Boulder: the cards are good but everything around them was basic — six
identical grey pill buttons, a plain header, and a dated Global Settings modal.
Action chips (artist-detail button language — tinted gradient + hover lift +
icon scale): Scan is the primary CTA with the accent gradient and a shimmer
sweep; the rest get per-hue identity (similar-artists blue, settings slate,
origins green, history amber, blocklist/cancel red). One .wl-chip base class
with a --chip-rgb variable per hue. Header count/timer become pill meta chips
(timer accent-tinted).
Chip-safe labels: the scan/update handlers set button.textContent, which would
wipe the new svg + shimmer children on first use — added _wlSetChipLabel()
(preserves icon/shimmer, swaps the text node) and converted all 11 writes.
Global Settings modal: emoji + inline-styled header replaced with the
origins/blocklist house-style head (title/sub/✕); option cards now show live
checked-state feedback (:has(:checked) accent ring + grayscale-dimmed icons
when off — also upgrades the per-artist config modal, same components); the
master-override toggle gets a CSS .enabled treatment instead of the hard-coded
green inline border the JS used to write.
All element ids/onclicks unchanged; JS syntax-checked; 131 watchlist tests pass.
Boulder's screenshots: the v1 deck shifted around depending on what data had
arrived (the album row vanished entirely without art, leaving floating
"Processing…/Processing…" text), the images were small, and the feed header
floated in empty space. Redesigned in the artist-detail-page language:
- Big 148px square portrait (rounded, shadowed) anchors the left side, with
the current album stamped as a 62px overlay badge in its corner — when art
is missing, both keep their slot and show a glyph placeholder instead of
collapsing, so the deck NEVER changes shape mid-scan.
- 24px artist name + uppercase accent phase line + a fixed-height
"now checking" block (accent left rule) for album + track, with stable
placeholders ("Looking for new releases…" / "—") instead of doubled
"Processing…" text.
- The additions feed is an inset fixed-height panel (artist-page sidebar
style): same size whether 0 or 10 tracks, empty state centered.
- JS: hide the artist photo when the CURRENT artist has none (previously the
prior artist's photo lingered), cleaner placeholder copy.
Boulder: the live display was a cramped ~600px box showing a fraction of the
data the scan already tracks, with no animation and no history.
Live scan deck (replaces the three-column box, full width):
- Header: pulsing live dot, "x / y artists" progress text, and two live
counter chips (found / added) that pop when they change.
- Animated progress bar (artist index / total) with a shimmer sweep.
- Stage: artist avatar with accent glow + name + readable phase line
("Checking album 2 of 5"), album art + album + current track.
- "Added to wishlist this run" feed: taller, bigger art, slide-in animation
that plays once per new track (feed re-renders only when it changes).
- All data was already in scan_state (current_artist_index, total_artists,
tracks_found/added_this_scan, current_phase) — just never displayed. The
legacy fullscreen-modal markup shares element ids and lacks the new ones,
so it keeps working untouched.
Scan History (persistent):
- New watchlist_scan_runs table — one row per run (status, timestamps,
artists/found/added counts) + the full track ledger JSON. Saved at scan
completion AND cancellation; idempotent on run_id; pruned to the last 100
runs. Wishlist rows erode as tracks download, so this is the durable record.
- GET /api/watchlist/scan/history (runs) + /history/<run_id>/tracks (ledger).
- New History button on the Watchlist page → modal in the origins/blocklist
house style: run cards (date, cancelled chip, artists/found/added stats)
expanding into the Added / Skipped track lists with art and badges.
Tests: save+fetch with ledger, idempotent re-save, prune keeps newest,
unknown-run empty, cancelled runs recorded. 398 watchlist/wishlist/history
tests pass; JS syntax-checked; all rendered strings escaped.
Tacobell444 (#707 follow-up): the scan summary said "New tracks: 19 • Added to
wishlist: 10" with no way to see which tracks those were — you had to scan your
wishlist and guess what was new.
