The CSS box-shadow property takes 2-4 properties that are `<length>`s,
those being:
- offset-x
- offset-y
- blur-radius
- spread-radius
Previously these were resolved directly to concrete Lengths at parse
time, but now they will be parsed as LengthStyleValues and/or
CalculatedStyleValues and be stored that way until styles are later
resolved.
Previously, using an identifier color like `currentColor` would fail to
parse, since we look at ident tokens (and reject unrecognised ones)
before trying to parse colors.
Instead of hard-coding a check for "calc", we now call out to
parse_dynamic_value() which allows use of other functions like min(),
max(), clamp(), etc.
Anywhere that `<number>` appears in the grammar, `calc()` that resolves
to a number is valid, including inside the `<ratio>` grammar.
Thankfully, a calculation that produces a number cannot rely on any
context information for the calculation, so we can resolve them
straight away and just pretend they were a `<number>` the whole
time. :^)
`foo.is(Token::Type::Delim) && foo.token().delim() == '!'` becomes
`foo.is_delim('!')`, which is a lot less verbose. I really should have
done this ages ago.
This fixes the issue that currently we use "auto" as initial value for
grid-template-column and grid-template-rows although spec says it
should be "none". This makes a lot of difference for these properties
because currently we represent "auto" as a list with one auto-sized
track which means initial value for grid-template-column defines one
"explicit" track while it should define none of them.
This change makes grid-auto-columns/rows be applied to the correct
tracks when initial values is used for grid-template-column/rows.
Wrap the parsing of numbers, integers, and dimensions in a transaction,
which we only commit if that parsed value was actually accepted by the
property.
This fixes `font: 0/0 a;` failing to parse.
This reintroduces bounds-checking for the CSS `<angle>`, `<frequency>`,
`<integer>`, `<length>`, `<number>`, `<percentage>`, `<resolution>`,
and `<time>` types.
I regressed this around 6b8f484114 when
changing how we parsed StyleValues.
This is an improvement from before though, since we now allow the bounds
of a dimension type to have units.
Added a test to make sure we don't regress this again. :^)
Having one StyleValue for `<number>` and `<integer>` is making user code
more complicated than it needs to be. We know based on the property
being parsed, whether it wants a `<number>` or an `<integer>`, so we
can use separate StyleValue types for these.
This partially implements CSS-Animations-1 (though there are references
to CSS-Animations-2).
Current limitations:
- Multi-selector keyframes are not supported.
- Most animation properties are ignored.
- Timing functions are not applied.
- Non-absolute values are not interpolated unless the target is also of
the same non-absolute type (e.g. 10% -> 25%, but not 10% -> 20px).
- The JavaScript interface is left as an exercise for the next poor soul
looking at this code.
With those said, this commit implements:
- Interpolation for most common types
- Proper keyframe resolution (including the synthetic from-keyframe
containing the initial state)
- Properly driven animations, and proper style invalidation
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
The comment mentions that zero is let through, but then immediately
errors out if it sees any number outside quirks mode.
This commit makes that check let zeros through.