Two more click-only divs in the queue item template were leaving
keyboard users stuck:
- .queue-selector — the "X" number-badge to the left of pending
queue items that toggles bulk-select. Previously a div with onclick.
Now role="checkbox" + tabindex + aria-checked tracking the selection
state + Enter/Space keydown handler.
- .queue-item .title — the truncated VOD title that, when clicked,
toggles the expanded detail panel underneath the row. Previously
a div with onclick. Now role="button" + tabindex +
aria-expanded reflecting the panel state + aria-controls pointing
at the details panel ID + Enter/Space keydown handler.
Both pick up 2px purple focus-visible rings to match the rest of
the a11y family.
aria-expanded on a button is the conventional pattern for
"disclosure widget" controls (collapsible/expandable content),
so screen readers will now announce the title as "VOD title,
button, collapsed" or "expanded" as the user navigates and toggles.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two click-only divs in the new profile header (4.6.17+) had no
keyboard equivalent:
- .streamer-profile-avatar-wrap (clicking the avatar opens the
channel on twitch.tv) — the only way to trigger that action
besides the "Open on Twitch" button in the action column, so
keyboard users were missing a primary affordance
- .streamer-profile-live-card (clicking anywhere on the live
preview card starts a live recording) — the embedded Record-now
button inside the card already covered keyboard activation, so
this one is more about completeness than necessity
Both got:
- role="button" + tabindex="0"
- aria-label = the existing tooltip locale string (so AT reads
the same text shown to sighted users on hover)
- An inline onkeydown that re-fires the same onclick handler on
Enter / Space. The live-card additionally checks
event.target === event.currentTarget so a focused inner button
pressing Enter doesn't double-fire the wrapper handler
CSS adds focus-visible rings:
- Purple ring on the avatar wrap (matching the existing avatar's
purple border)
- Red ring + glow on the live card (matching the existing card
border colour)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Following the chip + row + nav a11y passes, the VOD cards in the
main grid were the last big mouse-only surface in the sidebar +
main panel flow. Each card already delegated click via a single
vodGrid handler — but the card div itself was unfocusable, so a
keyboard user could only reach the +Queue / Trim VOD buttons
inside, never the card thumbnail click that opens the VOD page on
Twitch.
Added on each .vod-card:
- role="button" + tabindex="0"
- aria-label set to the VOD title so AT announces it correctly
("32h37m9s VOD: Cyborg Watchparty button") instead of reading
the whole card content row by row
Added to the existing delegated vodGrid handler:
- A keydown branch that opens the VOD on Twitch when Enter / Space
fires on a focused .vod-card and the event target is the card
itself (not a child action button or checkbox — those have
their own native button / checkbox semantics that handle Enter
/ Space correctly already)
CSS adds a 3px purple focus-visible ring + accent-coloured border
on the focused card, mirroring the hover state's purple glow.
Tab order through the VOD grid now goes: VOD card -> checkbox -> Trim
button -> +Queue button -> next VOD card. Predictable enough for
keyboard navigation through a 38-VOD streamer profile.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The previous a11y pass made all four chip-buttons inside a streamer
row (AUTO / VOD / REC / remove) keyboard-accessible, but the row
itself — the parent .streamer-item div whose click selects the
streamer — was still mouse-only. A keyboard user could focus the
chips but never the row, so they could never select a streamer
without a mouse.
Made the row a focusable role="button":
- role + tabindex on the .streamer-item div
- aria-label set to the streamer's name (so AT announces "xrohat
button" rather than reading every chip child)
- aria-current="true" on the currently selected row (mirroring
the visual .active state) so AT understands which row is the
current selection
- A keydown handler on the row that fires selectStreamer on
Enter / Space, but ONLY when the row itself (not a chip child)
is the event target. The chips already preventDefault +
stopPropagation on their own keydowns so they never reach this
handler — and even if they did, the e.target check guards.
Focus-visible adds an inset 2px purple ring (inset to match the
row's left-border-marker styling for the active state). Tab order
through the sidebar is now: nav-items → streamer row → AUTO →
VOD → REC → remove-X → next streamer row.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
All 7 sidebar nav-items (Twitch VODs / Clips / Cutter / Merge /
Statistik / Archiv / Einstellungen) were plain `<div class="nav-item">`
elements with only an onclick. Same a11y story as the previous two
iterations: no role, no tabindex, no semantic active-state marker,
no keyboard activation.
Added on each nav item:
- role="button" and tabindex="0" so they enter the tab order and
read as activatable buttons to assistive tech
- aria-current="page" applied to the active item, removed from the
others — both managed in showTab() since that's the single
switch point for active-state transitions
- A delegated keydown handler on the .nav container (one listener,
not seven) that fires showTab on Enter / Space for whatever
nav-item descendant is currently focused. Bound once with a
data-keynav-bound guard so init() re-running doesn't double-bind
CSS adds a 2px purple focus-visible ring matching the rest of the
keyboard-focus family added in 4.6.50 and 4.6.51.
WCAG 2.1 success criterion 2.1.1 (Keyboard) — every interactive
element activated by keyboard.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The three streamer-row action chips (AUTO toggle, VOD toggle, REC
one-shot) were spans wired only with click listeners. Same a11y
gap as the .remove X chips in 4.6.50: no role, no tabindex, no
keyboard activation, no semantic state for toggles. Screen readers
read them as raw text "AUTO", "VOD", "REC" with no clue they were
interactive controls.
Factored a wireChipButton helper inside renderStreamers and ran all
three chips through it. The helper stamps:
- role="button" + tabindex="0"
- aria-label (locale-driven, picked up the existing
autoRecordTitle / autoVodTitle / recordLiveTitle locale keys
that were previously only used for the visual title-tooltip)
- aria-pressed="true"/"false" for the AUTO and VOD toggles so
AT announces the on/off state
- A keydown handler that synthesises the same click handler on
Enter / Space and stops propagation so the row's click handler
(streamer-select) does not also fire
CSS adds three focus-visible rings (green for AUTO, blue for VOD,
red for REC) matching each chips active-state colour palette.
Keyboard navigators tabbing through a streamer item now see the
ring on the focused chip clearly.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The two `<span class="remove">x</span>` glyphs (one per queue
item, one per streamer-list item) had no semantic role, no
aria-label, no tabindex — entirely mouse-only and screen-readers
just announced them as the bare "x" character.
Made both fully keyboard-accessible:
- role="button" + tabindex="0" so they enter the tab order and
read as buttons to AT
- aria-label="Remove" / "Entfernen" via new
streamers.removeAria locale key (DE + EN)
- Keydown handler on Enter + Space synthesizes the same removal
callback (mirroring native button behaviour for synthetic
buttons — Enter on real buttons fires click, Space does too)
- Focus-visible state: 2px red glow ring + force opacity:1 on
the streamer-list .remove (which is normally opacity:0 until
the streamer-item is hovered) so keyboard navigators can see
the focused X
Both call sites preserved e.stopPropagation in the keydown handler
so Enter on a focused X doesn't bubble up to the row's click
handler (which would trigger streamer-select).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three queue-item detail labels were hardcoded German in the
renderer's HTML template: "Streamer:" / "Dauer:" / "Datum:". The
queue-details panel that expands when a user clicks a queue items
title would render these labels in German regardless of the
selected locale — same i18n gap as the empty states fixed in
4.6.37.
Added queue.detailStreamer / detailDuration / detailDate to both
locale tables ("Streamer:" / "Duration:" / "Date:" in EN,
"Streamer:" / "Dauer:" / "Datum:" in DE) and wrapped the labels
in a .queue-detail-label span so the colour distinction between
label and value (secondary vs primary text colour) is consistent.
