* place a new private ActiveDoc method in the expected order
This was tickling a lint failure on grist-core.
* reset an English translation that interferes with test currently
Summary:
A recent change perturbed some error handling when an ActiveDoc
is shutting down. It is important that errors get thrown when
attempting to replace a non-existent document. My bad in review
for not catching.
Test Plan: Snapshot test passes again
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Subscribers: georgegevoian, cyprien
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3824
Summary:
Porting script that run an evaluation against our formula dataset.
To test you need an openai key (see here: https://platform.openai.com/)
or hugging face (it should work as well), then checkout the branch and run
`OPENAI_API_KEY=<my_openai_api_key> node core/test/formula-dataset/runCompletion.js`
Test Plan:
Needs manually testing: so far there is no plan to make it part of CI.
The current score is somewhere around 34 successful prompts over a total of 47.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3816
Summary:
The problem is that the implementation for a summary update was relying on type consistency to get columns (ie: matches agains colId and type).
Type consistency is an attempt at maintaining consistent type across same-named column for summaries of same table.
But the problem is that the consistency of types is NOT a strict guarantee or an invariant, more of a best-effort attempt (there are too many possible sequences of operations possible with renaming/adding/removing in summary tables and the underlying table).
With current implementation and with a document violating the type consistency, a summary table could end up with fields referencing columns to the former summary table (more detail below(1)). Which is a bad state (yields js errors on the client).
This diff fixes this issue by relaxing the type comparison when search for same-named column.
(1) __Below is a description of how a violation of type consistency could end-up in bad state document (example taken from the reported bug):__
> In this document, let's assume two summary tables `Table1 [by A]` and `Table1 [Totals]`. Let's also assume Table1 and `Table1 [Totals]` both have an `Amount(Numeric)` column, and that `Table1 [by A]` has one `Amount(Any)` column (violating the type consistency principle). Now when users wanted to change the `Table1 [Totals]` section to group by 'A', grist found that there is already a summary table with same grouping. But it couldn't find a matching column for `Amount(Numeric)` so it created a new one. Except that because there was still an `Amount(Any)` the new column was named `Amount2` which caused following code to ignore it and in particular forgetting to update it's corresponding section's field which was then pointing toward the column of a different table (which is bad).
Test Plan: Added python test.
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3809
Summary:
Warnings about deprecated shortcuts are no longer needed.
As a side effect it fixes a bug that caused those warnings to not persist its
state on pages with charts.
Test Plan: Removed
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3820
Summary: The id column was a possible option for rulesets, which was a bug.
Test Plan: Browser tests.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3817
Summary:
- For python2, skip some tests of renaming which produce different results
because of an un-upgradable astroid version.
- Fix test affected by pyCall() having changed to async; avoid hanging timeout
callback in case of error.
Test Plan: All test cases should now pass (with 4 getting skipped)
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3819
Summary:
Usage is simply to call `overflowTooltip()` with no arguments, as an argument
to an element whose text may overflow. On 'mouseenter', it'll check for
overflow and show the element's .textContent in a tooltip.
- Added for long table names in the widget picker (Add Page, Add Widget to Page).
- Added for long page names in the left-panel list of pages.
Test Plan: Added test cases for the new overflow tooltips
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3814
This adds a special key to be translated. While the key has not been
translated, the language should not be offered or used by default.
The key is not yet effective - that will be follow-up once the key
has propagated to weblate and existing translations have had time to
update.
Summary:
Small glitch on safari: when we show behavioural tooltips the content
of the tooltip is first added to the parent of the target elem, then
we set tooltip's container positioning to absolute which normally causes recompute
of the layout. But in safari it doesn't, hence the button shows as if
the tooltip was still in there, as a sibling.
Diff fixes that issue by forcing positioning to absolute on the tooltip container.
{F68474}
Test Plan: Should not break anything.
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3802
Summary:
Fixes a bug when in a linked widget, the automatic reference wasn't being set
for a new record if attachment is the first thing that gets added to the
record.
- Move handling of 'setCursorPos' pseudo-command to GristDoc to support cross-section switching (relevant when moving attachment into a cell of a non-active page widget)
- Modernize code for AttachmentsWidget slightly (better typings, css conventions)
- Change the fix in https://phab.getgrist.com/D3796 from using isolate to using different z-index values, to avoid a change in the look of the cursor on Attachment cells.
Test Plan: Added a test case for what's possible to test with webdriver.
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3811
This adds a new `GRIST_SANDBOX_FLAVOR=pyodide` option where the
version of Python used for the data engine is wasm, and so can
be run by node like the rest of the back end. It still runs as
a separate process.
There are a few small version changes made to packages to avoid
various awkwardnesses present in the current versions. All existing
tests pass.
This is very experimental. To use, you'll need something with
a bash shell and make. First do:
```
cd sandbox/pyodide
make setup # README.md and Makefile have details
cd ..
```
Then running Grist as:
```
GRIST_SANDBOX_FLAVOR=pyodide yarn start
```
should work. Adding a formula with content:
```
import sys; return sys.version
```
should return a different Python version than other sandboxes.
The motivation for this work is to have a form of sandboxing
that will work on Windows for Grist Electron (for Linux we have
gvisor/runsc, for Mac we have sandbox-exec, but I haven't found
anything comparable for Windows).
It also brings a back-end-free version of Grist a bit closer, for
use-cases where that would make sense - such as serving a report
(in the form of a Grist document) on a static site.
This sets up a framework for running tests in parallel.
It increases the total time taken (since some steps are
repeated) but reduces the turn-around time significantly
overall.
The main objective is to make it possible to release more
test batches to grist-core without bringing CI to a crawl.
The clever little test/split-test.js script is from the
Grist Labs mono-repo and is Dmitry's work.
I considered doing the build in one job, and copying
it to test jobs, since it feels wasteful to repeat it.
That may be worth trying, especially if we start getting
jobs backing up (total concurrent Linux jobs on free plan
is quoted at 20).
It might also be worth looking at doing some tests in
parallel on the same worker, perhaps using the relatively
new MOCHA_WORKER_ID feature, since the tests are often not
actually CPU or I/O bound.