CSS grid specification states that for grid items with a replaced
element and a percentage preferred size or maximum size, the percentage
should be resolved against 0 during content-based minimum size
calculation. This makes sense, as it prevents replaced items from
overshooting their grid track while intrinsic track sizes are
calculated, and allows later track size resolution steps to scale
replaced items to fit their grid track.
- Omit calcs that are resolved to `0px` from the serialized value
- Allow CSV to be the 'Z' component in interpolated value.
- Allow calcs with mixed percentages in the first two arguments.
To achieve the third item above the concept of a "special" value parsing
context has been added - this will also be useful for instance for
different arguments of color functions having different contexts.
Gains us 23 WPT tests
We were failing to discriminate between DOM removals happening to SVG
elements cloned as part of an SVG use element instantiation.
When a "use source" element is removed, all clones of that source must
be updated to reflect the change. But when a "use clone" element is
removed, that's fine.
This was causing the surprising disappearance of use element subtrees,
seen for example on https://cal.com/
This lets you access closed shadow roots from JavaScript, even though
they're not normally accessible to JavaScript. This can be used to poke
into UA shadow roots in tests.
Fixes external CSS being blocked on https://beatsaver.com/, where they
have a `style-src` directive set to `'self' 'nonce-[value]'`
Relates to #5643, but does not make the website load.
Technically, env() should not be an ASF. (😱) This is why some tests
still fail - env() as specced is expected to have its syntax checked
fully at parse-time, whereas ASFs are not properly syntax-checked until
later. However, I think this approach was worth doing for a few reasons:
- env() behaves like an ASF otherwise. (It is replaced with a set of
arbitrary component-values that are not known until computed-value
time.)
- env() was defined before the ASF concept existed, so I strongly
suspect it will be updated in the future to match that definition,
with a couple of adjustments. (eg, env() is allowed in some extra
places compared to var() and attr().)
- This was much quicker and easier to implement (under 3 hours in total)
compared to the greater amount of work to implement a whole separate
system just for env().
- Most of these tests are marked tentative, and the spec definition of
env() is still somewhat in flux, so failing some is not a huge deal.
If in the future I turn out to be wrong on this, we can convert it to
its own special thing.
FFC expects parent formatting context to mark size as definite if that's
the case, because otherwise it cannot figure cross line size correctly.
Fixes incorrect alignment when FFC is nested in GFC.
Progress on https://web.telegram.org/a/ layout.
This commit regresses a couple tests related to the mask shorthand
property. This is because we now parse the longhands but there are
errors related to serialization. Some of the failures are fixed again in
the next commit. However, for some animation tests this is not the case.
Those failures were simply masked by the fact that we did not parse the
property correctly.
Previously we were converting lengths to CSSPixels values when we didn't
need to, this had a couple of effects in that:
- We rounded to CSSPixel resolution prematurely (sometimes giving
incorrect results)
- We converted NaN to 0 when we shouldn't have.
We now avoid prematurely converting lengths to CSSPixels values in two
places:
- `CalculationResult::from_value`
- `CalculatedStyleValue::resolve_length_deprecated` (the new method
already avoided rounding).
Gains us 16 WPT tests.
The test logs tend to get a bit mixed together, so this makes it
possible to identify which values correspond to which test when multiple
are failing at once.