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.
Instead of using Optional<LengthPercentage>, we now use LengthPercentage
for these values. The initial values are all `auto`.
This avoids having to check `has_value()` in a ton of places.
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.
This element doesn't actually support anything at the moment, but it
still massively speeds up painting performance on Wikipedia! :^)
How? Because we no longer paint SVG <path> elements found inside
<clipPath> elements. SVGClipPathElement::create_layout_node() returns
nullptr which stops the layout tree builder from recursing further into
the subtree, and so the <path> element never gets a layout or paint box.
Mousing over Wikipedia now barely break 50% CPU usage on my machine :^)
Percentage stroke widths are resolved against the scaled viewport size
which we were retrieving by calling client_width() and client_height()
on the element. Now that those accessors may trigger layout, this means
that we can't use them from the stroke_width() getter, which is itself
used *from within* layout.
This might not be entirely correct, but neither was using the completely
ad-hoc parse_html_length(), and this is the last user of that API so
let's move off of it.
There are a few unimplemented features for this type:
1. The value setter should throw a DOMException if it is invoked on an
SVGLength that was declared readonly in another IDL file.
2. SVG::AttributeParser does not parse unit types when it parses lengths
so all SVGLength will have an "unknown" unit for now.
3. Due to (2), methods which convert between units are unimplemented.
We were calculating the reflected control points in the svg smooth
curve instructions incorrectly, and this issue was masked by the fact
that we were treating it as a relative coordinate in relative mode.
This makes the selected-in-the-inspector outline appear in the right
place. We take the stroke-width into account when producing the
bounding box, which makes the fit nice and snug. :^)
This is all still quite ad-hoc. Eventually these will both need to
support units (like with CSS Lengths) but for now we can continue only
using numbers.
I've chosen the name `AttributeParser` since it parses data from
attributes. Rather than duplicate the parsing of numbers and other
basic types, let's make use of this existing parsing code for parsing
the data for `<line>`, `<polyline>`, etc.