This is a clear sign that they want to use a UnixDateTime instead.
This also adds support for placing durations and date times into SQL
databases via their millisecond offset to UTC.
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.
This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
This fixes a plethora of rounding problems on many websites.
In the future, we may want to replace this with fixed-point arithmetic
(bug #18566) for performance (and consistency with other engines),
but in the meantime this makes the web look a bit better. :^)
There's a lot more things that could be converted to doubles, which
would reduce the amount of casting necessary in this patch.
We can do that incrementally, however.
Introduce optimization that determines if one node is preceding,
following, ancestor or descdendant of another node by comparing
ancestors chains of both nodes which is much cheaper than using
Node::is_before() that can walk whole subtree in the worst case.
Some of the live HTMLCollection only ever contain children of their root
node. When we know that's the case, we can avoid doing a full subtree
traversal of all descendants and only visit children.
This cuts the ECMA262 spec loading time by over 10 seconds. :^)
Before this change, LayoutState essentially had a Vector<UsedValues*>
resized to the exact number of layout nodes in the current document.
When a nested layout is performed (to calculate the intrinsic size of
something), we make a new LayoutState with its own Vector. If an entry
is missing in a nested LayoutState, we check the parent chain all the
way up to the root.
Because each nested LayoutState had to allocate a new Vector with space
for all layout nodes, this could get really nasty on very large pages
(such as the ECMA262 specification).
This patch replaces the Vector with a HashMap. There's now a small cost
to lookups, but what we get in return is the ability to handle huge
layout trees without spending eternity in page faults.
By deferring allocation of StaticNodeList objects until we know somebody
actually wants the MutationRecord, we avoid a *lot* of allocation work.
This shaves several seconds off of loading https://tc39.es/ecma262/
At least one other engine (WebKit) skips creating mutation records if
nobody is interested, so even if this is observable somehow, we would
at least match the behavior of a major engine.
Before this, any style change that mutated a property we consider
"layout-affecting" would trigger a complete teardown and rebuild of the
layout tree.
This isn't actually necessary for the vast majority of CSS properties,
so this patch makes the invalidation a bit finer, and we now only
rebuild the layout tree when the CSS display property changes.
For other layout-affecting properties, we keep the old layout tree (if
we have one) and run the layout algorithms over that once again.
This is significantly faster, since we don't have to run all the CSS
selectors all over again.
The resolved property sets are stored with the element in a
per-pseudo-element array (same as for pseudo element layout nodes).
Longer term, we should stop storing this with elements entirely and make
it temporary state in StyleComputer somehow, so we don't waste memory
keeping all the resolved properties around.
This makes various gradients show up on https://shopify.com/ :^)
There's no need for this to require a DeprecatedString - the method it
wraps around already only expects a StringView. This allows passing a
String instance without any conversion.
This lets elements figure out if they're visible within the viewport or
not, so they take appropriate action.
Fixes the issues with animations not starting until the viewport was
resized or scrolled.
Layout will be identical for both of those values, so only a repaint is
necessary. If it changes to/from "collapse" however, we do need to
relayout. This means we can't simply use the "affects-layout" mechanism.
We have to write a little bit of custom code.
This makes Google Groups (and surely many other sites) significantly
more responsive by avoiding large amounts of layout work.
If something else has already caused a layout, there's no need to force
a new relayout when the layout timer fires.
This avoids a lot of redundant work on many pages. :^)
It's not enough to invalidate only layout, since changes to the DOM tree
may also cause different selectors to apply.
This brings Acid3 back to a score of 100/100. The problem was that a
:last-child selector wasn't rechecked after removing a node that was
previously the last child of its parent.
Regression from f36cbd3b65.
This follows on from the SVG linear gradients. It supports the same
features (xlink:href, gradientUnits, gradientTransform).
With this commit I have now implemented all web gradients :^)
(Though we are still missing a few parameters for SVG gradients,
e.g. spreadMethod).
This is typically used as `class A extends EventTarget`. It's usage can
be found on websites such as https://loadout.tf/
This has the quirk that we don't do set the EventTarget prototype for
HTML::Window, as it would cause a null deref on startup. However, given
it wasn't doing this before, I don't think it should cause any issues.
Implements:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/browsing-the-web.html#attempt-to-populate-the-history-entry's-document
This is going to be a replacement for `FrameLoader::load()` after
switching to navigables.
Brief description of `populate_session_history_entry_document`:
- If navigation params have url with fetch scheme then DOM document
will be populated by fetching url and parsing response. This
is going to be a replacement for `FrameLoader::load(AK::URL&)`.
- If url in navigation params is abort:srcdoc then DOM document
will be populated by parsing HTML text passed in document resource.
This is going to be a replacement for `FrameLoader::load_html()`
This represents the SVG <linearGradient>. The actual gradient is
converted to a Gfx::PaintStyle for use in SVG fills... There is a little
guesswork in the implementation, but it seems to match Chrome/Firefox.
Note: Still not hooked up to actual painting in this commit.
The "browsing context container" concept in the HTML spec has been
replaced with "navigable container". Renaming this is the first step of
many towards implementing the new world.
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Kalenik <kalenik.aliaksandr@gmail.com>
The spec defines a Permissions Policy to control some browser behaviors
on a per-origin basis. Management of these permissions live in their own
spec: https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-permissions-policy/
This implements a somewhat ad-hoc Permissions Policy for autoplaying
media elements. We will need to implement the entire policy spec for
this to be more general.
This makes YouTube's thumbnails start appearing on the homepage.
Yes,seriously.
Simply put, this is because this check failed when Comment had the
incorrect prototype:
90cb97f847/packages/shadycss/src/style-util.js (L397)
This causes it to try and reconvert style sheets that are already in
Shady format, which would cause it to spuriously add things such as
class selectors on the end of tag selectors. This caused nothing to
match the selectors.
When YouTube is generating the thumbnails, it checks if the thumbnail
grid container has a non-zero clientWidth. If it's zero, it simply
bails generating thumbnails. Since the selectors for this container did
not apply, we would not properly create a paint box for it, causing
clientWidth to return zero.