This commit unifies methods and method/param names between the above
classes, as well as adds [[nodiscard]] and ALWAYS_INLINE where
appropriate. It also renamed the various move_by methods to
translate_by, as that more closely matches the transformation
terminology.
Now we use min-height for calculating the height of block boxes.
Besides, now we check if min-height/max-height are percentage values
and don't use them if parent's height isn't explicitly set (CSS 2.1
section 10.7).
Now we set margins, borders and paddings for floating boxes and include
them into calculating floating box positions by using margin_box() and
margin_box_as_relative_rect().
This allows us to convert a number to a String given a bijective
(zero-less) alphabet.
So you count A,B,C,...,Y,Z,AA,AB,...
This was surprisingly very tricky!
This allows the ListItemMarker to be displayed with different (simple)
alphabets in the future.
This doesn't exactly do what you would think from its name: It surely
adds an extra leading zero to the front of a number, but only if the
number is less than 10. CSS is weird sometimes.
We had some inconsistencies before:
- Sometimes "The", sometimes "the"
- Sometimes trailing ".", sometimes no trailing "."
I picked the most common one (lowecase "the", trailing ".") and applied
it to all copyright headers.
By using the exact same string everywhere we can ensure nothing gets
missed during a global search (and replace), and that these
inconsistencies are not spread any further (as copyright headers are
commonly copied to new files).
Creating a ChunkIterator allows you to iterate over the text in a
Layout::TextNode at your leisure by calling next() when you want
another chunk.
This is one of many steps towards improving inline layout.
The current ProtocolServer was really only used for requests, and with
the recent introduction of the WebSocket service, long-lasting
connections with another server are not part of it. To better reflect
this, this commit renames it to RequestServer.
This commit also changes the existing 'protocol' portal to 'request',
the existing 'protocol' user and group to 'request', and most mentions
of the 'download' aspect of the request to 'request' when relevant, to
make everything consistent across the system.
Note that LibProtocol still exists as-is, but the more generic Client
class and the more specific Download class have both been renamed to a
more accurate RequestClient and Request to match the new names.
This commit only change names, not behaviors.
The WebSocket bindings match the original specification from the
WHATWG living standard, but do not match the later update of the
standard that involves FETCH. The FETCH update will be handled later
since the changes would also affect XMLHttpRequest.
LibWeb is now responsible for logging unhandled exceptions itself,
which means set_should_log_exceptions() is no longer used and can be
removed. It turned out to be not the best option for web page exception
logging, as we would have no indication regarding whether the exception
was later handled of not.
Instead of having to run queued promise jobs in LibWeb in various
places, this allows us to consolidate that into one function - this is
very close to how the spec describes it as well ("at some future point
in time, when there is no running execution context and the execution
context stack is empty, the implementation must [...]").
Eventually this will also be used to log unhandled exceptions, and
possibly other actions that require JS execution to have ended.
HTMLCollection is an awkward legacy interface from the DOM spec.
It provides a live view of a DOM subtree, with some kind of filtering
that determines which elements are part of the collection.
We now return HTMLCollection objects from these APIs:
- getElementsByClassName()
- getElementsByName()
- getElementsByTagName()
This initial implementation does not do any kind of caching, since that
is quite a tricky problem, and there will be plenty of time for tricky
problems later on when the engine is more mature.
You can now specify the "CustomGetByIndex" extended interface attribute
which will cause the generator to emit an override declaration for
JS::Object::get_by_index().
It's up to you to implement that function somewhere. Just like the
CustomGet mechanism already works. :^)
Try to find a font that has at least some of the requested properties.
This makes e.g. rfcs on tools.ietf.org easier to read since their
headers are now bold.
Height computation algorithm is actually
different for absolutely positioned boxes
and block formatting contexts (where it doesn't include floats)
Fixes#6408
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *