Defining a behavior on hover means making it different for people using
a keyboard or a touchscreen (most of the population, nowadays).
In this case, we had an accessibility issue where the message wouldn't
disappear once it appeared. That meant that, after tabbing through all
the links and buttons in, for instance, the debates index, the page
would be filled with "participation not allowed" messages, and in order
to see the information about how many people have voted, reloading the
page was required.
For touchscreen users the behavior was similar to what we get on hover,
although we've found some inconsistencies when trying to support several
elements on the same page.
We think in proposals it makes sense to hide the "support" button when
users click on it, and the same applies to the buttonsto support and
vote investment projects. However, we aren't hiding the buttons to
agree/disagree with a debate in order to keep the information about the
current number of people agreeing and disagreeing visible.
Note we're removing some support spec methods because after these
changes the duplication isn't as obvious as it was in the past.
Sometimes tests were hanging indefinitely. Debugging shows that in some
cases it's due to submitting a form before the AJAX request to get
proposals, debates or investments suggestions is finished, since having
an AJAX and a non-AJAX request at the same time when running the test
sometimes leads to unexpected results.
In our case, we were having many timeouts in Github Actions in the
branches where we use both ActiveStorage and Paperclip to store files
(based on pull request 4598). I can reproduce it in those branches
running the following test ("Should show new image after successful
creation with one uploaded file"), although only when my laptop isn't
plugged (!!):
```
rspec './spec/system/proposals_spec.rb[1:33:1:14]'
```
Since we didn't have a proper way to know the AJAX request had finished,
we're adding a `suggest-success` class to the element showing the
suggestions when that happens. Then in the tests we can look for that
class after filling in the title of a proposal, debate or investments.
Just for clarity's sake, we're also adding the `suggest-loading` class
when the suggestions are loading.
In order not to have expectations everywhere about the suggestions,
we're extracting methods to fill in those titles in the tests. Note we
aren't using these methods in the "edit" actions (suggestions are not
showing when editing) or in tests with the `no_js` tag (since
suggestions only work with JavaScript).
On JavaScript tests, Rails URL methods don't include the port when
invoked from a test, but they do when invoked from the browser. This was
causing some tests to fail with Selenium.
We were using list items with the checkbox role. This is probably
confusing since list items have a listitem role, and so we were
basically using a list with no listitem.
We could add a `<span role="checkbox">` tag inside the list item, but
using real checkboxes is probably easier. We're also adding a test to
verify the checkboxes native behavior is compatible with our code.
Note we're using the "enter" key to toggle the "checked" status of the
SDG. This is probably not intuitive for screen reader users who might
try to submit the form using the "enter" key after selecting a goal.
However, the alternative would be even less intuitive for sighted
keyboard users, since for them these icons look like links or buttons
and they would accidentally submit the form when trying to select a
goal.
Since we haven't come up with a better interface yet, for now we're
following the principle of least damage; we consider submitting the form
against a user's will is less annoying than forcing users to move to a
different field before being able to submit the form.
Also note we can't write `check` in the tests because Capybara will try
to click the checkbox, which is hidden by the image in the label.
By using real XML responses developers will be able to understand better
how the integration works (the data flow), and the correspondency between
`remote_census` settings and their place at a real XML response.
As `stubbed_responses` methods were removed from the model layer now the
stubbing part should be managed from the test environment code so also
added a new helper module `RemoteCensusSetup` that can be used anywhere
where we need to call the web service.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
After adding proposal translatable fields to forms, they will be generated with nested translations names and ids so we can no longer
use standard id locator.
Using input label text to fill in fields works with both types of forms.
This method allows to fill in CONSUL's signup form without interacting
with other UI elements, useful when using testing locales other than English
Backported from Decide Madrid
The tests that will check the featute
is working well added. There are four test:
1. Checks that the emails are been send to
the user. The test looks for the link in there
and takes the token. Visits the page and
changes the password.
2 and 3. Both change the password by hand. One
uses a password written by the manager, whilst
the other uses the 'Generate random password'
option. Both tests check that the user can
sign in with the new passwords.
4. Checks that the password can be printed
when it is saved.