This is a continuation of the previous commit.
Calling initialize() is the first thing that's done after allocating a
cell on the JS heap - and in the common case of allocating an object,
that's where properties are assigned and intrinsics occasionally
accessed.
Since those are supposed to live on the realm eventually, this is
another step into that direction.
No functional changes - we can still very easily get to the global
object via `Realm::global_object()`. This is in preparation of moving
the intrinsics to the realm and no longer having to pass a global
object when allocating any object.
In a few (now, and many more in subsequent commits) places we get a
realm using `GlobalObject::associated_realm()`, this is intended to be
temporary. For example, create() functions will later receive the same
treatment and are passed a realm instead of a global object.
This removes a bunch of silly wrapping and unwrapping of Crypto
SignedBigInteger values in JS BigInt objects, which isn't even intended
by the spec - it just wants us to take an integer value, not a BigInt
specifically. Nice opportunity to remove a couple of allocations. :^)
This is an editorial change in the Temporal spec.
See: https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/commit/26a4c4f
No behavioral change as we already did this correctly, but I changed
some implicit JS::Value creations to explicit ones.
Both at the same time because many of them call construct() in call()
and I'm not keen on adding a bunch of temporary plumbing to turn
exceptions into throw completions.
Also changes the return value of construct() to Object* instead of Value
as it always needs to return an object; allowing an arbitrary Value is a
massive foot gun.
The old versions were renamed to JS_DECLARE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION and
JS_DEFINE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION, and will be eventually removed once all
native functions were converted to the new format.
Almost everything in LibJS includes Cell.h, don't force all code to
include AK/TypeCasts.h + AK/String.h. Instead include them where they
are actually used and required.