Until now we would simply apply stylesheets in the order they finished
loading. This patch adds a StyleSheetList object that hangs off of each
Document and contains all the style sheets in document order.
There's still a lot of work to do for a proper cascade, but at least
this makes us consistently wrong every time. :^)
This patch adds two script lists to Document:
- Scripts to execute when parsing has finished
- Scripts to execute as soon as possible
Since we don't actually load scripts asynchronously yet (we just do a
synchronous load when parsing the <script> element for simplicity),
these are already loaded by the time we get to "The end" of parsing.
Instead of creating extremely common FlyStrings like "id" and "class"
on demand every time they are needed, we now have AttributeNames.h,
which provides Web::HTML::AttributeNames::{id,class_}
This avoids a bunch of string allocations during selector matching.
And move canonicalized_path() to a static method on LexicalPath.
This is to make it clear that FileSystemPath/canonicalized_path() only
perform *lexical* canonicalization.
Rather than printing them to stderr directly the parser now keeps a
Vector<Error>, which allows the "owner" of the parser to consume them
individually after parsing.
The Error struct has a message, line number, column number and a
to_string() helper function to format this information into a meaningful
error message.
The Function() constructor will now include an error message when
throwing a SyntaxError.
Every Document now has an Origin, found via Document::origin().
It's based on the URL of the document.
This will be used to implement things like the same-origin policy.
We were allowing this dangerous kind of thing:
RefPtr<Base> base;
RefPtr<Derived> derived = base;
This patch changes the {Nonnull,}RefPtr constructors so this is no
longer possible.
To downcast one of these pointers, there is now static_ptr_cast<T>:
RefPtr<Derived> derived = static_ptr_cast<Derived>(base);
Fixing this exposed a ton of cowboy-downcasts in various places,
which we're now forced to fix. :^)
LibWeb now creates a WindowObject which inherits from GlobalObject.
Allocation of the global object is moved out of the Interpreter ctor
to allow for specialized construction.
The existing Window interfaces are moved to WindowObject with their
implementation code in the new Window class.
I made some mistakes in the selector parsing code. It's now able to
parse selectors composed of multiple complex selectors, instead of just
one complex selector.
This currently returns a JS::Array of elements matching a selector.
The more correct behavior would be to return a static NodeList, but as
we don't have NodeLists right now, that'll be a task for the future.
Native functions now only get the Interpreter& as an argument. They can
then extract |this| along with any indexed arguments it wants from it.
This forces functions that want |this| to actually deal with calling
interpreter.this_value().to_object(), and dealing with the possibility
of a non-object |this|.
This is still not great but let's keep massaging it forward.
This function allows you to throw away the entire layout tree if that's
something you want to do.
It's certainly not super cheap to reconstruct, but hey, who am I to
tell you what to do? :^)
We now support rAF, driven by GUI::DisplayLink callbacks. It's a bit
strange how we keep registering new callbacks over and over.
That's something we can definitely optimize.
This allows you to update animations/whatever without doing it more
often than the browser can display.
Instead of every NativeFunction callback having to ask the Interpreter
for the current "this" value and then converting it to an Object etc,
just pass "this" as an Object* directly.
This patch introduces the Wrapper and Wrappable classes.
Node now inherits from Wrappable, and can be wrapped in a GC-allocated
Bindings::NodeWrapper object. The only property we expose right now is
the very simple nodeName property.
When a Document's JS::Interpreter is first instantiated, we add a
"document" property with a DocumentWrapper object to the global object.
This is pretty cool! :^)
This patch begins integrating LibJS into LibWeb. Document holds the
JS::Interpreter for now, and it is created on demand when you first
call Document::interpreter().
We also add a simple "alert()" function to the global object.