Scan ledger: the scanner now records a per-run scan_track_events list (track,
artist, album, thumb, status added|skipped — skipped = found-new but declined
by add_to_wishlist: already queued or blocklisted; capped at 500). The status
endpoint already serializes scan_state, so the payload flows free. The
completed (and cancelled) scan summary on the Watchlist page gets a
"Show tracks" toggle expanding a styled list — Added section + Skipped section
with badges, reusing the live-feed row styling.
Download Origins grouping: the modal now groups entries by what triggered them
(watchlist artist / playlist name) with collapsible headers + counts instead of
a flat list with a per-row badge. Entries arrive newest-first so groups order
themselves by their newest download. Same row markup, checkboxes/delete intact.
Provenance: watchlist adds now stamp scan_run_id into wishlist source_info, so
per-run grouping is queryable later (future "what did run X add" views).
Tests: per-run ledger seam test (added + skipped statuses, album/artist fields,
FIFO unchanged). 316 watchlist/wishlist tests pass; JS syntax-checked.
Completes Phase 1 on top of the backend (43c798a7):
- Cross-source backfill: core/blocklist/backfill.py is a pure injected-resolver
core (resolve only missing sources, never raises); core/blocklist/runtime.py
wires the real metadata clients with a confident name-match (exact
significant-token equality; album/track also require the parent artist when
both expose one — no wrong IDs hung on an entry). Resolution runs
synchronously at add time, so a ban is cross-source from the first scan;
the artist name-fallback in matching covers any gap.
- API: GET/POST/DELETE /api/blocklist (profile-scoped) + /api/blocklist/search
(thin wrapper over the manual-match service search on the active source, so
the modal needn't know the source). Add resolves the other sources before
storing.
- Modal (webui/static/blocklist.js): tabbed Artists/Albums/Tracks in the
revamp design language (accent light-edge, pill tabs, debounced search with
spinner + out-of-order guard, per-result Block, "currently blocked" list
with a match-status star and per-row remove). Opened by a new "Blocklist"
button on the watchlist page, next to Download Origins.
Tests: 5 backfill (fill-missing-only, None/exception handling, arg shape) + 4
API (search proxy, add→backfill→list→delete round trip, validation). Modal
registered in the script-split onclick-coverage test; JS syntax-checked.
User ask: "a modal that lists the tracks downloaded via watchlist" — extended,
as discussed, to playlists too. One modal, two tabs, opened from the Watchlist
page (watchlist tab preselected) and the Sync page (playlists tab) — same
shared-modal-different-entry-points UX as the rest of the app.
The data: library_history recorded which SERVICE a file came from but never
what TRIGGERED it. New origin/origin_context columns (migration + index) are
written once at the import chokepoint via core/downloads/origin.py, a pure
tested deriver that reads, in priority: an explicit _dl_origin stamp (set at
batch-task creation for direct playlist batches, where the playlist context
otherwise only survived in folder mode), the wishlist provenance already
riding in track_info.source_info (watchlist_artist_name / playlist_name —
watchlist_scanner has stamped these for ages), and the folder-mode playlist
thread. Manual downloads stay unclassified by design. History starts from
now — provenance can't be conjured retroactively.
API: GET /api/download-origins?origin=watchlist|playlist (paged) and POST
/api/download-origins/delete — deletes the file on disk (resolved through the
shared container/host path resolver), the matching library track row, and the
history entries; a file that refuses deletion keeps its row and reports the
error instead of lying.
UI: webui/static/origin-history.js — tabbed modal in the revamp design
language (accent light-edge, pill tabs, entry rows reusing the
library-history-entry components), per-row delete + select-all bulk delete
with honest result toasts, empty/loading states, per-tab totals.
Tests: 8 — deriver priority/shapes (incl. the exact watchlist_scanner
source_info shape and JSON-string survival), origin filtering + counts,
row fetch/delete isolation between origins, delete-track-by-path.