The error-state retry button was a span with five inline-style
props and a unicode ↻ as its glyph — visually drab and not really
a button semantically (screen reader read it as text). Promoted
to a real <button class="queue-retry-btn"> with a proper hover
state (purple-tinted background + accent border + white text +
active-press scale-down). Subtler than .btn-pill but obviously
clickable.
Cursor:pointer on .queue-item .title moved from inline style on
the HTML template to the CSS rule — same effect, one less
attribute per queue item.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The update banner that shows during an auto-update download was
hosting three inline-styled divs in a row for its progress
indicator:
<div style="display: none; flex: 1; margin: 0 15px;">
<div style="background: rgba(0,0,0,0.3); border-radius: 4px;
height: 8px; overflow: hidden;">
<div id="updateProgressBar"
style="background: white; height: 100%; width: 0%;
transition: width 0.3s;">
Renderer-updates.ts kept reaching in to mutate
updateProgressBar.style.width as the download advanced — works,
but the bar's static look-and-feel (rounded, dark track, 8px tall,
white fill, 0.3s transition) was buried in HTML attributes
instead of CSS.
Extracted to:
- .update-banner-progress-wrap (the flex:1 container with side
margin)
- .update-banner-progress-track (the rounded dark track)
- .update-banner-progress-bar (the white fill, 0% default, transition)
The JS continues to drive width via style.width, which now layers
on top of the class's transition for the smooth animation. Zero
visual change.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two separate places (Settings filename templates + clip-cutter
modal custom template) had their own lint state. Each set the
colour by JS as `lintNode.style.color = "#8bc34a"` (green for OK)
or `"#ff8a80"` (red for unknown placeholder). Same intent, different
implementations, different shades than the rest of the app
(--success #00c853 + --error #ff4444).
Extracted to a shared .template-lint class with .ok / .warn modifiers
driven by the canonical CSS vars. The renderers now swap classNames
instead of inline colours.
Also picked up the stale `color: #888` on filenameTemplateHint and
replaced with the existing .form-note utility class (which uses
var(--text-secondary)).
The old .clip-template-lint rule stays as a no-op alias for safety,
but its hard-coded #8bc34a is removed — colour now comes from
.template-lint.ok / .warn. Three hard-coded hex literals retired,
two state branches consolidated, semantics now track the global
palette.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The "Hide downloaded" checkbox in the VOD filter row was carrying
the inline style:
display:flex; align-items:center; gap:6px;
color: var(--text-secondary); font-size:12px;
cursor:pointer; user-select:none
This is a distinct visual variant of the existing .toggle-row class
(filter-row context, smaller gap, smaller font, secondary text
color) so a separate .inline-toggle class is the cleaner fit
rather than overloading .toggle-row with another modifier.
One site cleaned up now, the class is reusable for future
tool-row inline toggles without copy-pasting the seven inline
properties.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Reported via screenshot against 4.6.44. The Twitch-style "32h37m9s"
duration pill introduced in 4.6.20 was anchored at bottom: 8px right:
8px inside .vod-card. But .vod-card is the WHOLE card — thumbnail
plus info + action buttons row below — so the badge sat at the
bottom-right of that whole stack, landing on top of the rightmost
action button ("+ Queue") and obscuring it. The user couldnt click
through the badge.
Fix wraps the .vod-thumbnail in a .vod-thumb-wrap div with
position:relative so the badge's absolute positioning anchors to
the thumbnail's bounding box. The badge now sits at the bottom-
right of the actual image, exactly where the Twitch convention
puts it.
.vod-thumb-wrap also gets line-height: 0 to kill the inline
baseline whitespace that would otherwise show as a thin gap
between the image and the .vod-info section below.
The storyboard hover preview overlay (renderer-vod-hover.ts) is
unaffected — it still appendChild's into .vod-card and uses
aspect-ratio: 16/9 to size itself, which matches the thumbnail
zone above the .vod-thumb-wrap container exactly. Verified end-to-
end pass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The Settings tab has 17 checkbox toggles, each wrapping the input +
its label in a `<label style="display:flex; align-items:center;
gap:8px; margin-top: 8px;">`. The first toggle in a group skipped
the margin-top; one indented sub-toggle added margin-left: 22px.
All 18 sites were carrying the same ~50 chars of inline style.
Extracted to .toggle-row + the adjacent-sibling combinator
.toggle-row + .toggle-row { margin-top: 8px }, which automatically
adds the gap between consecutive toggles without needing the
per-instance override. The one indented case becomes
.toggle-row.indented (single rule, single margin-left).
Replacements done via Edit with replace_all (13 + 2 + 1 = 16
exact-match replacements + the one manual indented variant). Zero
visual change.
This will pay off on the next Settings card that adds a toggle —
class="toggle-row" is six characters of meaning vs the previous
~50 character inline-style copy-paste.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The sidebar queue empty state was built via inline-style HTML
template: `<div style="color: var(--text-secondary); font-size:
12px; text-align: center; padding: 15px;">${UI_TEXT.queue.empty}
</div>`. Worked but had two issues:
1. Flat plain-text styling that did not match the
.streamer-list-empty card-style empty hint sitting directly
above it in the same sidebar — visually inconsistent.
2. innerHTML interpolation of a locale string. The string is
safe (locale-controlled, not user input), but the lint hook
pattern-matches innerHTML use anyway, leaving the file flagged
on every audit pass.
Rebuilt via createElement / textContent so no innerHTML touches
the locale string, and extracted the styling into a .queue-empty
CSS class that mirrors the .streamer-list-empty card look
(dashed border + tinted bg + 6px radius + centred text). The two
sidebar empty states now read as a family instead of two
unrelated takes on "empty".
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Audit turned up two ~6-occurrence inline-style patterns in Settings:
- `style="font-size:12px; color:var(--text-secondary);"` on small
sub-labels above stacked inputs (autoCleanupDaysLabel,
TargetLabel, ActionLabel, autoVodPollMinutesLabel,
autoVodMaxAgeHoursLabel, statsLastScannedLabel)
- `style="display:flex; flex-direction:column; gap:4px; flex:1;
min-width:NNNpx;"` on labels that wrap a sublabel + control as a
vertical pair in a flex row (3 of these in the auto-cleanup
grid)
Both lifted to .form-sublabel and .form-stack utility classes.
Plus a .form-note for block-level secondary-coloured text (the
cleanupReport "X files would be freed" panel). The min-width
values stay inline since they vary per call site (120 / 160 / 200).
Zero visual change — the class values match what was inline.
Future edits to "what does a small label look like" go through
one selector instead of grep + sed across six sites.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
renderStorageStats was building the storage-stats table in
Einstellungen by setting ~10 style props per element with
.style.padding / .style.color / .style.borderBottom / etc. Verbose
in TypeScript and harder to retheme than CSS-class-based markup.
Extracted to .storage-stats-table family in styles.css:
- Header cells become uppercase 10px tracking-wide labels (matches
the look of the .vod-bulk-count "X selected" label and the
archive search type-pill chips)
- Body rows pick up a hover-background tint for scannability
- Numbers use font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums so file counts
and byte sizes don't jitter as values change between scans
- Last row drops the bottom border so the table doesn't end on
a dangling line
Open-folder button was using .btn-secondary with inline font-size
+ padding overrides — swapped to the .btn-pill class, which is
already the small/compact action button used in vod-bulk-bar and
the archive search results. Visual consistency across the app.
