* feat(tile-view): initial implementation for tile view
- Modify the classname on the app root so layout can adjust
depending on the desired layout mode--vertical filmstrip,
horizontal filmstrip, and tile view.
- Create a button for toggling tile view.
- Add a StateListenerRegistry to automatically update the
selected participant and max receiver frame height on tile
view toggle.
- Rezise thumbnails when switching in and out of tile view.
- Move the local video when switching in and out of tile view.
- Update reactified pieces of thumbnails when switching in and
out of tile view.
- Cap the max receiver video quality in tile view based on tile
size.
- Use CSS to hide UI components that should not display in tile
view.
- Signal follow me changes.
* change local video id for tests
* change approach: leverage more css
* squash: fix some formatting
* squash: prevent pinning, hide pin border in tile view
* squash: change logic for maxReceiverQuality due to sidestepping resizing logic
* squash: fix typo, columns configurable, remove unused constants
* squash: resize with js again
* squash: use yana's math for calculating tile size
A few occurrences of coding style/formatting which I noticed while
reviewing 'feat(eslint): Enable for non react files'. These are
definitely not all occurrences I could've noticed during the review
but... we're talking about files outside react/ anyway.
- Re-use the native redux pinning implementation for web
- Remove pinning logic from conference.js
- To the native pinning add a check for sharedVideo so
youtube videos do not send a pin event
- Add shared videos as a participant to enable pinning and
so they can eventually get added to the filmstrip
- Emit UIEvents.PINNED_ENDPOINT from middleware
We seemed to be using the names "film strip" and "filmstrip" (and,
consequently, their source code-conscious forms such as film-strip,
FilmStrip, etc.) In order to comply with our coding style which requires
a consistent one name for a given abstraction, choose one name and
rename the uses of the other name.
Wikipedia has a definition of a "filmstrip", I couldn't find a "film
strip". I guess our abstraction can be seen as what's described there.
When I google "film strip", I get results about "filmstrip" at the top.
That's why I chose "filmstrip".
Certain uses of "film strip" such as interfaceConfig.filmStripOnly and
in the external API I left untouched in an attempt to preserve
compatibility.
I wasn't sure whether CSS was tangled in compatibility so I made a
choice and renamed there was well.