Files
resolutionflow/frontend
Michael Chihlas 9f0bfd44f9 feat(escalations): mount time-to-first-action stat-card on /escalations
Surfaces the new GET /analytics/flowpilot/escalations endpoint as a card
above the EscalationQueue list. Closes the loop from yesterday's metric
endpoint commit — seniors and owners see the wedge stat the moment they
open the queue, which is the daily-reps version of the GTM ROI story.

Pieces:
- EscalationMetrics TS interface mirroring the backend Pydantic model
  (incl. metric_definition disclaimer field)
- flowpilotAnalyticsApi.getEscalationMetrics(period) client method
- EscalationMetricCard component:
    * loading skeleton, error state, zero-data empty state
    * avg + median + n_with_action/n_claimed conversion rate
    * humanized seconds → "Ns" / "N.N min" formatting
    * inline disclaimer reminding callers this is in-product time-to-
      first-action only, NOT the savings claim — pair with manual
      baseline (per /codex review's two-metric correction)
- Wired into EscalationQueuePage above EscalationQueue

DS-aligned: card-flat, accent-dim usage held to interactive elements,
text-muted-foreground for secondary copy, font-heading on the headline
number, explicit transition properties (no `transition: all`). Respects
prefers-reduced-motion implicitly (only animation is the loading pulse,
which Tailwind's animate-pulse already gates).

tsc -b clean. No new tests in this commit — component is a thin
state-machine over an axios call; integration coverage comes from the
existing backend tests + the e2e Playwright work in the plan.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-27 16:00:34 -04:00
..

React + TypeScript + Vite

This template provides a minimal setup to get React working in Vite with HMR and some ESLint rules.

Currently, two official plugins are available:

React Compiler

The React Compiler is not enabled on this template because of its impact on dev & build performances. To add it, see this documentation.

Expanding the ESLint configuration

If you are developing a production application, we recommend updating the configuration to enable type-aware lint rules:

export default defineConfig([
  globalIgnores(['dist']),
  {
    files: ['**/*.{ts,tsx}'],
    extends: [
      // Other configs...

      // Remove tseslint.configs.recommended and replace with this
      tseslint.configs.recommendedTypeChecked,
      // Alternatively, use this for stricter rules
      tseslint.configs.strictTypeChecked,
      // Optionally, add this for stylistic rules
      tseslint.configs.stylisticTypeChecked,

      // Other configs...
    ],
    languageOptions: {
      parserOptions: {
        project: ['./tsconfig.node.json', './tsconfig.app.json'],
        tsconfigRootDir: import.meta.dirname,
      },
      // other options...
    },
  },
])

You can also install eslint-plugin-react-x and eslint-plugin-react-dom for React-specific lint rules:

// eslint.config.js
import reactX from 'eslint-plugin-react-x'
import reactDom from 'eslint-plugin-react-dom'

export default defineConfig([
  globalIgnores(['dist']),
  {
    files: ['**/*.{ts,tsx}'],
    extends: [
      // Other configs...
      // Enable lint rules for React
      reactX.configs['recommended-typescript'],
      // Enable lint rules for React DOM
      reactDom.configs.recommended,
    ],
    languageOptions: {
      parserOptions: {
        project: ['./tsconfig.node.json', './tsconfig.app.json'],
        tsconfigRootDir: import.meta.dirname,
      },
      // other options...
    },
  },
])