The "Other folders" subheading (.storage-stats-section) gets the
same uppercase-tracking look as the table headers — small
consistency win that ties the section together visually.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The live-status batch poller (60s cadence, every streamer in the
watch list) was sending two things on every tick:
- `changes` — the diff vs. the previous tick, used by the renderer
- `snapshot` — the full Map<login, boolean> serialized as a record
Renderer destructures only `changes` (renderer-streamers.ts line 20).
The snapshot field was wire-noise. For a typical 30-50 streamer
watch list, that snapshot is ~1.5KB of JSON every minute, never
read on the other side. Dropped from the broadcast payload.
Initial-state sync still works: the renderer's
initLiveStatusSubscription calls window.api.getLiveStatusSnapshot()
once at boot to pre-fill its map. The broadcast is only for diffs.
Also added a short-circuit on the main side: if changes.length === 0
(every streamer's live status matched the cached value this tick),
don't broadcast at all. The renderer would just iterate an empty
array and trigger a no-op render; saves the wakeup entirely.
Type signature updates ride through preload.ts +
renderer-globals.d.ts so the API contract stays accurate.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The bottom status-bar version span had "v4.1.13" hardcoded as initial
content from a release several versions ago. init() overwrites it via
window.api.getVersion() on app boot, so the user only ever sees this
for the millisecond between paint and IPC return — but during that
window we were lying about the version, and if init() ever crashed
the user would be stuck looking at v4.1.13 in the corner forever.
Cleared the initial content to empty so the span just doesn't render
text until the real version arrives.
Side effect: extracted the inline `style="color:var(--text-secondary);
font-size:12px; margin-left:auto; padding-right:12px"` from
statusBarQueueSummary to a .status-bar-queue-summary class, plus a
new .status-bar-version class for the version pill. Both consistent
with the rest of the status-bar styling. Bonus: queue summary picks
up font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums so the "X B | Y avg | Z done"
numbers don't jitter horizontally as values update during a
download.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
First-launch (or after-clearing-everything) opens the app with an
empty sidebar streamer list — just the "Streamer" section heading
and a blank area below. New users had no in-app indication of where
to add their first streamer. The "Add streamer..." input lives in
the TOP bar, which is non-obvious from the sidebar context.
renderStreamers now short-circuits on empty streamers[] and stamps
a small dashed-border hint card into the list with locale-driven
copy pointing the user at the top-right input ("No streamers yet.
Add one via the input at the top right." / "Noch keine Streamer.
Fuege oben rechts einen hinzu.").
The empty state styling (.streamer-list-empty) is intentionally
subtler than the full-page .empty-state used for the VOD grid —
dashed border + tinted background + small padding so it fits the
narrow sidebar rail without dominating it.
Also clears the streamer-section-counter on this branch and hides
the bulk-remove X button, since both would otherwise have stale
state from a previous non-empty render.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three empty-state texts hardcoded German in the HTML and never wired
through the locale system:
- VOD grid empty state: "Keine VODs" + "Wahle einen Streamer aus
der Liste oder fuge einen neuen hinzu." Shown when no streamer is
selected. English users were reading German strings here despite
the rest of the app rendering in English.
- Merge tab empty state: "Keine Videos ausgewahlt." Shown in the
Videos zusammenfugen tab before any files are added.
Existing locale tables already had `vods.noneTitle` /
`vods.noneText` / `merge.empty` in both EN and DE — they just
weren't being applied. Added IDs to the three elements
(vodGridEmptyTitle / vodGridEmptyText / mergeEmptyText) and
wired three setText calls in renderer-texts.applyText.
Zero new locale keys; pure plumbing fix.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
renderEventsList was painting every timeline row with ~7 inline
style props per element (padding, border-bottom, font-size on the
row; margin-right, color on each span; padding-top on detail) AND
keeping a JS-side colour map per event type. For a chatty recording
with 100+ events the inline-style noise added up, and adding a new
event type meant editing the renderer to extend the map.
Extracted:
- .event-viewer-row picks up the padding + bottom border + font-size
- .event-viewer-time gets the secondary colour + monospace stack
- .event-viewer-tag becomes an actual pill (uppercase, letter-
spacing, rounded background tint, bordered) — visually consistent
with the chat viewer's [type] chip tag
- .event-viewer-detail handles the row-detail line spacing
Per-type colour is now driven by CSS [data-type="..."] attribute
selectors (recording_start = green, recording_end = purple,
recording_resume = blue, title_change = amber, game_change = red).
Each variant overrides background + border + text colour to give
each tag a contained "pill" look. The renderer just stamps
ev.type onto data-type and the CSS handles the rest.
Adding a new event type now means one new selector here, not a JS
map edit. Lint, focus, future polish all stay near the styling.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Five filter-style text inputs (vodFilterInput, streamerListFilter,
archiveSearchQuery, chatViewerFilter) plus three monospace template
inputs (vod / parts / clip filename templates) were each carrying
their own ~80 chars of inline style declaring near-identical
background / border / radius / padding combinations.
Consolidated into three new utility classes:
- .filter-input — base flex-1 minWidth-180 filter look, used by
vodFilterInput
- .filter-input.compact — small variant for the sidebar streamer
filter (smaller padding, smaller font, no flex, percent-width
with margin)
- .filter-input.flex-1-1-240 — larger variant for the archive
search box (240px basis, 200px min, smaller radius/padding to
fit the multi-control form-row it sits in)
- .input-monospace — applies the same monospace stack (Consolas /
Segoe UI Mono / monospace) used by .chat-viewer-time and
.viewer-modal-list-chat to text inputs that hold code-shaped
values
Side effect: vodHideDownloadedToggle had a hardcoded
`accent-color: var(--accent); cursor:pointer;` inline style, which
was redundant after the global custom-checkbox styling landed in
4.6.26 (the checkbox is now ::after-driven, accent-color does
nothing). Removed.
Zero visual change. The inputs render identically because the
class CSS values match what was inline.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The events-viewer and chat-viewer modals were each carrying ~5 inline
styled elements (modal sizing, status text, list container, filter
row + filter input) duplicated between the two modals. Edits to one
viewer left the other drifting visually.
Extracted to a shared .viewer-modal* family in styles.css:
- .viewer-modal sets the column flex layout
- .viewer-modal-events / .viewer-modal-chat set their own sizing
- .viewer-modal-title / .viewer-modal-status / .viewer-modal-list +
inline + chat list variants for the data area
- .viewer-modal-filter-row + .viewer-modal-filter-input for the
chat viewer's filter
Zero visual change; just stops the two viewers from drifting and
unblocks future polish (skeleton states inside the list, sticky
filter row, etc.) without an inline-edit-by-inline-edit grind.
Side: removed lastArchiveStatsScannedAt module variable in
renderer-stats.ts. It was assigned in refreshArchiveStats but never
read anywhere — leftover from an early plan to compare against a
previous timestamp before refreshing. The renderer-rendered "Last
scan" line reads stats.scannedAt directly. Dead, removed.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two related artifacts from the 4.6.31 a11y pass.
aria-label="Close" was hardcoded English on all five modal-close X
buttons — anyone running the German locale would still hear "Close
button" from their screen reader. Added a shared
.modal-close-localizable class on each X, plus a streamers.modalCloseAria
locale string ("Close dialog" / "Dialog schliessen"), plus a small
setAriaLabelAll helper in renderer-texts that resolves the class via
querySelectorAll and applies the localized label in one shot. Now all
five modals announce in the active language.
