subscriptions.
We also adapted the existing generic text by adding a description of
the related notification.
We modified the link that previously redirected us to the "My content"
page to redirect us to the new page for managing subscriptions.
We also adapted the existing generic text by adding a description of
the related notification.
We were very inconsistent regarding these rules.
Personally I prefer no empty lines around blocks, clases, etc... as
recommended by the Ruby style guide [1], and they're the default values
in rubocop, so those are the settings I'm applying.
The exception is the `private` access modifier, since we were leaving
empty lines around it most of the time. That's the default rubocop rule
as well. Personally I don't have a strong preference about this one.
[1] https://rubystyle.guide/#empty-lines-around-bodies
Why:
Both Newsletters and Email Downloads need the same logic: To extract the
emails from all the users in the segment that have newsletter flag
active, removing all empty email values.
How:
1- UserSegments#user_segment_emails holds that repeated logic and is used
on both Newsletter & EmailDownload.
2- Rename Newsletter#list_of_recipients to list_of_recipient_emails as
it is more descriptive. There is no need to pass entire Users around,
only the emails are needed at Mailer#newsletter method.
3- Cleanup Newsletter#list_of_recipient_emails model spec scenario
allows managers to create users without email
hides email preferences from account page for email-less users
prevents email delivery to users with no email
adds spec for user creation from management
adds specs for user's email requirement
adds spec for no deliveries if no email
It was not commendable independent so avery email related with a comment on a proposal was not being sent. Removes dependency on debates and makes it commentable independent.