This commit introduces a WEB_SET_PROTOTYPE_FOR_INTERFACE macro that
caches the interface name in a local static FlyString. This means that
we only pay for FlyString-from-literal lookup once per browser lifetime
instead of every time the interface is instantiated.
Document::navigable() can be unpleasantly slow, since we don't have a
direct link between documents and navigables at the moment. So let's not
call it twice when once is enough.
Patch up existing style properties instead of using the regular style
invalidation path, which requires rule matching for each element in the
invalidated subtree.
- !important properties: this change introduces a flag used to skip the
update of animated properties overridden by !important.
- inherited animated properties: for now, these are invalidated by
traversing animated element's subtree to propagate the update.
- StyleProperties has a separate array for animated properties that
allows the removal animated properties after animation has ended,
without requiring full style invalidation.
By following the spec more closely, we can actually make this function
a bit more efficient (by comparing the parent against the document
instead of looking for the first element child of the document).
Instead of creating a generic Layout::Box, make a BlockContainer. This
allows them to be laid out by BFC, which is better than nothing(?),
even if it's not going to be correct at all.
If a style element belongs to a shadow tree, its CSSStyleSheet is now
added to the corresponding ShadowRoot instead of the document.
Co-authored-by: Simon Wanner <simon+git@skyrising.xyz>
All of this error propogation came from a single call to
HashMap::try_ensure_capacity! As part of the ongoing effort to ignore
small allocation failures, lets just assert this works. This has the
nice side-effect of propogating out to a few other classes.
Every single client of this function was immediately calling paintable()
on the result anyway, so there was no need to return a layout node!
This automatically leverages the cached containing block pointer we
already have in Paintable, which melts away a bunch of unnecessary
traversal in hit testing and painting. :^)
We now cache potentially named elements on the Document when elements
are inserted and removed. This allows us to do lookup of what names are
supported much faster than if we had to iterate the tree every time.
This first cut doesn't implement the rules for 'exposed' object and
embed elements.
When an element with an ID is added to or removed from the DOM, or if
an ID is added, removed, or changed, then we must reset the form owner
of all form-associated elements who have a form attribute.
We do this in 2 steps, using the DOM document as the messenger to handle
these changes:
1. All form-associated elements with a form attribute are stored on the
document. If the form attribute is removed, the element is removed
from that list as well.
2. When a DOM element with an ID undergoes any of the aforementioned
changes, it notifies the document of the change. The document then
forwards that change to the stored form-associated elements.
By replacing the `page_did_request_scroll_to()` calls with a request
to perform scrolling in the corresponding navigable, we ensure that
the scrolling of iframes will scroll within them instead of triggering
scroll of top level document.
Recently, we moved the resolution of CSS properties that do not affect
layout to occur within LayoutState::commit(). This decision was a
mistake as it breaks invalidation. With this change, we now re-resolve
all properties that do not affect layout before each repaint.
We cannot port over Optional<FlyString> until the IDL generator supports
passing that through as an argument (as opposed to an Optional<String>).
Change to FlyString where possible, and resolve any fallout as a result.
Fixes following mistakes:
- "scrolling box" for a document is not `scrollable_overflow_rect()`
but size of viewport (initial containing block, like spec says).
- comparing edges of "scrolling box" with edges of target element
does not make any sense because "scrolling box" edges are relative
to page while result of `get_bounding_client_rect()` is relative
to viewport.
This commit un-deprecates DeprecatedString, and repurposes it as a byte
string.
As the null state has already been removed, there are no other
particularly hairy blockers in repurposing this type as a byte string
(what it _really_ is).
This commit is auto-generated:
$ xs=$(ack -l \bDeprecatedString\b\|deprecated_string AK Userland \
Meta Ports Ladybird Tests Kernel)
$ perl -pie 's/\bDeprecatedString\b/ByteString/g;
s/deprecated_string/byte_string/g' $xs
$ clang-format --style=file -i \
$(git diff --name-only | grep \.cpp\|\.h)
$ gn format $(git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni')
This fixes the issue that occurred when, after clicking an inline
paintable page would always scroll to the top. The problem was that
`scroll_an_element_into_view()` relies on `get_bounding_client_rect()`
to produce the correct scroll position and for inline paintables we
were always returning zero rect before this change.
No functional impact intended. This is just a more complicated way of
writing what we have now.
The goal of this commit is so that we are able to store the 'name' of a
pseudo element for use in serializing 'unknown -webkit-
pseudo-elements', see:
https://www.w3.org/TR/selectors-4/#compat
This is quite awkward, as in pretty much all cases just the selector
type enum is enough, but we will need to cache the name for serializing
these unknown selectors. I can't figure out any reason why we would need
this name anywhere else in the engine, so pretty much everywhere is
still just passing around this raw enum. But this change will allow us
to easily store the name inside of this new struct for when it is needed
for serialization, once those webkit unknown elements are supported by
our engine.
According to the CSS font matching algorithm specification, it is
supposed to be executed for each glyph instead of each text run, as is
currently done. This change partially implements this by having the
font matching algorithm produce a list of fonts against which each
glyph will be tested to find its suitable font.
Now, it becomes possible to have per-glyph fallback fonts: if the
needed glyph is not present in a font, we can check the subsequent
fonts in the list.