Commit Graph

4 Commits (f3f7ef2d13a76f35ccd41cd003450b084bf6ccf6)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Claire ff168ef202
Fix most rubocop issues (#2165)
* Run rubocop --autocorrect on app/, config/ and lib/, also manually fix some remaining style issues

* Run rubocop --autocorrect-all on db/

* Run rubocop --autocorrect-all on `spec/` and fix remaining issues
2023-04-09 11:25:30 +02:00
Thibaut Girka 17fb1c4345 Fix old migrations failing because of new version of `strong_migrations` 2019-05-30 21:20:42 +02:00
David Yip 4a64181461 Allow keywords to match either substrings or whole words.
Word-boundary matching only works as intended in English and languages
that use similar word-breaking characters; it doesn't work so well in
(say) Japanese, Chinese, or Thai.  It's unacceptable to have a feature
that doesn't work as intended for some languages.  (Moreso especially
considering that it's likely that the largest contingent on the Mastodon
bit of the fediverse speaks Japanese.)

There are rules specified in Unicode TR29[1] for word-breaking across
all languages supported by Unicode, but the rules deliberately do not
cover all cases.  In fact, TR29 states

    For example, reliable detection of word boundaries in languages such
    as Thai, Lao, Chinese, or Japanese requires the use of dictionary
    lookup, analogous to English hyphenation.

So we aren't going to be able to make word detection work with regexes
within Mastodon (or glitchsoc).  However, for a first pass (even if it's
kind of punting) we can allow the user to choose whether they want word
or substring detection and warn about the limitations of this
implementation in, say, docs.

[1]: https://unicode.org/reports/tr29/
     https://web.archive.org/web/20171001005125/https://unicode.org/reports/tr29/
2017-10-21 14:54:36 -05:00
David Yip 9093e2de7a Add KeywordMute model.
Gist of the proposed keyword mute implementation:

Keyword mutes are represented server-side as one keyword per record.
For each account, there exists a keyword regex that is generated as one
big alternation of all keywords.  This regex is cached (in Redis, I
guess) so we can quickly get it when filtering in FeedManager.
2017-10-21 14:53:41 -05:00