This reverts commit a73cd88f0c.
Emitting SaveLayer for each paintable made rasterization a lot slower
on every website because now Skia has to allocate enormous amounts of
temporary surfaces. Let's revert it for now and figure how to implement
it with less aggressive SaveLayer usage.
This makes them accessible outside of PropertyParsing.cpp (which will be
useful if/when descriptors can include them). I've also renamed them to
use the correct term: "arbitrary substitution function".
Having this hidden away in ImageStyleValue meant that
CSSStyleProperties (and anyone else who holds style values) had to know
exactly which types need visiting. This is a footgun waiting to happen,
so make this a virtual method on CSSStyleValue instead.
This is used for default UA style right now, and we'll expand its use in
the near future.
Note that this required teaching the CSS parser to handle url()
functions when there's no document URL to resolve them against. If we
don't handle that, namespace rules in UA style don't parse correctly.
The `transform` property supports transform functions that sometimes
need their `calc(percentage)` values to be converted to a number instead
of a length. Currently this only applies to the `scale*` family of
functions, which are marked as such in `TransformFunctions.json`.
We were not consistently applying the `NumberPercentage` type to these
functions though, and in addition, any `NumberPercentage` value would
not consider calculated values.
"Functional" as in "it's a function token" and not "it works", because
the behaviour for these is unimplemented. :^)
This is modeled after the pseudo-class parsing, but with some changes
based on things I don't like about that implementation. I've
implemented the `<pt-name-selector>` parameter used by view-transitions
for now, but nothing else.
There were several issues with the previous parsing code, like ignoring
trailing tokens, not handling whitespace, and not requiring the value
to be a `<family-name>`. So, fix all that.
Also correct the serialization code, which didn't call
`serialize_a_string()` previously.
Quite simply, ignore any declarations for properties we don't want,
while computing a pseudo-element's style.
I've imported a WPT test for this, which fails without this patch.
Pseudo-elements have specific rules about which CSS properties can be
applied to them. This is a first step to supporting that.
- If a property whitelist isn't present, all properties are allowed.
- Properties are named as in CSS.
- Names of property groups are prefixed with `#`, which makes this match
the spec more clearly. These groups are implemented directly in the
code generator for now.
- Any property name beginning with "FIXME:" is ignored, so we can mark
properties we don't implement yet.
We previously supported a few -webkit vendor-prefixed pseudo-elements.
This patch adds those back, along with -moz equivalents, by aliasing
them to standard ones. They behave identically, except for serializing
with their original name, just like for unrecognized -webkit
pseudo-elements.
It's likely to be a while before the forms spec settles and authors
start using the new pseudo-elements, so until then, we can still make
use of styles they've written for the non-standard ones.
The upcoming generated types will match those for pseudo-classes: A
PseudoElementSelector type, that then holds a PseudoElement enum
defining what it is. That enum will be at the top level in the Web::CSS
namespace.
In order to keep the diffs clearer, this commit renames and moves the
types, and then a following one will replace the handwritten enum with
a generated one.
This fixes a compile warning on GCC 13.3.0 where it warns about the
use of Variant within this class with no key function. Since the class
was almost a CRTP base class, make it a real one.
Previously, when serializing an angle value, we would always convert it
to degrees. We now canonicalize the angle value only when serializing
its computed value.
Previously, when serializing a time value, we would always convert it
to seconds. We now canonicalize the time value only when serializing
its computed value.
CSSStyleDeclaration is a base class that's used by various collections
of style properties or descriptors. This commit moves all
style-property-related code into CSSStyleProperties, where it belongs.
As noted in the previous commit, we also apply the CSSStyleProperties
prototype now.
We previously had PropertyOwningCSSStyleDeclaration and
ResolvedCSSStyleDeclaration, representing the current style properties
and resolved style respectively. Both of these were the
CSSStyleDeclaration type in the CSSOM. (We also had
ElementInlineCSSStyleDeclaration but I removed that in a previous
commit.)
In the meantime, the spec has changed so that these should now be a new
CSSStyleProperties type in the CSSOM. Also, we need to subclass
CSSStyleDeclaration for things like CSSFontFaceRule's list of
descriptors, which means it wouldn't hold style properties.
So, this commit does the fairly messy work of combining these two types
into a new CSSStyleProperties class. A lot of what previously was done
as separate methods in the two classes, now follows the spec steps of
"if the readonly flag is set, do X" instead, which is hopefully easier
to follow too.
There is still some functionality in CSSStyleDeclaration that belongs in
CSSStyleProperties, but I'll do that next. To avoid a huge diff for
"CSSStyleDeclaration-all-supported-properties-and-default-values.txt"
both here and in the following commit, we don't apply the (currently
empty) CSSStyleProperties prototype yet.
Previously, parse_css_style_attribute() would parse the string, extract
the properties, add them to a newly-created
ElementInlineCSSStyleDeclarations, and then user code would take the
properties back out of it again and throw it away. Instead, just return
the list of properties, and the caller can create an EICSD if it needs
one.
The spec defines several properties on the declaration which we
previously made virtual or stored on subclasses. This commit moves these
into CSSStyleDeclaration itself, and updates some of the naming.
This also implements the `:high-value` and `:low-value` that are in the
spec.
Same note as before about this being based on the very-drafty CSS Forms
spec. In fact, some of this isn't even in that spec yet. Specifically,
the `:suboptimal-value` and `:even-less-good-value` names are undecided
and subject to change. However, it's clear that this is a pseudo-class
situation, not a pseudo-element one, so I think this is still an
improvement, as it allows styling of the `::fill` pseudo-element
regardless of what state it is in.
Relevant spec issue: https://github.com/openui/open-ui/issues/1130
This spec is very early on, and likely to change. However, it still
feels preferable to use these rather than the prefixed -webkit ones.
Plus, as we have a `::fill` on range inputs, we can use that for styling
the bar instead of inserting CSS from C++.