Audit of every dashboard animation. Already good and untouched: orb canvas
(cached glow sprites, no shadowBlur, stops on tab-hide/page-switch/scroll),
shimmer scan, sidebar orbs, embers, rl-blink (all transform/opacity), and the
reduce-effects global kill-switch. The offenders were infinite animations of
paint-bound properties — each repaints its region every frame, forever:
- avatar halo: animated box-shadow on every active bar -> the bright state is
painted once on a wrap pseudo and only its OPACITY breathes (the wrap exists
because the avatar clips overflow)
- rate-limited warn: animated filter:brightness -> a white-wash pseudo whose
opacity breathes
- active-fill glow: animated box-shadow -> static glow at the old midpoint,
breathing moved to the tip's opacity
- header sweep: animated background-position across the full-width band (on
all four headers sharing the class) -> a real child strip translated inside
an overflow-clipped wrap; transform+opacity, zero paint
- orb canvas: renders at ~20fps while fully asleep (drift is at crawl speed —
invisible) instead of 60fps for the hours the dashboard sits idle
Visual parity throughout; peak-flash (event-driven, 0.65s one-shot) keeps its
box-shadow since its duty cycle is negligible.
1-3 tiny accent sparks per socket update drift up from each bar's fill tip,
scaled by the real (unclamped) rate — motion strictly means API calls are
happening right now. Self-removing DOM nodes with a per-bar live cap of 6,
suppressed during cooldown and under reduced-effects mode. The taste-risk one
of the set: revert this commit alone if it reads as noise.
The payload has carried daily_budget {used, limit, exhausted} forever and the
dashboard rendered none of it. The avatar disc now wears a conic progress rim
that fills as the day's real-API budget is spent — green to 70%, amber to 95%,
red after — and flips purple once the worker has bridged to Spotify Free for
the rest of the day (using_free now included in the emit payload). Tooltip
carries the exact used/limit numbers.
A banned service used to just tint red. The payload carries the seconds
remaining (rl_remaining), so the bar now locks into a cooldown state: the live
VU dims, a red column drains away as the ban ticks down (largest remaining
seen is latched as the denominator — only remaining is sent), and an m:ss
timer counts to recovery. The moment the ban expires the track flashes green
('recovered') and the VU takes the stage back. 'Back in 4:00', not
'something's red'.
A thin accent marker sticks at each bar's recent maximum, holds ~1.2s, then
falls a few percent per update until it rests on the live fill — exactly how a
hardware VU meter's peak LED behaves. A traffic burst stays readable for a few
seconds after it's over instead of vanishing with the next 1s sample. Hidden
while it sits on the fill so idle bars don't carry a stray line.
Password managers (Bitwarden/1Password/LastPass) treat this app's many API-key/
token/secret fields as login forms and re-scan the whole, constantly-mutating DOM
on every change — pegging the main thread for seconds and making hover/click/
scroll feel laggy. Two mitigations (measured to make the app usable with the
extension enabled):
- Tag all inputs with data-bwignore / data-1p-ignore / data-lpignore so the
managers skip them (no autofill detection work).
- Rate-monitor equalizer: skip DOM writes while it's off-screen (offsetParent
null). All pages stay mounted, so updating the hidden grid still triggered the
managers' MutationObserver on every backend rate-monitor event for no benefit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Last.fm ships a square Twitter avatar; clip it to a circle so the
disc reads as a uniform chip. Tidal / Qobuz / Discogs / Amazon
ship dark-foreground marks that disappear against the dark glass
avatar backdrop — invert to a white silhouette so the logo
actually reads. The per-service accent drop-shadow still applies
so the brand color cue is preserved as a glow around the white
silhouette.
Initial-letter glyphs (SP / AM / DZ / ...) read as placeholder
once the brand-logo equalizer disc was visualised — each chip
should carry the service's actual mark. Wired the same logo
URLs the header-action worker orbs already load (Spotify press
asset, iTunes Wikimedia SVG, Deezer brandfetch symbol, Last.fm
avatar, Genius logo, MusicBrainz Wikimedia SVG, AudioDB local
PNG, Tidal / Qobuz / Discogs SVGRepo marks, Amazon local SVG)
into a new _RATE_GAUGE_LOGOS map and rendered as an ``<img>``
inside the avatar disc.