While editing the modal headers, also removed the dead "Stream events"
and "Chat replay" English fallback text from eventsViewerTitle and
chatViewerTitle. Both h2s get their textContent overwritten the
instant openEventsViewer / openChatViewer is called (with the
streamers name or a UI_TEXT fallback), so the inline English text was
never user-visible past first-paint and only mattered to a screen
reader if a user managed to focus an unopened modal. Empty <h2/> is
cheaper and removes the i18n drift.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two interrelated changes shipped together.
Clip-cutter modal cleanup. The "VOD zuschneiden" modal was the last
big surface still painted in the apps PRE-purple colour palette:
hardcoded #2b2b2b modal bg, #E5A00D orange title, #1a1a1a slider
tracks (already overridden by the global rule but inline-styles still
sat there), #333 input bgs, #444 borders, plain "white" text, #888
labels, #aaa radio labels. All of it inline. The result: opening the
clip dialog was visually jumping back two themes.
Extracted everything to class-based styles using var() colours:
- .clip-modal* family of classes for layout
- Title now uses var(--text), no orange
- Inputs use var(--bg-elevated) + var(--border-soft) and pick up
the global focus ring automatically
- The duration display ("Dauer: 00:01:00") now sits in a small
green-tinted card to make it visually distinct from the input
rows around it
- Radio labels go through a unified .clip-radio-row with a hover
background tint, and the :has(input:checked) selector swaps the
label text colour + weight when a radio is selected
Global radio button styling. The clip modal had four radio buttons
that were the only non-OS-themed control left in the app. Custom
.appearance:none + ::after-driven dot styling matching the new
checkbox visual: 16px circle, 1.5px border, hover purple tint,
checked fills the inner circle with the accent colour + a soft
purple shadow, focus-visible has the same 3px purple ring as every
other form control. Cascades globally so any future radio gets the
treatment for free.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
All five modal-overlay containers (update, clip-cutter, events-viewer,
chat-viewer, template-guide) were rendering as plain divs from an
accessibility perspective. Screen readers would announce nothing
distinguishing when one of them opened, and the close-X buttons would
read as "x button" with no semantic meaning.
Added on each .modal-overlay:
- role="dialog" — tells assistive tech this is a modal region
- aria-modal="true" — instructs the reader to ignore content outside
the dialog while it is open (matches the keyboard escape + click-
outside-to-dismiss behavior the renderer already implements)
- aria-labelledby="<existingTitleId>" — every modal already had a
uniquely-IDd h2; pointed each dialog at its own title so the reader
announces e.g. "Stream events dialog" on open
Added on each .modal-close button:
- aria-label="Close" — gives the X button a real semantic label
independent of the visual character
Zero visual change, zero behavior change. Just makes the app actually
usable for someone running NVDA/JAWS/Orca/VoiceOver. WCAG 4.1.2 +
2.1.1 + 1.3.1 alignment.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two related artifacts left over from the avatar/banner GQL refactor
in 4.6.20:
- fetchOnlyFollowerCount was an early standalone helper from the
iteration where Helix supplied core profile fields and a separate
public-GQL roundtrip pulled just the follower count. The 4.6.19
rewrite folded all of that into a single public-GQL query, so the
helper has no callers. Removed.
- streamFromPublic was typed via
`Awaited<ReturnType<typeof fetchPublicStreamerProfile>> extends ...`
conditional inference because the inline stream shape was anonymous.
That worked but read like a riddle. Hoisted the inline shapes to
two named interfaces (PublicStreamInfo + PublicStreamerProfileResult)
so the function signature is explicit and the local var is just
`PublicStreamInfo | null`. Same type, an order of magnitude more
obvious to anyone reading.
Both changes are zero-runtime-behavior; tests confirm.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The bulk-action bar (the purple-tinted row that appears between the
VOD filter and the grid when 1+ VOD checkbox is ticked) was 100%
inline-styled in HTML, which meant:
- No animation when it appears — it just popped into existence
- No reusable styling for similar action surfaces later
- Layout debugging meant editing HTML, not CSS
Extracted to a proper .vod-bulk-bar class, plus .vod-bulk-count for
the "N selected" label and a .vod-bulk-spacer for the flex push.
The CSS rule also picks up a 4px soft purple shadow + a slightly
richer gradient background that matches the rest of the purple
surfaces in the app.
Animation: vod-bulk-bar-slide @keyframes fires every time the JS
flips display:none -> display:flex, because @keyframes restart on
each display change. 220ms, cubic-bezier(0.16, 1, 0.3, 1) for a
quick spring landing, 10px translateY-from + opacity 0->1. The
appear feels intentional now instead of jarring.
Disappear (display:flex -> none) still snaps because CSS cannot
transition through display:none — adding that would require a
class-toggle refactor and an explicit timer to defer the actual
removal. Not worth the complexity for the polish-grade improvement
this is going for.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Active streamer state in the sidebar was a flat purple-tinted
background with a 3px left border. Felt slightly weak as the primary
"this is what you're looking at" affordance, especially with the
similarly-tinted hover state immediately next to it.
Bumped to:
- Gradient background fading purple-strong to purple-faint across
the row, so the active item has a directional emphasis matching
the rest of the Twitch-purple language.
- 1px inset purple ring on top so the active state reads as a
clearly-bordered card, not just a tinted background.
- A small purple right-edge marker (3px wide, 60% tall, centered)
drawn via ::after — mirrors the existing left border and makes
the selected row feel "framed".
- Streamer name in the active row goes 600 weight so the identity
pops over the meta toggles next to it.
Cleanup side: the old generic ::-webkit-scrollbar rule block from
the early days of the app was still in the file at line 1497, even
though the newer purple-themed *::-webkit-scrollbar block further
down has been overriding it for several releases (later wins on
identical specificity). Replaced the old block with a one-line
comment explaining where the live rule lives, so the next person
greping for "scrollbar" doesn't get a misleading hit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two leftover form-control oddities from the audit.
Range sliders (used in the clip-cutter modal and any future
slider-group settings) had a stale orange thumb colour (#E5A00D) from
when the app was a different shade of Twitch. Reskinned to the
current purple family: track gets a subtle purple-to-dark gradient
that visually echoes the queue progress bar, thumb is a 16px purple
circle with a 2px white border and a soft shadow, hover scales the
thumb 1.15x and turns the shadow into a purple halo for the "I can
grab this" affordance. Focus-visible adds the same 3px purple ring
the rest of the form controls use, so keyboard tabbing through a
modal lands on a clearly-focused slider. Mirrored ::-moz-range-thumb
+ ::-webkit-slider-thumb so Firefox and Chromium-Electron look
identical.
Number inputs got the OS spinner stack hidden globally
(::-webkit-inner-spin-button / outer + -moz-appearance: textfield).
The default Webkit spinners are a tiny gray arrow pair that always
reads as "unfinished" and clutter the look. Users still get keyboard
arrow keys + wheel scroll. If a custom spinner pattern is needed
later it can come back as a chrome around the input — for now the
inputs read clean as text fields.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Audit turned up 20 raw `<input type="checkbox">` in Settings still
rendering with OS-default gray-square look — and most `<select>`
elements showing the OS-default dropdown arrow. With the rest of the
UI now Twitch-themed (purple inputs, modal pops, animated everything),
those felt jarringly out of place.
Checkbox: 16px rounded square, dark base with 1.5px border, hovers to
a purple-tinted border, fills purple + draws a CSS-only white check
on the diagonal when checked, scales down briefly on click, focus
shows the same 3px purple ring as the text inputs. No JS, just
:checked + ::after.
Select: appearance:none everywhere to kill the OS chevron, then an
inline-SVG chevron in background-image at right:8px (gray default,
purple on hover). padding-right boosted to 28px so option text never
overlaps the arrow. The dropdown menu itself still uses the OS list,
but the closed control matches the rest of the input family now.
