When querying the HTML element (in strict mode) or the BODY element
(in quirks mode), we return the viewport dimensions.
Layout doesn't change the size of the viewport, so we can actually
reorder the steps here and avoid performing layout in some cases.
This removes a bunch of synchronous layouts on pages with reCAPTCHA.
Unlike ensure_web_prototype<T>(), the cached version doesn't require the
prototype type to be fully formed, so we can use it without including
the FooPrototype.h header. It's also a bit less verbose. :^)
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.
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
The goal here is to move the parser-internal classes into this namespace
so they can have more convenient names without causing collisions. The
Parser itself won't collide, and would be more convenient to just
remain `CSS::Parser`, but having a namespace and a class with the same
name makes C++ unhappy.
There were two main issues with these functions:
1. They were not updating layout before inspecting metrics.
2. They were not returning viewport metrics for the root and body
elements when appropriate.
If the font resource finishes loading we need to make sure the element
using it gets a chance to re-layout, even if the font-family property
didn't change.
When parsing the "style" attribute on elements, we'd previously ask the
CSS parser for a PropertyOwningCSSStyleDeclaration. Then we'd create a
new ElementCSSInlineStyleDeclaration and transfer the properties from
the first object to the second object.
This patch teaches the parser to make ElementCSSInlineStyleDeclaration
objects directly.
I came across some websites that change an elements CSS "opacity" in
their :hover selectors. That caused us to relayout on hover, which we'd
like to avoid.
With this patch, we now check if a property only affects the stacking
context tree, and if nothing layout-affecting has changed, we only
invalidate the stacking context tree, causing it to be rebuilt on next
paint or hit test.
This makes :hover { opacity: ... } rules much faster. :^)
We were hanging on to element inline style, even after the style
attribute was removed. This made inline style sticky and impossible to
remove. This patch fixes that. :^)
This was causing us to miss layout invalidations. With this fixed, we
can remove the invalidation from Element::recompute_style() along with
the associated FIXME.
Thanks to Idan for spotting this! :^)
Use the new CSS::property_affects_layout() helper to figure out if we
actually need to perform a full relayout after recomputing style.
There are three tiers of required invalidation after an element receives
new style: none, repaint only, or full relayout.
This avoids the need to rebuild the layout tree (and perform layout on
it) when trivial properties like "color" etc are changed.
Let's make it very clear that these are *computed* values, and not at
all the specified values. The specified values are currently discarded
by the CSS cascade algorithm.
The "paintable" state in Layout::Box was actually not safe to access
until after layout had been performed.
As a first step towards making this harder to mess up accidentally,
this patch moves painting information from Layout::Box to a new class:
Painting::Box. Every layout can have a corresponding paint box, and
it holds the final used metrics determined by layout.
The paint box is created and populated by FormattingState::commit().
I've also added DOM::Node::paint_box() as a convenient way to access
the paint box (if available) of a given DOM node.
Going forward, I believe this will allow us to better separate data
that belongs to layout vs painting, and also open up opportunities
for naturally invalidating caches in the paint box (since it's
reconstituted by every layout.)
Let's get this right before trying to make it fast. This patch removes
the code that tried to do less work when an element's style changes,
and instead simply invalidates the entire document.
Note that invalidations are still coalesced, and will not be
synchronized until update_style() and/or update_layout() is used.
When recomputing the style for an element that previously didn't have
a corresponding layout node, it may become necessary to create a layout
node for it.
However, we should not do this if it's within a subtree that can't have
layout children. Nor should we do it for elements who have an ancestor
with display:none.