"Component value" is the term used in the spec, and it doesn't conflict
with any other types, so let's use the shorter name. :^)
Also, this doesn't need to be friends with the Parser any more.
CSS Values and Units Module Level 5 defines attr as:
`attr(<q-name> <attr-type>?, <declaration-value>?)`
This implementation does not contain support for the type argument,
effectively supporting `attr(<q-name>, <declaration-value>?)`
The `text-shadow` property is almost identical to `box-shadow`:
> Values are interpreted as for box-shadow [CSS-BACKGROUNDS-3].
> (But note that the inset keyword are not allowed.)
So, let's use the same data structures and parsing code for both. :^)
This patch adds support for "crisp-edges", "high-quality" and "smooth"
for the CSS image-rendering property.
"crisp-edges" maps to nearest-neighbor scaling for <canvas> and <img>
elements, while "high-quality" and "smooth" both use bilinear blending.
Instead of awkwardly visiting and mutating lengths inside StyleValues,
we now simply create a new StyleValue instead.
This fixes an issue where inherited relative lengths could get
absolutized using a parent as reference, and then not having the correct
values when used in a child context.
For now, we only understand `none`, `normal`, `<image>` and `<string>`.
The various other functions and identifiers can be added later.
We can *almost* use a StyleValueList for this, except it's divided into
two parts - the content, and the optional "alt text". So, I've added a
new StyleValue for it.
Depending on the type of the calc() expression, the percentage_basis has
to be the same dimension type. Several places were already passing `
{}` for this, so let's make that an empty Variant instead of an
undefined Length. :^)
None of these require any outside metrics, which is nice! I believe the
Values-4 spec would have us simplify them down into a single value at
parse time, but that's a yak for another day.
The previous static functions are now methods of their respective
CalcFoo structs, but the logic has not changed, only that they work
with CalculationResults instead of converting everything to floats.
calc() sub-expressions can return a variety of different types, which
then can be combined using the basic arithmetic operators. This class
should make that easier to deal with, instead of having to handle all
the possible combinations at each call site. :^)
We take the Layout::Node as a pointer not a reference, since later we'll
need to call these functions when resolving to `<number>` or `<integer>`
which don't use those, and we don't want to force users to pass them in
unnecessarily.
See https://www.w3.org/TR/css-values-3/#calc-type-checking
If the sub-expressions' types are incompatible, we discard the calc() as
invalid.
Had to do some minor rearranging/renaming of the Calc structs to make
the `resolve_foo_type()` templates work too.
This lets us produce valid CSS in its to_string() method, instead of
always adding commas as before. :^)
Also, finally added a Formatter for StyleValues.
Many of these will need to change in the future in order to include
features we don't yet support, and touching StyleValue.h is a great way
to have to wait for all of LibWeb to rebuild. I'm hoping this saves me
time in the long run. :^)
The flexbox logic confuses me so regressions are possible, though our
test page looks the same as before so it should be fine.
Renamed FlexBasis::Length -> LengthPercentage too, for clarity.
Layout::Node still treats border radii as having a single value instead
of horizontal and vertical, but one less hack is nice, and helps with
conversion to LengthPercentage. :^)
This is in a slightly weird state, where Percentages are sometimes
Lengths and sometimes not, which I will be cleaning up in subsequent
commits, in an attempt not to change all of LibWeb in one go. :^)
This option is already enabled when building Lagom, so let's enable it
for the main build too. We will no longer be surprised by Lagom Clang
CI builds failing while everything compiles locally.
Furthermore, the stronger `-Wsuggest-override` warning is enabled in
this commit, which enforces the use of the `override` keyword in all
classes, not just those which already have some methods marked as
`override`. This works with both GCC and Clang.