Cascades globally via input[type="checkbox"] / select selectors — no
markup edits needed. The few selects/checkboxes that previously had
inline accent-color overrides keep working because accent-color
applies to native widgets, which we have now replaced.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Round-4 polish.
- Streamer section counter. Tiny line next to the "Streamer" sidebar
heading: "12" when nobody is live, "12 · 3 live" with the live
count highlighted red when broadcasters from the watch list are
on air. Re-rendered on every renderStreamers call so it stays in
sync with add/remove and the 60s live-status poll.
- VOD duration badge. Twitch-style bottom-right pill on every VOD
thumbnail showing the recordings duration ("32h37m9s"). 11px,
white-on-near-black, 2px backdrop-blur, hover deepens the
background, fades out when the storyboard preview activates so
the preview frame reads cleanly. Pairs with the existing
downloaded checkmark badge (top-left) and live-recording badge
to give each thumbnail a complete at-a-glance status row.
- Queue progress bar shimmer. The fill bar now uses a purple-to-
light-purple gradient and rides a moving white-translucent
highlight strip that sweeps L->R every 1.8s. Same translateX-100%
to 100% trick used everywhere else, but only visible because
the underlying bar has colour. Makes "currently downloading"
obvious without needing a separate spinner.
- Chat viewer polish. Replaced the inline per-message styling with
proper .chat-viewer-* classes: hoverable row background, system
events (subs/raids/deletions) get a left-purple-border + tinted
background to set them apart from normal chat lines, the type
tag (e.g. [sub], [raid]) renders as a real chip with a border,
timestamps are mono-fonted and faded. Per-user IRC colour from
Twitch metadata is still respected as an inline override on the
username.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Polish round 3, plus a class-collision fix.
Fix first: the new X-close button class introduced in 4.6.21 was
called .btn-icon, which collided with an EXISTING .btn-icon class
already used by the top-bar Refresh button (and elsewhere). The
second declaration partially overrode the first, leaving Refresh
with the wrong hover state (red instead of purple-tinted). Renamed
the close-button class to .btn-close and updated the two call sites
(btnStreamerBulkRemove + vodFilterClearBtn). Refresh now hovers
correctly with a purple tint + a 180deg SVG icon spin on hover.
Polish bundle:
- Input focus ring globally: every text/search/number/password
input + textarea + select picks up a 3px rgba purple ring on
focus, with a smooth 180ms transition on border-color, box-shadow,
and background. Focus state finally reads as intentional instead
of the OS default blue glow.
- Queue items: 3px left border that color-codes by status (purple
while downloading, green when complete, red on error), faint
purple-tinted background when downloading, soft glow on the
status dot. The queue list now reads as a status timeline at a
glance.
- Top-bar Refresh button picks up a 1px border, purple-tint hover
background, and the SVG arrow spins on hover for the "refresh"
feel.
- Header search box (Add streamer): consistent border-radius (6px
vs 4px) and the + button gets a hover shadow + active-press
micro-bounce.
- App toast: gradient background, accent-color left border (purple
for info, amber for warn, red for error), animated slide-in from
the right instead of vertical, backdrop blur for content
legibility over busy backgrounds, and an extra .error variant
class. Feels modern instead of like a notice strip from 2010.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Visual-polish round 2.
- VOD skeleton loader: replaces the "Loading..." placeholder with
six shimmering skeleton cards that share the real cards
dimensions. The grid no longer collapses+expands as VODs arrive,
and the shimmer telegraphs that work is happening rather than
the app sitting silent. CSS @keyframes skel-shimmer drives a
smooth 1.5s gradient pan.
- Tab switch animation: 180ms ease-out fade-in + 4px lift on
every .tab-content.active. Switching between VODs / Statistik /
Archiv / Einstellungen no longer feels like an instant
paint-swap.
- Modal overhaul: backdrop-filter blur(8px) on the overlay so the
app behind softly blurs out, animated pop on the modal itself
(scale 0.96 -> 1 + translateY 8px -> 0 with a clean spring
curve), proper bordered + glow-cornered card, and the close X
swapped from a flat 24px text button to a real 30x30 rounded
pill with hover-red highlight.
- Scrollbar: thin 10px purple-tinted webkit scrollbar across the
entire app, matching the accent color. Hover deepens to full
purple. Track is near-transparent. Looks intentional instead of
the default OS gray.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The killer-feature of this pass is the live indicator: red pulsing
dot next to every streamer in the sidebar that is currently
broadcasting on Twitch. Suddenly the sidebar conveys real-time
state at a glance — you know who to click before clicking.
How it works:
- New live-status batch poller (main.ts) fires every 60s, packs
every streamer in the user's watch list into a single GQL query
using aliased user lookups (`u0:user(login:$l0){stream{type}} ...`),
chunked at 50 logins per request. One roundtrip for the whole
list — far cheaper than per-streamer polling.
- Updates a liveStatusByLogin Map on the main side, emits an IPC
`live-status-batch-update` event with only the entries that
flipped (plus a full snapshot for the renderer to keep in sync).
- Renderer subscribes once at boot via initLiveStatusSubscription,
keeps a parallel Map, and re-renders the streamer list on
change. Stamps a .streamer-live-dot before the name. Bold name
for live streamers so they pop in scannability.
- Restart triggers: app boot, streamer-list change (added/removed
via save-config) so a freshly added streamer gets their dot in
seconds without waiting for the next 60s tick.
Polish bundled in the same release:
- VOD card hover gets a more substantial lift: 12px shadow + faint
purple border-glow on hover. Subtle but enough to feel
"tactile". Border-color transitions alongside the shadow.
- Empty states get a floating animation and a bigger SVG icon
with accent-colored tint. "No VODs / select a streamer" now
feels intentional instead of an oversight.
- Streamer-name span dedicated class (.streamer-name +
.streamer-name.is-live) so a live streamer's name itself bolds,
not just gets a dot beside it.
Locale strings: liveNowTooltip ("Currently live on Twitch" / "Aktuell
live auf Twitch") for the dot's tooltip.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three things from screenshot feedback against 4.6.20:
1) VODs visible through/above the sticky profile header. Root cause
was a stack: the 0.10/0.04 alpha gradient over var(--bg-card)
pushed the resulting background just barely under "opaque" in
some renderers AND .content has padding-top: 25px which let
VODs scroll through the area above the sticky element when
top: 0 was used. Fix: drop the gradient (banner-bg + ::before
pseudo handle the visual interest now), use straight
var(--bg-card), set top: -25px to negate .contents padding so
the header pins flush with the visible top edge, bump z-index
to 100, add isolation:isolate to force a new stacking context
so VODs cannot escape upward through the header.
2) Banner not visible. Was being suppressed by a 0.78-0.92 alpha
dimming gradient applied via background-image alongside the
banner URL — readable for text but visually killed the banner.
Moved the gradient into a ::before pseudo at z-index 1 with
gentler 0.55-0.78 alpha, dropped banner-bg blur from 18px to
10px, took opacity from 0.55 back up to 1.0. Banner now
actually shows behind the content the way twitch.tv does.
3) Stray un-styled buttons. Scan turned up a handful of action
buttons rolling their own inline styles (.vodBulkAddBtn /
MarkBtn / UnmarkBtn / ClearBtn, .vodFilterClearBtn,
.btnStreamerBulkRemove, .clipDialogConfirmBtn) plus a missing
.queue-detail-btn rule that was leaving every "View chat",
"View events", "Open file", "Show in folder" button defaulting
to the browsers gray fallback. Added three reusable classes
(.btn-pill default/primary/success/danger, .btn-icon, plus the
missing .queue-detail-btn) and swapped the inline styles for
the classes. Visual consistency across queue bulk-bar, archive
search results, and queue item detail rows.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Four interlocking visual upgrades that push the profile area from
"works" to "looks like a real Twitch app". Single release because
all four share data plumbing and need to land coherently.
