These are based on the ones in Firefox:
`$(selector, element = document)`:
Equivalent to `element.querySelector(selector)`.
`$$(selector, element = document)`:
Equivalent to `element.querySelectorAll(selector)`.
This holds the return value of the expression that was last entered into
the browser console. If that last expression returned an error of some
kind, `$_` will be `undefined`. This matches the behaviour in Firefox.
wrap() is now basically a no-op so we should stop using it everywhere
and eventually remove it. This patch removes uses of wrap() in
non-generated code.
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
This is needed so that the allocated NativeFunction receives the correct
realm, usually forwarded from the Object's initialize() function, rather
than using the current realm.
Global object initialization is tightly coupled to realm creation, so
simply pass it to the function instead of relying on the non-standard
'associated realm' concept, which I'd like to remove later.
This works essentially the same way as regular Object::initialize() now.
Additionally this allows us to forward the realm to GlobalObject's
add_constructor() / initialize_constructor() helpers, so they set the
correct realm on the allocated constructor function object.
Similar to create() in LibJS, wrap() et al. are on a low enough level to
warrant passing a Realm directly instead of relying on the current realm
from the VM, as a wrapper may need to be allocated while no JS is being
executed.
This is a continuation of the previous six commits.
The global object is only needed to return it if the execution context
stack is empty, but that doesn't seem like a useful thing to allow in
the first place - if you're not currently executing JS, and the
execution context stack is empty, there is no this value to retrieve.
This is a continuation of the previous five commits.
A first big step into the direction of no longer having to pass a realm
(or currently, a global object) trough layers upon layers of AOs!
Unlike the create() APIs we can safely assume that this is only ever
called when a running execution context and therefore current realm
exists. If not, you can always manually allocate the Error and put it in
a Completion :^)
In the spec, throw exceptions implicitly use the current realm's
intrinsics as well: https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-throw-an-exception
The old versions were renamed to JS_DECLARE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION and
JS_DEFINE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION, and will be eventually removed once all
native functions were converted to the new format.
`$0` is a helpful variable in other browsers' JS consoles, which points
to whichever DOM Node is currently selected in the DOM Inspector. And
now we have it too! :^)
ConsoleGlobalObject is used as the global object when running javascript
from the Browser console. This lets us implement console-only functions
and variables (like `$0`) without exposing them to webpage content. It
passes other calls over to the usual WindowObject so any code that would
have worked in the webpage will still work in the console. :^)