When a property is a "legacy name alias", any time it is used in CSS or via the CSSOM its aliased name is used instead. (See https://drafts.csswg.org/css-cascade-5/#legacy-name-alias) This means we only care about the alias when parsing a string as a PropertyID - and we can just return the PropertyID it is an alias for. No need for a distinct PropertyID for it, and no need for LibWeb to care about it at all. Previously, we had a bunch of these properties, which misused our code for "logical aliases", some of which I've discovered were not even fully implemented. But with this change, all that code can go away, and making a legacy alias is just a case of putting it in the JSON. This also shrinks `StyleProperties` as it doesn't need to contain data for these aliases, and removes a whole load of `-webkit-*` spam from the style inspector.
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CSS Generated Files
We generate a significant amount of CSS-related code, taking in one or more .json files in
Userland/Libraries/LibWeb/CSS
and producing C++ code from them, located in
Build/<build-preset>/Lagom/Userland/Libraries/LibWeb/CSS/
.
It's likely that you'll need to work with these if you add or modify a CSS property or its values.
The generators are found in Meta/Lagom/Tools/CodeGenerators/LibWeb
.
They are run automatically as part of the build, and most of the time you can ignore them.
Properties.json
Each CSS property has an entry here, which describes what values it accepts, whether it's inherited, and similar data.
This generates PropertyID.h
and PropertyID.cpp
.
Most of this data is found in the information box for that property in the relevant CSS spec.
The file is organized as a single JSON object, with keys being property names, and the values being the data for that property. Each property will have some set of these fields on it:
(Note that required fields are not required on properties with legacy-alias-for
or logical-alias-for
set.)
Field | Required | Default | Description | Generated functions |
---|---|---|---|---|
affects-layout |
No | true |
Boolean. Whether changing this property will invalidate the element's layout. | bool property_affects_layout(PropertyID) |
affects-stacking-context |
No | false |
Boolean. Whether this property can cause a new stacking context for the element. | bool property_affects_stacking_context(PropertyID) |
animation-type |
Yes | String. How the property should be animated. Defined by the spec. See below. | AnimationType animation_type_from_longhand_property(PropertyID) |
|
inherited |
Yes | Boolean. Whether the property is inherited by its child elements. | bool is_inherited_property(PropertyID) |
|
initial |
Yes | String. The property's initial value if it is not specified. | NonnullRefPtr<CSSStyleValue> property_initial_value(JS::Realm&, PropertyID) |
|
legacy-alias-for |
No | Nothing | String. The name of a property this is an alias for. See below. | |
logical-alias-for |
No | Nothing | Array of strings. The name of a property this is an alias for. See below. | |
longhands |
No | [] |
Array of strings. If this is a shorthand, these are the property names that it expands out into. | Vector<PropertyID> longhands_for_shorthand(PropertyID) |
max-values |
No | 1 |
Integer. How many values can be parsed for this property. eg, margin can have up to 4 values. |
size_t property_maximum_value_count(PropertyID) |
percentages-resolve-to |
No | Nothing | String. What type percentages get resolved to. eg, for width percentages are resolved to length values. |
Optional<ValueType> property_resolves_percentages_relative_to(PropertyID) |
quirks |
No | [] |
Array of strings. Some properties have special behavior in "quirks mode", which are listed here. See below. | bool property_has_quirk(PropertyID, Quirk) |
valid-identifiers |
No | [] |
Array of strings. Which keywords the property accepts. Consider defining an enum instead and putting its name in the valid-types array. |
bool property_accepts_keyword(PropertyID, Keyword) |
valid-types |
No | [] |
Array of strings. Which value types the property accepts. See below. | bool property_accepts_type(PropertyID, ValueType) |
animation-type
The Web Animations spec defines the valid values here:
Spec term | JSON value |
---|---|
not animatable | none |
discrete | discrete |
by computed value | by-computed-value |
repeatable list | repeatable-list |
(See prose) | custom |
legacy-alias-for
and logical-alias-for
These are two separate concepts, with unfortunately similar names:
- Legacy name aliases are properties whose spec names have changed,
but the syntax has not, so setting the old one is defined as setting the new one directly.
For example,
font-stretch
was renamed tofont-width
, sofont-stretch
is now a legacy name alias forfont-width
. - Logical aliases are properties like
margin-block-start
, which may assign a value to one of several other properties (margin-top
,margin-bottom
,margin-left
, ormargin-right
) depending on the element they are applied to. List all the properties that they can alias.
quirks
The Quirks spec defines these.
Spec term | JSON value |
---|---|
The hashless hex color quirk | hashless-hex-color |
The unitless length quirk | unitless-length |
valid-types
The valid-types
array lists the names of CSS value types, as defined in the latest
CSS Values and Units spec, without the <>
around them.
For numeric types, we use the bracketed range notation,
for example width
can take any non-negative length, so it has "length [0,∞]"
in its valid-types
array.
Keywords.json
This is a single JSON array of strings, each of which is a CSS keyword, for example auto
, none
, medium
, or currentcolor
.
