Converting the invite modal includes the following:
- Creating new react components to display InviteDialog. The
main parent components are ShareLink and PasswordOverview,
the later handles displaying lock state and password editing.
These components do not make use of atlaskit as the component
for input does not yet support readonly, so for consistency
within the modal content no atlaskit was used.
- Using redux for keeping and accessing lock state instead of
RoomLocker.
- Publicly exposing the redux action lockStateChanged for direct
calling on lock events experienced on the web client.
- Removing Invite, InviteDialogView, and RoomLocker and references
to them.
- Handling errors that occur when setting a password to preserve
existing web funtionality.
Instead of using AtlasKit Single-Select, use Dropdown. Dropdown
differs in that an icon can be specified for the trigger element,
whereas Single-Select currently supports icons for all elements,
and Dropdown can show all options incuding the already-selected
option.
This change does introduce the issue of the trigger element not
taking up 100% width of the parent. Supporting such would involve
overriding AtlasKit CSS. The compromise made here was to do a
generic override of max-width so the trigger elements at least
stay within the parent and aligning the trigger elements to the
right.
Some atlaskit components, such as field-text, inherit text color.
This is a problem with components that are white as they will
inherit $defaultColor, which is a light gray. So instead, for
the atlaskit modal, set a color for all the form content so it
can be inherited instead.
Atlaskit at times will have localized styling for font-size and
sometimes will not. The button component will inherit its
font-size whereas selectors have localized font-size of 14px. For
consistency, the cancel/submit buttons on the atlaskit modals
will also have 14px. The atlaskit story book examples also use
buttons with 14px font-size.
Cleanup existing logic for displaying and updating device
selection settings in the settings menu. In its place
is a button to open the device selection modal.
The Device Selection modal consists of:
- DeviceSelection, an overly smart component responsible for
triggering stream creation and cleanup.
- DeviceSelector for selector elements.
- VideoInputPreview for displaying a video preview.
- AudioInputPreview for displaying a volume meter.
- AudioOutputPreview for a test sound output link.
Store changes include is primarily storing the list of
available devices in redux. Other app state has been left
alone for future refactoring.
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.
All z-indexes found in css files have been moved into css
variables. If the z-index is used only once, the variable
name will be the same as the selector it is used in. If
the z-index is used multiple times, then the plain name
of $zindex# was used. This allowed a more confident
moving down of the toolbar so that the new modal dialog,
with z-index 500, could display on top of it.
#1436