This is mostly to get the grunt work of the way. This is split up into
multiple commits to hopefully make it more manageable to review.
Note that these are not full implementations, and the bindings mostly
get the low hanging fruit.
Also implements some attributes that I kept out because they had
dashes in them. Therefore, this closes#2905.
LibWeb keeps growing and the Web namespace is filling up fast.
Let's put DOM stuff into Web::DOM, just like we already started doing
with SVG stuff in Web::SVG.
This commit starts adding a basic SVG element. Currently, svg elements
have support for the width and height properties, as well as the stroke,
stroke-width, and fill properties. The only child element supported
is the path element, as most other graphical elements are just shorthand
for paths.
This patch implements a simple <object> element with fallback content.
If the URL from the data attribute fails to load (including 404),
we render the DOM tree inside the <object> as fallback content.
This works by generating a different layout tree for the <object>
depending on the state and success of the data load. Since we cannot
currently do incremental layout tree updates, we have to force a
complete layout tree rebuild when the resource load finishes/fails.
This patch introduces a bunch of things:
- Subframes (Web::Frame::create_subframe())
- HTMLIFrameElement (loads and owns the hosted Web::Frame)
- LayoutFrame (layout and rendering of the hosted frame)
There's still a huge number of things missing, like scrolling, overflow
handling, event handling, scripting, etc. But we can make a little
iframe in a document and it actually renders another document there.
I think that's pretty cool! :^)
This patch adds HTMLCanvasElement along with a LayoutCanvas object.
The DOM and layout parts are very similar to <img> elements.
The <canvas> element holds a Gfx::Bitmap which is sized according to
the "width" and "height" attributes on the element.
Calling .getContext("2d") on a <canvas> element gives you a context
object that draws into the underlying Gfx::Bitmap of the <canvas>.
The context weakly points to the <canvas> which allows it to outlive
the canvas element if needed.
This is really quite cool. :^)
This patch begins integrating LibJS into LibWeb. Document holds the
JS::Interpreter for now, and it is created on demand when you first
call Document::interpreter().
We also add a simple "alert()" function to the global object.