This generates Keyword.h
and Keyword.cpp
.
All keyword values used by any property or media-feature need to be defined here.
The generated code provides:
- A
Keyword
enum as used byCSSKeywordValue
Optional<Keyword> keyword_from_string(StringView)
to attempt to convert a string into a KeywordStringView string_from_keyword(Keyword)
to convert a Keyword back into a stringbool is_css_wide_keyword(StringView)
which returns whether the string is one of the special "CSS-wide keywords"
Enums.json
This is a single JSON object, with enum names as keys and the values being arrays of keyword names.
This generates Enums.h
and Enums.cpp
.
We often want to define an enum that's a set of a few keywords.
Enums.json
allows you to generate these enums automatically, along with functions to convert them to and from a Keyword,
or convert them to a string.
These enums also can be used in property definitions in Properties.json
by putting their name in the valid-types
array.
This helps reduce repetition, for example the border-*-style
properties all accept the same set of keywords, so they
are implemented as a line-style
enum.
The generated code provides these for each enum, using "foo" as an example:
- A
Foo
enum for its values Optional<Foo> keyword_to_foo(Keyword)
to convert aKeyword
to aFoo
Keyword to_keyword(Foo)
to convert theFoo
back to aKeyword
StringView to_string(Foo)
to convert theFoo
directly to a string
PseudoClasses.json
This is a single JSON object, with selector pseudo-class names as keys and the values being objects with fields for the pseudo-class.
This generates PseudoClass.h
and PseudoClass.cpp
.
Each entry has a single required property, argument
, which is a string containing the grammar for the pseudo-class's
function parameters - for identifier-style pseudo-classes it is left blank.
The grammar is taken directly from the spec.
The generated code provides:
- A
PseudoClass
enum listing every pseudo-class name Optional<PseudoClass> pseudo_class_from_string(StringView)
to parse a string as aPseudoClass
nameStringView pseudo_class_name(PseudoClass)
to convert aPseudoClass
back into a string- The
PseudoClassMetadata
struct which holds a representation of the data from the JSON file PseudoClassMetadata pseudo_class_metadata(PseudoClass)
to retrieve that data
MediaFeatures.json
This is a single JSON object, with media-feature names as keys and the values being objects with fields for the media-feature.
This generates MediaFeatureID.h
and MediaFeatureID.cpp
.
A <media-feature>
is a value that a media query can inspect.
They are listed in the @media
descriptor table in the latest Media Queries spec.
The definitions here are like a simplified version of the Properties.json
definitions.
Field | Description |
---|---|
type |
String. How the media-feature is evaluated, either discrete or range . |
values |
Array of strings. These are directly taken from the spec, with keywords as they are, and <> around type names. Types may be <boolean> , <integer> , <length> , <ratio> , or <resolution> . |
The generated code provides:
- A
MediaFeatureValueType
enum listing the possible value types - A
MediaFeatureID
enum, listing each media-feature Optional<MediaFeatureID> media_feature_id_from_string(StringView)
to convert a string to aMediaFeatureID
StringView string_from_media_feature_id(MediaFeatureID)
to convert aMediaFeatureID
back to a stringbool media_feature_type_is_range(MediaFeatureID)
returns whether the media feature is arange
type, as opposed to adiscrete
typebool media_feature_accepts_type(MediaFeatureID, MediaFeatureValueType)
returns whether the media feature will accept values of this typebool media_feature_accepts_keyword(MediaFeatureID, Keyword)
returns whether the media feature accepts this keyword
MathFunctions.json
This is a single JSON object, describing each CSS math function,
with the keys being the function name and the values being objects describing that function's properties.
This generates MathFunctions.h
and MathFunctions.cpp
.
Each entry currently has a single property, parameters
, which is an array of parameter definition objects.
Parameter definitions have the following properties:
Field | Description |
---|---|
name |
String. Name of the parameter, as given in the spec. |
type |
String. Accepted types for the parameter, as a single string, separated by | . |
required |
Boolean. Whether this parameter is required. |
The generated code provides:
- A
MathFunction
enum listing the math functions - The implementation of the CSS Parser's
parse_math_function()
method
TransformFunctions.json
This is a single JSON object, describing each CSS transform function,
with the keys being the function name and the values being objects describing that function's properties.
This generates TransformFunctions.h
and TransformFunctions.cpp
.
Each entry currently has a single property, parameters
, which is an array of parameter definition objects.
Parameter definitions have the following properties:
Field | Description |
---|---|
type |
String. Accepted type for the parameter. |
required |
Boolean. Whether this parameter is required. |
The generated code provides:
- A
TransformFunction
enum listing the transform functions Optional<TransformFunction> transform_function_from_string(StringView)
to parse a string as aTransformFunction
StringView to_string(TransformFunction)
to convert aTransformFunction
back to a stringTransformFunctionMetadata transform_function_metadata(TransformFunction)
to obtain metadata about the transform function, such as its parameter list