We now also store `outline-width` in ComputedValues as a `CSSPixels`
since we know it's an absolute length at `apply_style` time - this saves
us some work in converting to CSSPixels during layout.
Gains us 46 new passes since we now interpolate keywords (thick, thin,
etc) correctly.
Also loses us 4 WPT tests as we longer clamp negative values produced by
interpolation from the point of view of getComputedStyle (although the
'used' value is still clamped).
This property provides a hint to the rendering engine about properties
that are likely to change in the near future, allowing for early
optimizations to be applied.
These will be used for the mask-repeat property as well in an upcoming
commit, hence the more generic names. Also, this more closely matches
the names used in the spec.
Fixes crash in the created test as well as https://wpt.live/css/css-text
/word-spacing/reference/word-spacing-percent-001-ref.html. The WPT test
hasn't been imported as it passing is currently a false-positive due to
the fact that we don't yet respect `word-spacing` in most cases.
This patch expands our generated content support beyond single strings
to lists of strings and/or images.
Pseudo-elements like ::before and ::after can now use content:url(...)
to insert anonymous image boxes into the layout tree.
This is heavily used in Google Docs for UI elements.
No functional changes. The main difference is renaming the cursor enum
to match the spec term `<cursor-predefined>`, which is a bit more
verbose but clearer in meaning.
Corresponds to 1a57a4025c
This exposed a few bugs which caused the following tests to behave
incorrectly:
- `tab-size-text-wrap.html`: This previously relied on a bug where we
incorrectly treated `white-space: pre` as allowing text wrapping. The
fix here is to implement the text-wrap CSS shorthand property.
- `execCommand-preserveWhitespace.html`: We don't correctly serialize
shorthand properties. This is covered by an existing FIXME in
`CSSStyleProperties::serialized()`
- `white-space-shorthand.html`: The last 5 subtests here fail as we
don't correctly handle shorthand properties in
`CSSStyleProperties::remove_property()`. This is covered by an
existing FIXME in said function.
To prepare for introducing a CSS::URL type, we need to qualify any use
of LibURL as `::URL::foo` instead of `URL::foo` so the compiler doesn't
get confused.
Many of these uses will be replaced, but I don't want to mix this in
with what will likely already be a large change.
This is a improved version of a73cd88f0c
The old commit was reverted in 552dd18696
The new version only paints an element into a new layer if background
blend modes other than normal are used. The rasterization performance
of most websites should therefore not suffer.
Co-Authored-By: Alexander Kalenik <kalenik.aliaksandr@gmail.com>
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.
The `cursor` property accepts a list of possible cursors, which behave
as a fallback: We use whichever cursor is the first available one. This
is a little complicated because initially, any remote images have not
loaded, so we need to use the fallback standard cursor, and then switch
to another when it loads.
So, ComputedValues stores a Vector of cursors, and then in EventHandler
we scan down that list until we find a cursor that's ready for use.
The spec defines cursors as being `<url>`, but allows for `<image>`
instead. That includes functions like `linear-gradient()`.
This commit implements image cursors in the Qt UI, but not AppKit.
When drawing a table, some of the CSS properties must be moved from the
table grid box to an anonamyous table wrapper box. One of these
properties is `position`. `z-index` however is not. This leads to the
following behavior if a table has both `position` and `z-index`:
* The wrapper box has the `position`, but a `z-index` of `auto`.
* The grid box has the `z-index`, but `position: static`.
This effectively means that the `z-index property is ignored since it
has no effect on non-positioned elements. This behavior contradicts what
other browsers do and causes layout issues on websites.
To align Ladybird behavior with other browser this commit also moves the
`z-index` property to the wrapper box.
We've long claimed to support this, but then silently ignored string
values, until 4cb2063577 which would
not-so-silently crash instead. (Oops)
So, actually pass the string value along and use it in the list marker.
As part of this, rename our `list-style-type` enum to
`counter-style-name-keyword`. This is an awkward name, attempting to be
spec-based. (The spec says `<counter-style>`, which is either a
`<counter-style-name>` or a function, and the `<counter-style-name>` is
a `<custom-ident>` that also has a few predefined values. So this is the
best I could come up with.)
Unfortunately only one WPT test for this passes - the others fail
because we produce a different layout when text is in `::before` than
when it's in `::marker`, and similar issues.
CSS filters work similarly to canvas filters, so it makes sense to have
Gfx::Filter that can be used by both libraries in an analogous way
as Gfx::Color.
Most computed border-radii contain their initial values, and since the
normalized initial border radii are always zero, there is no need to do
expensive floating point math to normalize them.