This patch parses enough of GPOS tables to be able to support the
kerning information embedded in Inter.
Since that specific font only applies positioning offsets to the first
glyph in each pair, I was able to get away with not changing our API.
Once we start adding support for more sophisticated positioning, we'll
need to be able to communicate more than a simple "kerning offset" to
the clients of this code.
With Clang, the previous/next pointers in buckets of an
`OrderedHashTable` are not cleared when a bucket is being shifted up as
a result of a removed bucket. As a result, an unfortunate pointer mixup
could lead to an infinite loop in the `HashTable` iterator, which was
exposed in `HashMap::keys()`.
Co-authored-by: Luke Wilde <lukew@serenityos.org>
Similar to POSIX read, the basic read and write functions of AK::Stream
do not have a lower limit of how much data they read or write (apart
from "none at all").
Rename the functions to "read some [data]" and "write some [data]" (with
"data" being omitted, since everything here is reading and writing data)
to make them sufficiently distinct from the functions that ensure to
use the entire buffer (which should be the go-to function for most
usages).
No functional changes, just a lot of new FIXMEs.
We don't need to decode the entire code point to know its length. This
reduces the runtime of decoding a string containing 5 million instances
of U+10FFFF from over 4 seconds to 0.9 seconds.
Let's add FlyString::from_deprecated_fly_string() so we can use it
instead of FlyString::from_utf8(). This will make it easier to detect
potential unncessary allocations as we transfer to FlyString.
We currently fully casefold the left- and right-hand sides to compare
two strings with case-insensitivity. Now, we casefold one code point at
a time, storing the result in a view for comparison, until we exhaust
both strings.
Indented #cmakedefine01 is supported since CMake 3.10:
https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/release/3.10.html#commands
We're on 3.16, and the minimum required for Serenity itself is 3.25, so
this should be fine. And it makes CLion's auto-formatter much happier!
For example, the code point U+002F could be encoded as UTF-8 with the
bytes 0x80 0xAF. This trick has historically been used to bypass
security checks.
This is needed to have code for creating an in-memory sRGB profile using
the (floating-ppoint) numbers from the sRGB spec and having the
fixed-point values in the profile match what they are in other software
(such as GIMP).
It has the side effect of making the FixedPoint ctor no longer constexpr
(which seems fine; nothing was currently relying on that).
Some of FixedPoint's member functions don't round yet, which requires
tweaking a test.