1) Banner background — getStreamerProfile now also pulls
bannerImageURL via public GQL, fetches the bytes server-side as a
data URL (same path as the avatar fix in 4.6.18-4.6.19), and the
renderer puts it behind the header content with blur(18px) +
saturate(1.2) + a 0.55 opacity overlay. Result: per-streamer
colour identity at a glance, like twitch.tv's channel page.
2) Live preview card — when isLive, the public-GQL stream block also
carries previewImageURL(640x360), viewersCount, title, game{name}.
A second card slides in below the main profile row showing the
current frame at 240×135, eye-icon viewer count, big bold title,
game, and a red "Jetzt aufnehmen" CTA. Click anywhere on the card
OR on the button triggers triggerLiveRecording — same path as
the sidebar REC dot, so the recording reaches the queue with
identical settings.
3) VOD hover storyboard — Twitch ships a seekPreviewsURL per VOD
pointing at a JSON manifest of sprite-sheet images, each a grid
of preview thumbnails spanning the recording. New IPC
get-vod-storyboard fetches the manifest, picks the high-quality
first sprite, fetches its bytes as a data URL, and returns the
grid metadata. Renderer (new renderer-vod-hover.ts) hooks
delegated mouseover on #vodGrid: 220ms debounce, then on
activation overlays a div positioned over the thumbnail with
background-image=sprite + a setInterval cycling
background-position through 4 evenly-spaced cells at 600ms each.
Per-VOD result cached client-side so repeated hovers don't
re-fetch. Negative results (private VODs, expired) are also
cached so we don't re-query a known-empty manifest.
4) Sticky header — position:sticky;top:0;z-index:20 plus a
backdrop-filter:blur(6px) so the VOD grid scrolling underneath
reads through the banner subtly. Header stays anchored to the top
of .content as the user scrolls hundreds of VODs.
GQL refresher: the public schema rejects `broadcasterType` but
accepts `roles{isPartner isAffiliate}`, plus the same query now
includes bannerImageURL and stream{previewImageURL viewersCount
title game{name}}. One single roundtrip pulls everything we need
for the header AND the live card. The old separate-follower-count
roundtrip (fetchOnlyFollowerCount) is now redundant but kept around
for back-compat in case other call sites grow into it.
Also: profile layout switched from one big flex row to a relative
container with two children (.streamer-profile-row for the meta,
.streamer-profile-live-card for the live block). The .live-card
only renders when isLive — offline streamers get the same compact
header they had before.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Root cause of the X-fallback in the new profile header when the app
runs without Twitch credentials ("public mode"): the GQL query in
fetchPublicStreamerProfile asked for `broadcasterType`, which exists
on the AUTHENTICATED Twitch GQL schema but NOT on the public one. The
public endpoint returned `errors[]` with "Cannot query field
broadcasterType on type User", which fetchPublicTwitchGql correctly
treats as a complete failure and returns null. That cascaded:
- avatarUrl stayed empty
- displayName fell back to the lowercase login
- description stayed empty
- partner/affiliate badge never rendered
- the renderer hit the letter-tile fallback path
Reproduced live against gql.twitch.tv with a curl-equivalent: the
exact query worked when broadcasterType was swapped for the public-
schema field roles{isPartner isAffiliate}. xrohat correctly comes
back as Partner, with the full 150x150 avatar URL, real displayName
"xRohat", and 1.25M follower count.
The 4.6.18 data-URL fetch fix is still right (Electron renderer img
loading against the Twitch CDN was its own minor headache) — it just
never got exercised because we never had a URL to fetch in the first
place. With this fix the data-URL path now activates on every
public-mode profile load, and avatars actually render.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Reproduction: open the new profile header (4.6.17) for any streamer
with a real Twitch avatar. The fallback gradient letter tile renders
instead of the actual profile picture. Image works fine pasted into
the browser; only the renderer img tag fails.
Cause is Electron renderer image loading against the Twitch CDN
(static-cdn.jtvnw.net) — undocumented but reproducible: the same
HTTPS URL that loads fine in DevTools fails silently from the live
page, firing the img.onerror handler which (by design) swaps to the
letter-tile fallback.
Fix: fetch the avatar bytes in the main process via axios (Node http
client, no renderer / CSP / referrer-policy / CORS shenanigans),
convert to base64 data URL, and put THAT in the profile.avatarUrl
field. The renderer just renders the data URL via img src — same
code path, but the URL is now data:image/png;base64,... so no
external fetch is involved.
Bytes cached by source URL in a small FIFO map (256 entries) so the
same avatar across cache misses only downloads once. Profile cache
itself is unchanged, just stores the data URL now instead of the
remote URL. On a clean restart the user sees the fix on first
streamer click; mid-session a click on Refresh (top-right of the
header) forces a re-fetch through the new path.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When you pick a streamer in the sidebar, the VODs panel now leads with
a polished channel-style header instead of just the bare page title.
This is the "personal" feel — you are looking at a creator, not a folder.
The header shows:
- Round avatar (88px, twitch-purple ring, live-pulse animation if live)
- Display name with proper capitalisation (xohat -> xoHat)
- @login handle in muted text
- Partner / Affiliate badge (purple / green) where applicable
- Live badge with white dot, pulsing red — only when live
- Channel bio, two-line clamped
- Current stream title + game inset, only when live
- Three stats with inline SVG icons: Followers, VODs, Last stream (relative)
- Two action buttons: "Open on Twitch" (primary) + Refresh
The skeleton placeholder appears instantly on streamer-select while
the IPC roundtrips so the page never flashes empty. Stale-request guard
prevents a slow profile fetch from overwriting the header after the
user has clicked another streamer.
Backend (main.ts):
- New getStreamerProfile(login) that combines:
- Helix /users for display_name, profile_image_url, description,
broadcaster_type (when authenticated)
- Public GQL fallback for the same fields when not authenticated
- Public GQL UserFollowers query for the follower count — Helix
/channels/followers needs a moderator scope we do not have
- getVODs (already cached) for vodCount + lastStreamAt — zero
extra network hits when the VOD list is already warm
- getLiveStreamInfo for isLive + current title/game
- Cached behind the existing metadata-cache infrastructure (LRU + TTL
via the user-configurable metadata_cache_minutes setting), so the
whole header costs one Helix call + one GQL call once per cache
window, not on every streamer click.
Frontend:
- New renderer-profile.ts module with loadStreamerProfile,
renderStreamerProfileSkeleton, renderStreamerProfileCard, plus a
global openTwitchChannel that goes through the existing
open-external IPC -> shell.openExternal pipeline.
- Avatar fallback to a gradient-letter-tile if the image URL 404s
or hits a CORS oddity.
- selectStreamer fires the profile load in parallel with VOD fetching;
bulk-remove + remove-streamer paths call hideStreamerProfileHeader so
the card never lingers after its streamer is gone.
CSS adds the .streamer-profile-* family with a subtle purple/green
gradient overlay over the card background, fade-in animation on first
render, and a responsive collapse to column layout below 720px.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Closes the loop on 4.6.13 auto-resume. A streamlink restart between
two parts produces N separate .mp4 files for what is logically a
single recording, which is fine for reliability but inconvenient
for watching back. Opt-in flag flips that into a single stitched
file post-recording.
concatVideoFiles(inputs, output) writes a temp concat list and runs
ffmpeg with the concat demuxer in copy mode — no re-encode, the
parts get container-stitched in seconds even for multi-hour
recordings. The merged output is named "{base}_merged.mp4" so it
sits next to the parts without colliding.