Visual details
- Disc backdrop switched from a solid accent-gradient fill to a
dark glass radial + accent-tinted ring + accent drop-shadow
on the logo. The service color still anchors the chip without
competing with the logo for contrast.
- Logo sized at 75% of the disc for breathing room. Drop-shadow
pops dark / multi-tone marks against the dark backdrop.
- Avatar bumped to 34px / 28px / 26px across desktop / tablet /
mobile so logos read clearly at every breakpoint.
Resilience
- ``<img onerror>`` swaps in an initial-letter glyph span on
load failure (CDN drop, network blip). The ``.rate-eq-avatar
--fallback`` variant restores the original accent-gradient
disc look so the fallback chip still reads as branded.
Asset
- AudioDB ships no public logo URL — saved the existing header-
action base64 PNG (~30 KB) to ``webui/static/audiodb.png`` so
the equalizer can reference it as ``/static/audiodb.png`` like
Amazon already does.
Four upgrades that take the equalizer row from clean to vibey.
All tied together by the same --eq-accent / --eq-glow CSS
variables so future tweaks stay coherent across the four
animation layers.
1. Brand-color avatar disc above each bar. Circular chip with a
2-3 letter glyph (SP / AM / DZ / LF / GN / MB / ADB / TD /
QB / DC / AZ) and a radial gradient using the service's
accent. Inner highlight + drop-shadow for depth; slow halo
pulse when the worker is running. Anchors each capsule to
its identity so the row reads as "these are your services"
not "these are 11 anonymous bars."
2. Peak-flash detector. When ``cpm`` actually steps upward
between socket updates (above a small jitter floor so
near-zero noise doesn't trigger), the peak tip briefly
flares white-hot, the fill flashes brighter, and the
reflection puddle ripples — all on a 650ms one-shot the JS
removes after fire. Mimics a hardware VU meter's peak-
detect LED. Sells the "alive" feeling by tying bar
movement to real call activity, not just continuous
animation.
3. Rolling-counter number animation. The live count under
the bar digit-animates from old→new with easeOutCubic
over 520ms instead of snapping. Per-element animation
handles tracked in a WeakMap so a fast second update
cancels the prior RAF loop instead of fighting it.
Premium-counter feel.
4. Glass-surface reflection puddle. Soft accent-colored
blurred ellipse under each bar; opacity scales with the
real (unclamped) rate via the --eq-glow variable so idle
bars don't pollute the row with permanent ground-light.
Rate-limited bars get a red puddle. Peak-flash briefly
intensifies the puddle so the surface "ripples" with the
call burst. Mounted on the host button (not the track) so
it escapes the track's overflow clipping.
Responsive: avatar disc shrinks to 26px at laptop/tablet,
24px at mobile.
The rate monitor on the dashboard used a 10-column grid of circular
SVG speedometers. With 11 services configured (Amazon was the
straw), the grid produced 10-in-row-1 + 1-orphan-in-row-2, breaking
the dashboard's tile symmetry. Speedometers also wasted ~80% of
their pixels on empty arc — most services sit at 0 cpm most of
the time, so the row visually read as a wall of empty gauges.
Replaced with a VU-meter / equalizer row: one vertical capsule
per service, brand-color gradient filling from the bottom, bar
height tracks ``calls/min ÷ limit``. Music-app native aesthetic,
fits the existing accent-heavy glassy vibe, and symmetric by
design at any service count — services slot into the flex row.
Visual details
- 4% sliver floor on idle bars so the row reads as "everything
alive" instead of "8 dead gauges" — vibe over literal zero
- Continuous shimmer scan when worker is running (vertical wash)
- Slow breathing pulse on idle bars
- Red gradient + faster pulse when rate-limited
- White-hot peak tip glows in the service's accent color
- Status pill below each bar (Running pulses green, Paused amber)
- Big count number floats top-center of the track
Behavior
- Click any bar opens the same detail modal the speedometer used —
no data-flow changes, no API changes, drop-in visual swap.
