This commit upgrades TypeScript to the latest version 5.3 and introduces
`verbatimModuleSyntax` in line with the official Vue guide
recommendatinos (vuejs/docs#2592).
By enforcing `import type` for type-only imports, this commit improves
code clarity and supports tooling optimization, ensuring imports are
only bundled when necessary for runtime.
Changes:
- Bump TypeScript to 5.3.3 across the project.
- Adjust import statements to utilize `import type` where applicable,
promoting cleaner and more efficient code.
This commit broadens the search functionality within privacy.sexy by
including documentation text in the search scope. Users can now find
scripts and categories not only by their names but also by content in
their documentation. This improvement aims to make the discovery of
relevant scripts and information more intuitive and comprehensive.
Key changes:
- Documentation text is now searchable, enhancing the ability to
discover scripts and categories based on content details.
Other supporting changes:
- Remove interface prefixes (`I`) from related interfaces to adhere to
naming conventions, enhancing code readability.
- Refactor filtering to separate actual filtering logic from filter
state management, improving the structure for easier maintenance.
- Improve test coverage to ensure relability of existing and new search
capabilities.
- Test coverage expanded to ensure the reliability of the new search
capabilities.
This commit introduces a batched debounce mechanism for managing user
selection state changes. It effectively reduces unnecessary processing
during rapid script checking, preventing multiple triggers for code
compilation and UI rendering.
Key improvements include:
- Enhanced performance, especially noticeable when selecting large
categories. This update resolves minor UI freezes experienced when
selecting categories with numerous scripts.
- Correction of a bug where the code area only highlighted the last
selected script when multiple scripts were chosen.
Other changes include:
- Timing functions:
- Create a `Timing` folder for `throttle` and the new
`batchedDebounce` functions.
- Move these functions to the application layer from the presentation
layer, reflecting their application-wide use.
- Refactor existing code for improved clarity, naming consistency, and
adherence to new naming conventions.
- Add missing unit tests.
- `UserSelection`:
- State modifications in `UserSelection` now utilize a singular object
inspired by the CQRS pattern, enabling batch updates and flexible
change configurations, thereby simplifying change management.
- Remove the `I` prefix from related interfaces to align with new coding
standards.
- Refactor related code for better testability in isolation with
dependency injection.
- Repository:
- Move repository abstractions to the application layer.
- Improve repository abstraction to combine `ReadonlyRepository` and
`MutableRepository` interfaces.
- E2E testing:
- Introduce E2E tests to validate the correct batch selection
behavior.
- Add a specialized data attribute in `TheCodeArea.vue` for improved
testability.
- Reorganize shared Cypress functions for a more idiomatic Cypress
approach.
- Improve test documentation with related information.
- `SelectedScript`:
- Create an abstraction for simplified testability.
- Introduce `SelectedScriptStub` in tests as a substitute for the
actual object.
Major refactoring using ESLint with rules from AirBnb and Vue.
Enable most of the ESLint rules and do necessary linting in the code.
Also add more information for rules that are disabled to describe what
they are and why they are disabled.
Allow logging (`console.log`) in test files, and in development mode
(e.g. when working with `npm run serve`), but disable it when
environment is production (as pre-configured by Vue). Also add flag
(`--mode production`) in `lint:eslint` command so production linting is
executed earlier in lifecycle.
Disable rules that requires a separate work. Such as ESLint rules that
are broken in TypeScript: no-useless-constructor (eslint/eslint#14118)
and no-shadow (eslint/eslint#13014).
Using more granular interfaces adds to expressiveness of the code.
Knowing what needs to mutate the state explicitly helps easier
understanding of the code and therefore increases the maintainability.