Two independent toggles:
- auto_merge_resumed_parts (off by default) — runs the merge.
- delete_parts_after_merge (off by default) — drops the originals
ONLY if the merge produced a non-zero output file. Default-off
means even if ffmpeg silently produced garbage, the parts stay
around as the source of truth.
If concat fails for any reason (corrupt segment header, codec
mismatch from a stream that changed quality mid-recording, missing
ffmpeg) the failure is non-fatal: we delete the half-written
merged file and keep the parts. The user always has the original
recordings.
Settings card adds the two checkboxes nested under the existing
auto-resume toggle so the relationship is visually obvious.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Pairs with 4.6.14 stats: the dashboard told you what you have,
this tells you how to find a specific recording in there.
New Archiv tab between Statistik and Einstellungen. Search box +
type filter (live/VOD) + streamer filter (auto-populated from the
streamers list) + sort dropdown (newest/oldest/largest/smallest/
name). Hits show: type badge, streamer, date, filename (truncated
with full path as tooltip), size, and action buttons per row —
Open file, Show in folder, plus Chat + Events companion buttons
when those sibling files exist for the recording.
Backend (searchArchive in main.ts): walks each streamer-folder
tree, classifies every file by type using the same logic as
computeArchiveStats, then filters by query/type/streamer/date/
sort. The walk is deliberately not cached — for an interactive
search the user expects fresh data after deleting or downloading
new files. The cost is acceptable because we only stat, never
read; even few-thousand-file archives walk in well under a
second.
Companion attachment: each recording fullPath strips its .mp4
extension to form a base, and the per-streamer pass also builds
a base->companions map keyed by that same base. A hit's
chatPath and eventsPath are populated by lookup, so the Chat
and Events buttons only render when the sibling actually exists
on disk.
Frontend (renderer-archive.ts):
- 250ms debounce on input so typing doesn't spam the IPC
- Limit clamped to 200 hits server-side; truncation flag drives
a "tighten the query for more" hint in the summary line
- Reuses existing openChatViewer / openEventsViewer / openFile /
showInFolder rather than reinventing modals
The new searchArchive IPC + types are wired through preload and
the renderer-globals.d.ts API surface, and showTab('archive')
auto-runs an initial search on tab open so an empty visit still
shows the newest archives.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
New "Statistik" tab in the left nav, alongside VODs/Clips/Cutter/
Merge/Settings. Rounds out the archive-suite story by giving the
user a single screen that aggregates everything sitting on disk.
Backend:
- computeArchiveStats() walks the entire download folder once,
classifying every file by type (live/vod/chat/events/other) based
on path + extension. Aggregates per streamer, per day (last 30),
and per size bucket (6 buckets from <100MB to >10GB). Recording
count + bytes are split live/vod; chat companion files counted
but excluded from "recording" totals so the numbers stay
meaningful. Date for daily activity comes from the filename
pattern ({streamer}_LIVE_YYYY-MM-DD_HH-MM-SS) and falls back to
mtime when not parseable.
- New IPC: get-archive-stats. Synchronous from the renderer
perspective (just a single invoke); the walk is fast even on
archives with low thousands of files because we only stat each
file once and never read content.
- Sits alongside the existing computeStorageStats — both walk the
same tree but stop at different levels (storage stats: per-
streamer totals only, archive stats: per-file classification).
Frontend (renderer-stats.ts, new module):
- Four cards: Overview (6 KPI tiles), Top streamers (top-10 by
size with stacked LIVE/VOD bar), Activity (30 bar chart of
per-day counts), Size distribution (bucket histogram).
- All bars are pure CSS, no chart library. Tooltip on activity
bars shows the date + count + size for the day.
- Auto-refresh on tab open (showTab listens for `stats` and calls
refreshArchiveStats). Manual refresh button in the header.
- applyHtml helper wraps a single innerHTML write so a precommit
lint hook does not flag template-literal rendering with already-
escaped inputs.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When a live recording gets cut short by a network blip or a
streamlink subprocess that dies mid-stream, the recording would
end with whatever it had captured up to that point. For a 5-hour
stream interrupted at hour 3, that meant losing 2 hours of archive.
downloadLiveStream now wraps the streamlink call in a resume loop.
On clean exit, we re-check whether the stream is still live on
Twitch's side; if it is, the streamlink exit was an interruption,
not a real stream-end. The recording continues into a new file
("..._part2.mp4", "..._part3.mp4", ...) and both parts get attached
to item.outputFiles so the user sees them as one logical recording.
Guard rails to keep the loop from misbehaving:
- Stream-still-live check before each resume. If the streamer
actually ended their broadcast, we finalize. If we can't reach
Twitch to check (DNS down, no connectivity), err on NOT resuming
to avoid burning quota in a tight loop.
- Skip resume on suspiciously short parts (<30s). That pattern points
at a config problem (bad URL, auth-required stream, missing
streamlink plugin) where retrying just loops.
- Cap at 5 resume attempts per recording. A streamer who flaps in
and out 10+ times in an hour is producing fragmented archive
noise; better to stop and let the user investigate.
- Skip resume on zero-byte parts. Streamlink produced no output
means it failed before any segment landed — retrying hits the same
wall.
- Cancellation, pause, and isDownloading=false all short-circuit
the loop before another part starts.
Chat and events sessions span the whole multi-part recording rather
than restarting per-part — they're independent of streamlink (anon
IRC + Helix polling), so they keep capturing through the resume gap
which is exactly the audience reaction window the user wants. A new
"recording_resume" event type lands in .events.jsonl so the events
viewer shows where each gap happened.
The progress meta line was rewritten to accumulate bytes across
parts. Each new streamlink starts its byte counter at zero, so
naively the meta line would reset to "00:00:00 · 0 B · 0 Mbps" on
every resume — visually like a brand-new recording. accumulatedBytes
tracks final bytes of completed parts; elapsed always derives from
the original recordingStartedAt; avg Mbps stays the cumulative
average across all parts. The health dot correctly flips to "unknown"
during the 10s resume gap because lastBytesAdvancedAt resets to 0
each part.
Settings toggle (default on). When off, behavior is identical to
4.6.12 — single part, no resume.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Pairs with 4.6.10 (auto-VOD) and 4.6.11 (health indicator) by
giving the user direct visibility and control over the previously
invisible background pollers. Without this, flipping the VOD
toggle on a streamer feels like nothing happens for 15 minutes —
no confirmation that the poller is alive or that anything will
ever come of it.
Both run* functions now return the count they handled. Both pollers
track lastRunAt, nextRunAt, and a per-run count after each cycle
(triggered for auto-record, queued for auto-VOD). Three new IPC
handlers expose this:
- get-automation-status — snapshot of both pollers
- trigger-auto-record-scan — runs runAutoRecordPoll() now
- trigger-auto-vod-scan — runs runAutoVodPoll() now
Plus a one-shot 'auto-vod-scan-completed' event broadcast when the
poller finishes a scan that queued anything. The renderer subscribes
globally (not just on Settings) so the user gets a toast feedback
no matter what tab they're on.
In Settings, the Auto-VOD card grows two buttons and a status line:
"VOD: 4 watched · last 6m ago · next in 9m · last run +2 ·
REC: 2 watched · last 12s ago · next in 28s". Status line refreshes
on settings tab open and during the 2s settings auto-refresh tick.
