In particular, we now blockify layout internal boxes (e.g table parts)
by turning them into `block flow`. This fixes a crash when viewing
our GitHub repo :^)
The Display class already supported all specific values, and now they
will be parsed too. The display property now has a special type
DisplayStyleValue.
Rather than passing an increasingly-unwieldy number of font parameters
individually to every function that resolves lengths, let's wrap them
up.
This is frustratingly close to being `Gfx::FontPixelMetrics`, but bitmap
fonts cause issues: We choose the closest font to what the CSS
requests, but that might have a wildly different size than what the
page expects, so we have to fudge the numbers.
No behaviour changes.
When deciding on a box type transformation (blockify/inlinify) for a
pseudo element, we have to use the originating element as a reference
rather than the parent.
(The originating element *is* the parent for its pseudo elements.)
This fixes multi-layer backgrounds with background positions. This
is a little awkard, so maybe it would be better to refactor the
parsing code to make these lists directly, but right now this is
the simplest fix.
This parses the new background-position-x/y longhands and properly
hooks up them up. This requires converting PositionStyleValue to
just contain two EdgeStyleValues so that it can be easily expanded
into the longhands.
Due to CSSImportRule::has_import_result() being backwards, we never
actually entered imported style sheets when traversing style rules or
media queries.
With this fixed, we no longer need the "collect style sheets" step in
StyleComputer, as normal for_each_effective_style_rule() will now
actually find all the rules. :^)
We don't support all parts of the font formats we assume as "supported"
in the CSS parser. For example, if an open type font has a CFF table, we
reject loading it. This meant that until now, when such an
unsupported-supported font url was first in the list of urls, we
couldn't load it at all, even when we would support a later url.
To resolve that, try loading all font urls one after each other, in case
we are not able to load the higher priority one.
This also resolves a FIXME related to spec compliant url prioritization.
Our CSS parser already filters and prioritizes font src urls in
compliance with the spec. However, we still had to resort to brittle
file extension matching, because some websites don't set the `format`
and if the first url in a src list happened to be one we don't support,
the font could not be loaded at all. This now is unnecessary because we
can try and discard the urls instead.
It is not sufficient to just invalidate layout when a new font has
loaded, because while it was loading we might have chosen a fallback
font-family value instead.
Invalidate style instead.
Before this patch, we would build full computed style for these pseudo
elements, for every DOM element, even if no ::before/::after selector
actually matched.
This was a colossal waste of time, and we can also just not do that.
Instead, just abort pseudo element style resolution early if no relevant
selectors matched. :^)
Percentage line-height values are relative to 1em (i.e the font-size
of the element). We have to resolve their computed values before
proceeding with inheritance.
Use FlyString::from_deprecated_fly_string() in these instances instead
of FlyString::from_utf8(). As we convert to new FlyString/String we want
to be aware of these potential unnecessary allocations.
Instead of putting every rule that matches a pseudo element in the
same bucket, let them go in the best ID/class/tag name bucket instead.
Then, add a flag to MatchingRule that says whether it contains a
pseudo element in the rightmost compound selector.
When deciding which selectors to run for an element, we can now simply
filter in/out pseudo element selectors as appropriate depending on what
we're trying to match.
This fixes an issue where pages using Font Awesome had 1700+ rules in the
pseudo-element rule cache. (This meant all those rules had to run
against every element twice or more while instantiating pseudo elements.)
We were already sorting the author style selectors into buckets.
Now we do it for the built-in UA style as well.
This means less work for the selector engine everywhere :^)
This relied on pulling the current realm from the main thread VM, which
requires an execution context to be on the VM's stack. This heavily
relied on the dummy execution context that is always on the stack, for
example, when parsing the UA style sheets where no JavaScript is
running.