Apply all the required styling to show links, table, spoilers, etc in cpp. This also updates the method of revealing spoilers so now you can click to reveal then click again to hide.
Separate out a base `MessageContentModel` that can be extended to get the component types from different places. This is used currently for `EventMessageContentModel` but will be used later as part of the rich chat bar.
All display text is now in the text component so it never needs special casing. This also cleans up some of the model parameters so more things come from attributes including location and file data (which was already a qvariantmap anyway).
Also cleaned up the itinerary and file enhancement views,
There were some cases that was hit that revealed some mistakes in the
code block checking code, which is now fixed. Basically, we just needed
to make sure the indices were updated at the right times. I also took
some time to clean up some of the comments, and magic numbers used here.
A new test case was added that was failing before in real-world testing.
Similar to spoilers, some Markdown flavors like GitHub's or Discord's
allow you to strike through text with ~~. Normally, the only way to do
this on most Matrix clients (including Element) is surrounding text with
<del> tags. As expected, no one knows how to do this.
So now NeoChat supports the ~~ syntax. We can reuse the existing spoiler
parser for this after making it generic. I have added new test cases for
this syntax. This does not affect the quick format bar yet.
Currently the only two ways to spoiler text in your message is either:
* Using the /spoiler command
* Manually typing the data-mx-spoiler span HTML blocks
Neither one is discoverable, or friendly to users really. Instead, we
should extend our existing Markdown-based formatting syntax with one
that can handle spoiler tags. I chose the || syntax to match Discord,
since Element doesn't seem to adopt one.
Unfortunately, CMark does not support custom extensions (see
https://github.com/commonmark/cmark/pull/123) so we have to implement
our own parsing function. New tests are also added for this too.
This is because we only check if the last message component != Text,
because that handles it's own edit strings. Quote components do that
too, so if we don't exclude it there ends up being two (edited) strings
in one message.
This was a mistake in the code that was designed to remove the outside
paragraphs, which seems to be to make way for the quotation marks we
add around the text. Instead of doing that (which turns out, is very
brittle and breaks on multiple paragraphs) insert the quotation marks
*inside* of the paragraph tags.
A test case is added for this as well.