- Renderer auto-detects the dashboard context (data-card="enrichment")
and routes through the equalizer path; legacy speedometer code
still ships for any non-dashboard mount.
- Responsive: tightens at laptop/tablet breakpoints, wraps to
5-per-row on phones.
Include a capped recent tail of database-backed download history in the unified Downloads page so completed Deezer and other streaming downloads remain visible after runtime tasks are cleaned up or the container restarts. Use persistent download history for the dashboard finished count, keep live tasks authoritative for active rows, avoid showing the local clear-completed action for persisted history rows, and cover history hydration/deduping/capping in status tests.
- replace click-driven artist-detail hops with semantic links
- keep SPA transitions via shell bridge interception for /artist-detail/:source/:id
- drop legacy page helper wrappers and dead bridge plumbing
- add a canonical TanStack route for artist-detail and keep the legacy page as the renderer target
- expose page-level artist-detail navigation on the shell bridge for legacy callers
- remove artist-detail-specific routing, origin stack, and back-label logic from the shared shell helpers
Add MusicBrainz watchlist artist ID storage, badges, linked-provider editing, and per-artist preferred source support.
Backfill watchlist MusicBrainz matches from already-enriched library artists so existing MusicBrainz worker matches appear in watchlist cards and settings.
Extend bulk watchlist add, liked artist matching, artist map source picking, and service status labels to recognize MusicBrainz, with regression tests for watchlist ID persistence and backfill.
- Artist cards, hero section, and enhanced view now show Amazon Music badges
when amazon_id is populated (AMAZON_LOGO_URL constant, orange #FF9900 brand)
- Enhanced view artist and album match status rows include amazon_match_status
chip with click-to-rematch via openManualMatchModal
- getServiceUrl: added amazon (album/track ASIN → music.amazon.com) and fixed
missing discogs entries; serviceLabels adds tidal/qobuz/amazon
- Enhanced view enhanced-artist-id-badges includes amazon_id entry
- DB SELECTs for library artists list and artist detail now return amazon_id;
both response dicts include the field
- watchlist_artists migration adds amazon_artist_id column
- Watchlist config GET: amazon_artist_id in SELECT/WHERE/response (index 18)
- Watchlist artists list response includes amazon_artist_id
- link-provider endpoint: amazon added to valid_providers and col_map
- _populateLinkedProviderSection: amazonId param + Amazon Music source row
- Watchlist card source badges render Amazon pill (watchlist-source-amazon CSS)
- _openSourceSearch labels map includes amazon
- service_search: amazon_worker injected via init(); _search_service amazon branch
uses search_artists/albums/tracks, same {id,name,image,extra} return shape
- _SERVICE_ID_COLUMNS: amazon → amazon_id for artist/album/track
- _init_service_search call passes amazon_worker_obj
- amazon_client._fetch_album_metas: 5-minute TTL cache per ASIN — cached hits
skip _rate_limit() and HTTP call entirely; fixes ~10s artist detail load
- registry.py: removed amazon from METADATA_SOURCE_PRIORITY and
METADATA_SOURCE_LABELS — T2Tunes has no discography API, cannot serve as a
primary metadata source; Amazon remains a download source + ASIN enricher
- Settings metadata source dropdown and help text updated accordingly
Adds full parity with Deezer/Qobuz/Tidal/Discogs in every dashboard
UI layer — orb button, live tooltip, WebSocket push, rate speedometer.
- webui/index.html: Amazon enrichment orb button after Discogs
- webui/static/amazon.svg: local icon (a + smile, same pattern as
hydrabase.png — avoids external URL dependency)
- webui/static/style.css: Amazon button/spinner/tooltip CSS with
FF9900 brand color; added to mobile tooltip suppress list
- webui/static/worker-orbs.js: Amazon orb in WORKER_DEFS [255,153,0]
- webui/static/api-monitor.js: Amazon in rate gauge services list,
label, and color map
- webui/static/enrichment.js: updateAmazonEnrichmentStatusFromData,
toggleAmazonEnrichment, DOMContentLoaded init + 2s poll
- webui/static/core.js: socket.on enrichment:amazon-enrichment listener
- web_server.py: amazon-enrichment added to _emit_enrichment_status_loop
workers dict so WebSocket pushes fire every 2s
Recent activity items on the dashboard all rendered 'NaNmo ago'
because the formatter parsed `activity.time` (a human label like
'Now' / 'Just now') with `new Date(...)` -> Invalid Date -> NaN
arithmetic -> 'NaNmo ago'.
