Due to a typo in d0f7fd6df7, linked files were still being renamed even
with the pref off if metadata was found for the file. The test I added
was only for adding a file to an existing item, which didn't trigger
metadata retrieval.
This also adds a hook for stubbing the actual PDF recognition process so
we can test certain behaviors without making HTTP requests.
Since 9c0f5998a3, depending on your timezone the day could be off by
one if the access date didn't have a timestamp (so only for manual
entries or imports).
It seems like the Zotero.Utilities.debounce() on handleSearch() in
tagSelector.jsx was somehow causing the function to be run without being
triggered from the onSearch events, resulting in an extra render. I'm
not sure why that was happening, but it's fixed now that there's no
longer a debounce() there.
Using a regexp meant that an invalid regexp pattern would crash the tag
selector, and even if we caught that it would produce unexpected results
for some searches (e.g., anything with a period).
And take an optional second parameter in waitForTagSelector() to
indicate how many updates to wait for, since certain operations trigger
two updates, one from notify() and the other from onItemViewChanged().
Even after cdf9d7ff32, the tag selector was still being initialized if
it was closed at startup, which meant that keeping it closed didn't fix
performance problems in large libraries. This hopefully finally brings
the tag selector in line with pre-Reactification behavior.
This also moves initIntlStrings() logic to Zotero.Intl so that strings
are accessible from React components in separate windows, and it moves
container initialization to ZoteroPane since most of what it does will
need to interact with ZoteroPane anyway.
The test incorrectly contained an item wait for an attachment that
doesn't get saved to the group library, but the test was passing because
the main item was being moved to the group twice. 94ccba45b somehow
fixed that, and since the behavior during the test is now correct, I'm
not going to worry about this unless we notice a problem.