The name is a little awkward, but this corresponds to the condition of a
`@supports` rule or the `CSS.supports("")` function.
A supports query only gets evaluated once, since its condition cannot
change during runtime. (We either support something or we don't, and the
spec specifically mentions that user preferences that disable features
do not affect the result here.) We keep a representation of it around
though, so that it can be serialized if needed. This is a little awkward
since we hold onto a `StyleDeclarationRule` which should be an internal
Parser class. This means making some Parser functions more public.
Potentially we could evaluate the Supports inside the Parser, and have
it only store a String representation of itself. But this works for now.
:^)
This is the `CSS` namespace defined in IDL here:
https://www.w3.org/TR/cssom-1/#namespacedef-css , not to be confused
with our `Web::CSS` namespace. Words are hard.
`CSS.escape()` lets you escape identifiers that can then be used to
create a CSS string.
I've also stubbed out the `CSS.supports()` function.
'static' for a function means that the symbol shall not be made public
for the result of the current compilation unit. This does not make sense
in a header, especially not if it's a large function that is used in
more than one place and not that performance-sensitive.
There's a subtle difference here. A "block box" in the spec is a
block-level box, while a "block container" is a box whose children are
either all inline-level boxes in an IFC, or all block-level boxes
participating in a BFC.
Notably, an "inline-block" box is a "block container" but not a "block
box" since it is itself inline-level.
This introduces 3 classes: NodeList, StaticNodeList and LiveNodeList.
NodeList is the base of the static and live versions. Static is a
snapshot whereas live acts on the underlying data and thus inhibits
the same issues we have currently with HTMLCollection.
They were split into separate classes to not have them weirdly
mis-mashed together.
The create functions for static and live both return a NNRP to the base
class. This is to prevent having to do awkward casting at creation
and/or return, as the bindings expect to see the base NodeList only.
This is a list of MediaQuery objects. Not to be confused with
`MediaQueryList`, which is concerned with firing events when a media
query's match-state changes.
Since we don't support IDL typedefs or unions yet, the responsibility
of verifying the type of the argument is temporarily moved from the
generated Wrapper to the implementation.
This patch makes both of these classes inherit from RefCounted and
Bindings::Wrappable, plus some minimal rejigging to allow us to keep
using them internally while also exposing them to web content.
This currently only supports pair iterables (i.e. iterable<key, value>)
support for value iterables (i.e. iterable<value>) is left as TODO().
Since currently our cmake setup calls the WrapperGenerator separately
and unconditionally for each (hard-coded) output file iterable wrappers
have to be explicitly marked so in the CMakeLists.txt declaration, we
could likely improve this in the future by querying WrapperGenerator
for the outputs based on the IDL.
This is used surprisingly often. For example, it is used by a core
YouTube library called Structured Page Fragments.
It allows you to manually dispatch an event with arbitrary data
attached to it.
The only thing missing from this implementation is the constructor.
This is because WrapperGenerator is currently missing dictionary
capabilities.
A legacy platform object is a non-global platform object that
implements a special operation. A special operation is a getter, setter
and/or deleter. This is particularly used for old collection types,
such as HTMLCollection, NodeList, etc.
This will be used to make these spec-compliant and remove their custom
wrappers. Additionally, it will be used to implement collections that
we don't have yet, such as DOMStringMap.
We now fire "pageshow" events at the appropriate time during document
loading (done by the parser.)
Note that there are no corresponding "pagehide" events yet.
We will now spin in "the end" until there are no more "things delaying
the load event". Of course, nothing actually uses this yet, and there
are a lot of things that need to.
Resolved style is a spec concept that refers to the weird mix of
computed style and used style reflected by getComputedStyle().
The purpose of this class is to produce the *computed* style for a given
element, so let's call it StyleComputer.
The original name was based on the window.getComputedStyle() API.
However, "Computed" in "getComputedStyle" is actually a misnomer that
the platform is stuck with due to backwards compatibility.
What getComputedStyle() returns is actually a mix of computed and used
values. The spec calls it the "resolved" values. So let's call this
declaration subclass "ResolvedCSSStyleDeclaration" to match.
This patch adds a basic initial implementation of these API's.
Since LibWeb currently doesn't support workers, this implementation of
messaging doesn't bother with serializing and deserializing messages.
Instead of trying to layout SVG boxes as if they are regular CSS boxes,
let's invent an "SVG formatting context" and let it manage SVG boxes.
To facilitate this, Layout::SVGBox no longer inherits from ReplacedBox,
and is instead a simple, "inline-block" style BlockBox.
There are a whole bunch of SVG attributes, and we shouldn't mix them in
with the HTML attributes. This patch adds some of them to the new
namespace, but there are more to be added. :^)
This is a very partial implementation, as some features (like 2 of the
possible constructor types, iteration and the getAll method) are
missing, and other's are not implemented due to the currently missing
URL built-in.
This namespace will be used for all interfaces defined in the URL
specification, like URL and URLSearchParams.
This has the unfortunate side-effect of requiring us to use the fully
qualified AK::URL name whenever we want to refer to the AK class, so
this commit also fixes all such references.
getComputedStyle(element) now returns a ComputedCSSStyleDeclaration
object, which is a live view of the computed style of a given element.
This works by ComputedCSSStyleDeclaration being a wrapper around an
element pointer. When you ask it for a CSS property, it gets the latest
computed style values from the element and returns them as a
CSS::StyleProperty object.
This first cut adds support for computed 'color' and 'display'.
In case the element doesn't have a corresponding node in the layout
tree, we fall back to using specified style instead. This is achieved by
performing an on-the-fly style resolution for the individual element and
then grabbing the requested property from that resolved style.
The spec allows us to optionally return from these for any reason.
Our reason is that we don't have all the infrastructure in place yet to
implement them.