Major changes included:
- better support for screen readers
- trapping focus in modals
- better tabbing order in composer
- alerts on no content found/number of items found
- better autofocus in modals
- mini-tag-chooser is now a multi-select component
- each multi-select-component will now display selection on one row
* FIX: Cache missing inline oneboxes
Some inline oneboxes were not cached when the server did not return an
answer for an URL and the queried URL and the absolute URL were
different.
For example, if user typed www.example.com, the client asked the server
for http://www.example.com and if the server returned an empty response,
then the client would keep requesting an inline onebox everytime the
composer changed.
In other words, the key used for reading (the absolute URL) and the one
used for writing (the URL as typed by the user) were not the same when
the server returned an empty response.
* DEV: Check cache before making request
There is another cache check in PrettyText, but that is not enough if
multiple requests are pending. This problem was made obvious in tests,
but can happen for users with slow connections.
Using arrow functions changes `this` context, which is undesired in tests, e.g. it makes it impossible to setup things like pretender (`this.server`) in `beforeEach` hooks.
Ember guides always use classic functions in examples (e.g. https://guides.emberjs.com/release/testing/test-types/), and that's what it uses in its own test suite, as do various addons and ember apps.
It was also already used in Discourse where `this` was required. Moving forward, it will be needed in more places as we migrate toward ember-cli.
(I might later add a custom rule to eslint-discourse-ember to enforce this)
In newer Embers jQuery is removed. There is a `find` but it only returns
one element and not a jQuery selector. This patch migrates our code to a
new helper `queryAll` which allows us to remove the global.
We used many global functions to handle tests when they should be
imported like other libraries in our application. This also gets us
closer to the way Ember CLI prefers our tests to be laid out.
This is where they should be as far as ember is concerned. Note this is
a huge commit and we should be really careful everything continues to
work properly.