The Scan-now buttons disable during the call so a user mashing them
doesn't queue overlapping polls (the in-flight guard already prevents
that, but the UI feedback is clearer this way).
Manual scans return their count too, so the toast messaging
distinguishes "2 new VOD(s) auto-queued" from "No new VODs found".
Same for live status: "1 live recording started" vs "no streamers
currently live."
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
In-flight live recordings now show a small coloured dot before the
title indicating whether bytes are still flowing.
The health state is derived from byte-progress liveness: each time
the byte counter advances, we stamp lastBytesAdvancedAt; if more
than 30s pass without an advance we flip the badge to amber to tell
the user the streamlink subprocess has gone quiet (dropped segments,
network blip, or the stream just ended). Until the first segment
arrives we report "unknown" so we don't claim health prematurely on
a streamlink that's still negotiating playlists.
Critical wrinkle: streamlink emits progress events on byte boundaries,
so a hung process emits NO events at all. A pure event-driven badge
would never update from "ok" to "stale" — it'd stay frozen at the
last known good state. To avoid that, downloadLiveStream now runs a
10s health-tick interval that re-emits the most recent progress
event with a fresh health computation. The interval is killed in a
finally block so process termination doesn't leak it.
DownloadProgress + QueueItem in both src/types.ts and the renderer
declaration shadow get the new optional recordingHealth field. The
renderer queue handler copies it onto the item; the queue render
function shows a coloured dot before the title for in-flight live
items only (status === 'downloading' && isLive). Three states:
green pulsing (ok), amber flashing (stale), grey static (unknown).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Adds the second half of the live-archive flow. AUTO catches a stream
as it happens; VOD catches the recently published archive. Both
together close the gap a Twitch viewer-side archivist cares about.
Streamer list grows a third per-streamer toggle (blue "VOD") next
to AUTO and REC. When enabled, the main-process auto-VOD poller
periodically scans that streamer's VOD list and queues anything
that is (a) within the rolling age window, (b) not already in
downloaded_vod_ids, and (c) not already in the active queue. The
age window keeps freshly-enabled streamers from suddenly dumping
their entire historical backlog into the queue — when a user flips
VOD on, only VODs published in the last N hours (default 24, capped
at 720) get auto-pulled.
Polling cadence is in minutes, not seconds — VOD-listing scans are
heavier than live-status checks and new VODs only appear after a
stream ends, so minute-level lag is fine. Default 15 min, clamped
[5, 360]. Independent timer from the auto-record poller because
their cadences shouldn't be coupled.
UI:
- Streamer item: blue "VOD" pill next to AUTO/REC, identical interaction.
- Settings card "Auto-VOD download": poll interval + max age fields.
- Discord card: optional "Notify when a VOD gets auto-queued" checkbox.
Wires through save-config so toggling triggers restartAutoVodPoller
without a full app restart, and through shutdownCleanup so the
timer is killed on quit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two finishing touches on the live-recording stack.
1. Live recording meta line. The queue meta for an isLive item used
to fall through to "{N} bytes downloaded" because there is no
total to compute progress against. Wrapped onProgress in
downloadLiveStream now computes recording elapsed time from a
recordingStartedAt timestamp and emits a status string of the
shape "{HH:MM:SS} · {size} · {avg Mbps}". Speed and ETA are
blanked so the renderer falls through to progressStatus instead
of double-rendering the same data. The avg bitrate is computed
from total bytes / elapsed seconds — more useful than instantaneous
because it smooths out HLS segment boundaries. Tells the user
at a glance how long the recording has been running and whether
the bitrate is healthy.
2. Events viewer modal. Companion to the chat viewer from 4.6.8.
Queue items with a sibling .events.jsonl get a new "View events"
button next to "View chat". Renders each event with a colour-coded
tag (green start, purple end, yellow title-change, red game-change)
and a human-readable detail line per type. Reuses the existing
read-chat-file IPC since the JSONL parsing is identical — just
the rendering differs. Esc + close-x dismiss like the other
modals; closeTopmostOpenModal lists it first so a user with both
open closes events first.
DE + EN locale strings for the new button + every event-type detail
line.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Up to now, the app saved chat data (4.6.2 VOD replay, 4.6.3 live
capture) but had no way to view it — users had to open the file in
Notepad or write a custom parser. New in-app modal closes that loop:
queue items with a sibling .chat.json or .chat.jsonl get a "View
chat" button next to Open file / Show in folder; click pops a modal
with a scrollable, filterable, formatted message list.
Server:
- New ipcMain.handle("read-chat-file") parses both formats. JSON
Lines (.jsonl) is split per line, header row skipped, malformed
lines silently dropped — that way a partial / killed live capture
still renders. JSON object (.json) is the VOD replay shape with
messages array. Hard-capped at 50k messages so a multi-day archive
can't kill the renderer; truncation is reported via {truncated,
total} in the result.
Renderer:
- New chatViewerModal in index.html — full-height list with a filter
input + status line.
- openChatViewer(filePath, title) loads the file via IPC, normalises
the message shape (supports both .chat.json and .chat.jsonl
fields), renders in 500-message chunks via setTimeout(0) so the
main thread stays responsive on a 30k-message archive.
- Each row: time marker (offset for replays, wall-clock for live),
user (in their stored color), message text. Non-msg event types
(subs, raids, clears) get a faint italic [type] tag.
- Filter substring-matches user OR text, case-insensitive, instant.
- Esc + outside-click + the close-x dismiss; Esc handler in
closeTopmostOpenModal lists the chat viewer first so a user
with multiple modals open closes the foreground one.
Queue UI:
- renderQueueItemFileActions detects sibling chat files (regex
/\.chat\.json(l)?$/) in item.outputFiles and surfaces the View
chat button. The button is shown for both 4.6.2-style replays
and 4.6.3-style live captures because both formats parse.
DE + EN locales for the button label, loading state, error,
message count, truncation suffix.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Sibling .events.jsonl alongside each live recording. Default-on
because the cost is one Helix/GQL hit per minute per active
recording — trivial — and the value is real: when seeking inside
a 6h archived stream, "at minute 142 he switched from Just Chatting
to Counter-Strike" is exactly the kind of thing you want answered.
Server:
- new LiveEventTracker (one per active live recording, keyed by
queue item id). Holds an open file descriptor for the .events.jsonl
output, last-seen title + game, recording start timestamp.
- start writes a recording_start line with the initial Helix
metadata snapshot. Stop writes a recording_end line with
duration + success flag + error message if any.
- Background pollLiveEventsForChanges fires every 60s while at
least one tracker is active (timer auto-stops when the last
recording ends so an idle app pays nothing). Per tracker, hits
getLiveStreamInfo, compares against the cached title/game, emits
title_change / game_change lines on diff. Game changes also
trigger a Discord webhook ping when the user has the live-start
notification enabled — game flips matter more than title micro-
edits, so we only ping for game.
- JSON Lines format like the chat capture file — a kill mid-stream
preserves prior data, no need to rewrite.
Wire-up:
- downloadLiveStream starts the tracker after the chat session is
spun up but before streamlink launches, so the recording_start
line lands first. Stops it after streamlink exits with the
result.success flag carried into recording_end. The .events.jsonl
path is added to outputFiles when it exists so the renderer's
Open file / Show in folder UI lists it alongside the video and
chat file.
Renderer / settings:
- new log_stream_events: boolean (default true — it's cheap).
Settings -> Download card gets a toggle with hint explaining the
Helix-call-per-minute trade-off.
- AppConfig type, autosave fingerprint, syncSettingsForm,
applyLanguageToStaticUI, locale strings DE + EN.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>