This fixes an issue where we'd serialize some floating point numbers
with excessive precision, resulting in unpleasant-looking numbers like
0.49999999999999999 and such.
At least 90 new subtests passing on WPT, possibly more. :^)
We have implemented all commands in the editing spec that potentially
reference one another, so we can now rely on the fact that any command
that gets passed to these methods has a definition. User-provided
commands still get checked by means of `queryCommandSupported()` and
friends.
No functional changes.
There's discussion in the linked spec issue, but the short version is,
this algorithm will see "foo,bar," as a list of two groups, with "foo"
in the first group and "bar" in the second. However, users of this want
to get a list of three groups, with the last one being empty. So, do
that!
Some dimensions would always serialize in a canonical unit, others never
did, and others we manually would do so in their StyleValue. This
commit moves all of that into the dimension types, which means for
example that Length can apply its special rounding.
Our local serialization test now produces the same output as other
browsers. :^)
Selector::serialize() is used for both normal and relative selectors.
For the latter, we need to serialize their initial combinator, and for
the former, we always set the initial combinator as None anyway, so
this would be a no-op there.
Gets us 3 WPT passes.
The spec requires us to accept any ident here, not just ltr/rtl, and
also serialize it back out. That means we need to keep the original
string around.
In order to not call keyword_from_string() every time we want to match
a :dir() selector, we still attempt to parse the keyword and keep it
around.
A small behaviour change is that now we'll serialize the ident with its
original casing, instead of always lowercase. Chrome and Firefox
disagree on this, so I think either is fine until that can be
officially decided.
Gets us 2 WPT passes (including 1 from the as-yet-unmerged :dir() test).
The spec gives us a hard-coded list of functional pseudo-classes and how
to serialize them - but this list is incomplete and likely to always be
outdated compared to the list of pseudo-classes that exist. So instead,
use the generated metadata we already have to serialize their arguments
based on their type.
This fixes :dir() and :has(), which previously did not serialize their
arguments.
Gets us 26 passes (including 6 from that as-yet-unmerged :dir() test).
Major browsers seem to preserve `white-space: pre/pre-wrap` styles in a
`<div>` when deleting the current selection through an editing command.
The idiomatic way to support this is to have a command with a "relevant
CSS property" to make sure the value is recorded and restored where
appropriate, however, no such command exists.
Create a custom command (internal to Ladybird) that implements this
behavior.
This reworks EventHandler so text insertion, backspace, delete and
return actions are now handled by the Editing API. This was the whole
point of the execCommand spec, to provide an implementation of both
editing commands and the expected editing behavior on user input.
Responsibility of firing the `input` event is moved from EventHandler to
the Editing API, which also gets rid of duplicate events whenever
dealing with `<input>` or `<textarea>` events.
The `beforeinput` event still needs to be fired by `EventHandler`
however, since that is never fired by `execCommand()`.
Originally part of a fix in 15103d172c, it
appears that this is no longer necessary and received a better fix in a
more recent commit. Resolves a visual regression with the ACID3 test.
The main motivation here is that the CSS Parser needs to know about
PageSelectorList so that we can parse one in
`CSSPageRule::set_selector_text()`. Including all of `CSSPageRule.h`
there would pull in a lot of other headers that aren't needed.
Previously we only matched against the first attribute with a given
local name. What we actually want to do is look at each attribute with
that local name in turn and only return false if none of them match.
Also remove a hack for HTML elements in HTML documents, where we would
refuse to match any namespaced attributes. This doesn't seem to be
based on the spec, but we had regressions without it, until now. :^)
Gets us 21 more WPT subtest passes.
The HTML spec gives us a list of HTML attributes that must have their
values compared case-insensitively by default (when the attribute
selector does not specify a case-sensitiveness). However, ifwe have a
namespace, then we are not looking for an HTML attribute, so this
should not apply.
Gets us 8 more WPT subtest passes.
This is a bit under-specced, specifically there's no definition of
CSSMarginDescriptors so I've gone with CSSStyleProperties for now. Gets
us 17 WPT subtests.
By doing that we avoid lots of `PropertyKey` -> `Value` -> `PropertyKey`
transforms, which are quite expensive because of underlying
`FlyString` -> `PrimitiveString` -> `FlyString` conversions.
10% improvement on MicroBench/object-keys.js
With this, we pass the 8 ref tests in css/selectors/selectors-4/ which
previously failed. This is not technically a full implementation, as we
are supposed to first canonicalize the language range and tag, but that
will require downloading and processing the IANA language subtag
registry:
https://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry/language-subtag-registry
That's significantly more work, and WPT doesn't seem to test any cases
that require that, so we can leave it for now.
Adds `matches_webm_signature()` and `parse_vint()` helpers per WPT
spec. Uses these helpers to resolve the WebM FIXME that was in
`match_an_audio_or_video_type_pattern()`.
Our Ranges should maintain the invariant that their offsets are always
within range of 0..length (inclusive) of their respective containers.
Note that we cannot maintain this in AbstractRange, which is the base
for StaticRange and can still have invalid offsets.
156c1083e9 introduced a text blocks cache
for better performance when searching through text on a page, but when
we partially recreate the layout tree, this cache does not get
invalidated. We now rebuild the entire text blocks cache after a layout
update.
We were calling into `Range::set_start_or_end()` indirectly through
`::set_start()` and `::set_end()`, but that algorithm only calls for an
invocation whenever the start or end of a range needs to be set to a
boundary point. If an algorithm step calls for setting the node or
offset, we should directly modify the range.
The problem with calling into `::set_start_or_end()` is that this
algorithm potentially modifies _both_ the start and end of the range,
but algorithms trying to update a range's start or end often have
explicit steps to take both the start and end into account and end up
overcompensating for the start or end offset resulting in an invalid
range (e.g. with an end offset beyond a node's length).
This makes updating a range's start/end a bit more efficient and removes
a piece of ad-hoc code in CharacterData needed to make it work before.
I was wrong when I added those notes before about this being impossible,
it's *very* possible, for example with the `@page margin` descriptor.
However, until we have a large number of these shorthands and not just a
single example, we can get away with hard-coding support for it.
Ideally we'd be able to share the code between page selectors and style
ones, but given how simple page selectors are, some code duplication is
the simpler option.