Backend (`core/runtime_state.add_activity_item`) has always emitted
`activity.timestamp` (Unix epoch seconds) alongside the label.
Frontend now uses the epoch for relative-time formatting via a new
local `_activityTimeAgo` helper:
- typeof timestamp === 'number' -> diff against Date.now() in ms
- < 60s -> 'Just now'
- < 60m -> 'Nm ago'
- < 24h -> 'Nh ago'
- < 30d -> 'Nd ago'
- otherwise 'Nmo ago'
- falls back to the literal `activity.time` label only when no
timestamp is present (legacy items / future shapes)
Both call sites in api-monitor.js (initial render + timestamp-only
refresh path) updated to the new helper.
- Avoid refetching /api/watchlist/count every second when no auto-run is scheduled.
- Keep the timer active only while a next run exists; otherwise leave the label static.
Completes the artist-detail unification. Source artists now land on
the same /artist-detail page as library artists (with the source-aware
backend endpoint from earlier this session handling the data fetch).
The inline Artists page is gone — artists.js deleted, #artists-page
HTML block removed, /artists URL aliases to /search.
Source-artist callsites re-migrated from selectArtistForDetail to
navigateToArtistDetail (search results, global widget, download
modal, Discover hero / Your Artists cards / artmap context / genre
deep-dive, watchlist artist detail).
Visual upgrade to standalone hero: added .artist-detail-hero-bg +
.artist-detail-hero-overlay (blurred image bg, dark gradient — same
treatment as the inline page). library.js sets the bg image when
loading an artist.
Library-only UI hidden via CSS for source artists (existing rules
from the previous commit cover Enhanced toggle, Status filter,
completion bars, enrichment coverage, Top Tracks sidebar, Radio /
Enhance buttons).
Final 2 helpers (lazyLoadArtistImages used by wishlist-tools,
showCompletionError used by completion checker) moved from
artists.js into shared-helpers.js. The inline-page candidate set
was dropped from _resolveSimilarArtistsTargets.
init.js: 'artists' alias added at top of navigateToPage (same
pattern as the existing 'downloads' alias). 'case artists:' handler
removed from loadPageData. _getPageFromPath now maps artist-detail
to library as its parent (matches the existing nav highlight at
init.js:2161).
tests/test_script_split_integrity.py: artists.js removed from
SPLIT_MODULES; KNOWN_CROSS_FILE_DUPES updated to point escapeHtml
at shared-helpers.js instead of artists.js. 354/354 tests pass.
Net delta: -1700 lines.
Stays at 2.39. Once you've verified end-to-end (library artist ->
hero looks like inline visual; source artist from Search -> same
page, similar artists works, no 404s; /artists URL -> /search), a
follow-up commit bumps to 2.40 with the full WHATS_NEW entry that's
already prepped.
Part B of the deferred unification cleanup. Now that Part A teaches
/api/artist-detail/<id> to fall back to a metadata-source lookup when
the library DB lookup misses, source-artist clicks can finally land
on the standalone page without 404ing — the goal Phase 4a aimed for
and had to roll back in commit 19e9174.
Re-migrating the seven callsites reverted earlier in this session:
- search.js enhanced-search source-artist onClick
- downloads.js _gsClickArtist (global widget non-library branch)
- downloads.js _navigateToArtistFromModal fallback
- discover.js viewRecommendedArtistDiscography
- discover.js viewDiscoverHeroDiscography
- discover.js 'Your Artists' card navAction inline onclick
- discover.js 'Your Artists' info-modal 'View All' button
- discover.js artist-map context menu
- discover.js genre-deep-dive artist click
- api-monitor.js watchlist discography view
Each replaces the navigateToPage('artists')+setTimeout+selectArtist-
ForDetail dance with a single navigateToArtistDetail(id, name,
source) call. The third arg seeds artistDetailPageState.currentArtist-
Source, which library.js now reads and forwards as ?source= to the
backend (added in Part A).
