We're still missing the lazy loading attribute handling, and once we hit
the navigation step, we fall back to totally ad-hoc behavior instead of
going all the way with a Fetch Request.
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
We will soon have two DOM nodes which contain nested browsing contexts:
HTMLIFrameElement and HTMLObjectElement. Only HTMLIFrameElement should
have its nested context created automatically upon insertion, so move
the invocation of that logic to HTMLIFrameElement.
Instead of making each Layout::Node compute style for itself, we now
compute it in TreeBuilder before even calling create_layout_node().
For non-element DOM nodes, we create the style and layout tree node
in TreeBuilder. This allows us to move create_layout_node() from
DOM::Node to DOM::Element.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
This particularly affects the insertion steps and the removed steps.
The insertion steps no longer take into the parent that the node
was inserted to, as per the spec. Due to this, I have renamed the
function from "inserted_into" to simply "inserted". None of the
users of the insertion steps was using it anyway.
The removed steps now take a pointer to the old parent instead of
a reference. This is because it is optional according to the spec
and old parent is null when running the removal steps for the
descendants of a node that just got removed.
This commit does not affect HTMLScriptElement as there is a bit
more to that, which is better suited for a separate commit.
Also adds in the adopted steps as they will be used later.
A FrameHostElement is an HTML element (<frame> or <iframe>) that may
have a content frame that participates in the frame tree.
This basically just moves code from <iframe> to a separate base class
so we can share it with <frame> once we implement <frame>.