Max width shouldn't be tied to min width, commit d33b99d went too far
and made them the same when the table-root had a specified percentage
width.
Fixes#19940.
Make sure the insets and margins calculated according to the spec are
not later ignored and ad-hoc recomputed in
layout_absolutely_positioned_element.
Use the static position calculation in a couple of places where the
spec (and comment) was indicating it should be used.
Fixes#19362
When the containing block has an indefinite width, any descendants with
a percentage size should resolve that against 0, not infinity.
Fixes an assertion failure when loading https://www.gnu.org/
Follow the specification in making the borders centered on the grid
lines. This avoids visual bugs due to double-rendering of borders on
either side of an edge and paves the way for a full implementation of
the harmonization algorithm for collapsed borders.
Currently, this still lacks complete handling of row and column spans.
Also, the box model for cells still considers the full width of the
internal borders instead of just half, as the specification requires.
Some additional handling of rounding issues will be needed to avoid very
subtle visual bugs.
Despite these limitations, this improves the appearance of all the
tables with collapsed borders I've tried while limiting the amount of
change to something reasonable.
Add a cell border specificity comparator which preserves the winning
border logic according to specification and makes it possible to sort
borders by specificity. This will be important for handling the style of
table cell corners in a way consistent with other browsers.
When sizing under a max-content constraint, we allow flex lines to have
an infinite amount of "remaining space", but we shouldn't let infinity
leak into the geometry of items. So treat it as zero in arithmetic.
This fixes an issue where inline SVGs with natural aspect ratio (from
viewBox) but no natural width or height could get an infinite size as
flex items.
Anonymous wrapper boxes inherit style from their layout tree parent,
and since style data is per-layout-node, we have to manually sync them
from parent to anonymous children when something changes.
This is not very elegant or efficient, so I've left a FIXME about
solving it in a nicer way.
This fixes horizontal dog alignment on https://waffles.dog/ :^)
As it turns out, Layout::TreeBuilder never managed to wrap text within
table boxes in anonymous wrapper boxes, since it relied on checking
text_for_rendering(), and that was never initialized during that early
stage of tree building.
This patch fixes the issue by making text_for_rendering() compute the
(potentially collapsed) text lazily when called.
Note that the test included with this patch is still totally wrong,
but that is now a TFC problem rather than a TreeBuilder problem. :^)
Computing the table width algorithm bifurcates based on whether
table-root width is auto. We only adjust the used table width based on
cell percentage widths on the auto branch, thus the same check is needed
when we initialize cell widths.
Cell percentage widths are relative to table width, not containing
block width. If the table width is auto, there isn't a normative
specification, only a brief mention that the user agent should try to
meet it.
As a starting point, we increase the width of the table such that it's
sufficient to cover min-width of cells with a percentage width. This
matches the behavior of other browsers, at least for simple cases.
This ensures that min-content contributions from cells with no content
are computed using their calculated values, which are never considered
for min-content before then. The specification diverges from column
measures algorithm, which doesn't use specified width of cells anywhere.
The CSS box-shadow property takes 2-4 properties that are `<length>`s,
those being:
- offset-x
- offset-y
- blur-radius
- spread-radius
Previously these were resolved directly to concrete Lengths at parse
time, but now they will be parsed as LengthStyleValues and/or
CalculatedStyleValues and be stored that way until styles are later
resolved.
The used width is already a content width, which doesn't include
borders. Border widths should be subtracted from the specified width
instead, since that initially specifies the total width including
borders, for consistent comparison. Also handle table box padding as an
additional fix.
On style update, we have to preserve the invariant established when we
built the layout tree - some properties are applied to the table wrapper
and the table box values are reset to their initial values.
This also ensures that the containing block of a table box is always a
table wrapper, which isn't the case if we set absolute position on the
box instead of the wrapper.
Fixes#19452.
This fixes the issue when size of abspos items is considered to be
resolvable without performing layout which is not correct in the
scenarious when top/right/bottom/left properties are not auto.
Instead of a custom struct, use an AK::Variant for flex-basis.
A flex-basis is either `content` or a CSS size value, so we don't need
anything custom for that.
By using a CSS size, we also avoid having to convert in and out of size
in various places, simplifying the code.
This finally gets rid of the "Unsupported main size for flex-basis"
debug spam. :^)
Adding undistributable space right before setting the content width is
incorrect when it's a percentage. Follow the specification and add it to
GRIDMIN and GRIDMAX instead.
In particular, in BFC:
- Non-floating, non-replaced elements
- Floating, non-replaced elements
- Floating, replaced elements
The first two regressed in 1d76126abe
The third one seems to have been introduced by this regression, as it
was seemingly copied from compute_width_for_floating_box in
7f9ede07bc
The shortcut we put in place didn't resolve percentage widths and
ignored border spacing. We can still return early after we compute the
width per the specifications.
While CSS 2.2 does tell us to use the "auto height for BFC roots"
calculation when resolving auto heights for abspos elements, that
doesn't make sense for other formatting context roots, e.g flex.
In lieu of implementing the entire new absolute positioning model from
CSS-POSITION-3, this patch borrows one small nugget from it: using
fit-content height as the auto height for non-BFC-root abspos elements.