Effect: clicking an artist in any of these surfaces now lands on the
standalone /artist-detail page with a stable URL, source context
preserved, and owned-library data merged in when available. Library
artist clicks (unchanged) and media-player / stats links (unchanged)
all continue to use navigateToArtistDetail too, so they now
consistently share one destination.
The inline Artists page (#artists-page + selectArtistForDetail in
artists.js) still exists but has no external callers left — only the
page's own internal search-result click handler references the
function now. Parts D + E will delete the dead inline page and
finally remove artists.js.
Phase 4a (9361c29) mistakenly routed every artist click to
navigateToArtistDetail, which fetches /api/artist-detail/<id>. That
endpoint only knows how to look up local DB primary keys. For source
artists (Spotify/Deezer/iTunes/etc.) the id is a metadata-source id,
not a library PK — so clicks 404'd out.
Library artists (db_artists section in search results, library page
clicks, stats links, media player) continue to go to the standalone
/artist-detail page as before. Source artists now route back to the
Artists page's inline view via selectArtistForDetail, which calls
/api/artist/<id>/discography with a source param — the endpoint that
actually handles non-library IDs.
Reverted 7 migration points:
- search.js: Enhanced Search source-artists onClick
- downloads.js: global widget _gsClickArtist non-library branch
- downloads.js: _navigateToArtistFromModal fallback
- discover.js: viewRecommendedArtistDiscography
- discover.js: viewDiscoverHeroDiscography
- discover.js: 'Your Artists' card name-click inline HTML
- discover.js: 'Your Artists' info-modal 'View All' button
- discover.js: artist-map context menu
- discover.js: genre-deep-dive artist click
- api-monitor.js: watchlist artist discography view
Phase 4a's goal of "one artist page for everything" is deferred —
it needs backend work on /api/artist-detail to accept a source param
and fall back to metadata-source lookup when the local DB lookup
fails. Keeping the signature extension on navigateToArtistDetail
(source parameter) in place for when that lands.
Phase 4b of the Search/Artists unification. Cin flagged that 'Artists'
in the sidebar read like a library section but was actually a
dedicated artist-search page, duplicating what unified Search already
does. Removed the sidebar entry so users funnel through Search.
- Sidebar Artists button gone
- 'Browse Artists' on empty Watchlist now opens Search
- 'View artist from Wishlist' opens Search pre-filled with the name
- Profile Home Page + Page Access drop the Artists option
artists.js stays on disk: it defines ~30 shared helpers used across
the app (escapeHtml, openDownloadMissingModalForArtistAlbum, service
status, download bubbles, image helpers) that library/discover/etc.
depend on. Wholesale deletion would orphan too much. The inline
Artists page and its selectArtistForDetail flow are still there —
just unreachable from the sidebar — so /artists deep links keep
working for bookmarks.
Phase 4a of the Search/Artists unification. The app had two artist-
detail implementations: the standalone page Library navigates to via
navigateToArtistDetail (its own route, deep-link support, highlights
Library in the sidebar), and an inline state inside the Artists page
reached via selectArtistForDetail. They rendered similar content but
were separate code paths and kept drifting apart (PR #356 just had
to fix source propagation in both).
Every external caller of selectArtistForDetail (9 sites across
api-monitor.js, discover.js, downloads.js, search.js) now calls
navigateToArtistDetail(id, name, source) directly. Removed ~63 lines
of the navigate-then-setTimeout-then-select dance. Source context
(Spotify/iTunes/Deezer/etc.) carries cleanly through via the new
third argument.
Artists sidebar entry, its inline search, and selectArtistForDetail
all still work — they just have no external callers. Phase 4b will
retire the sidebar entry and artists.js.