`DeprecatedString::to_int` calls `StringUtils::convert_to_int`
internally. However, the integer parsing is not done in an HTML
spec-compliant way. For example, `colspan="2;"` is valid according to
the spec. But, with the current implementation, we will fail to parse
"2;", and instead fall back to using 1 as the colspan value.
This patch changes the `HTMLTableCellElement::col_span` and
`HTMLTableCellElement::row_span` methods to use the
`Web::HTML::parse_non_negative_integer` function that will parse the
attribute value in an HTML spec-compliant way.
We have code inside LibWeb that uses the
`AK::StringUtils::convert_to_uint`and `AK::StringUtils::convert_to_int`
methods for parsing integers. This works well for the most part, but
according to the spec, trailing characters are allowed and should be
ignored, but this is not how the `StringUtil` methods are implemented.
This patch adds two new methods named `parse_integer` and
`parse_non_negative_integer` inside the `Web::HTML` namespace that uses
`StringUtils` under the hood but adds a bit more logic to make it spec
compliant.
In case we've looked up the family name before and cached the result of
font fallback, we now invalidate any cached entries with the same family
name so that the next lookup may consider the newly downloaded font.
This function is used to calculate a matching radius that goes inside or
outside of the border. For example, if the border-radius is 10px and we
are 5px further out, the radius needs to be 15px to look right.
However, if the radius is 0 it isn't rounded, and we want to keep the
same sharp corner no matter how far we go.
This makes our outline rendering better match Chrome and Firefox.
This event is the star of the show, and the main way that web content
can react to either programmatic or user-initiated navigation.
All of the fun algorithms will have to come later though.
This API is how JavaScript can manipulate the new Navigable concepts
directly. We are still missing most of the interesting algorithms on
Navigation that do the actual navigation steps, and call into the
currently WIP navigable AOs.
This enum is used in many Navigation API classes, so stick it in its own
IDL file. However, we have no way to ask the BindingsGenerator to create
just an enum class that's not defined in an IDL file without an
``interface`` class at the top level, so implement the expected enum
and stringification method manually.
We never implemented this for History::pushState/popState, and now that
we're working on the Navigable changes, we don't need this legacy entry
with its legacy name.
Add the seralization and URL validation steps, but skip the actual
navigation for now. This might cause more pages to throw exceptions
when trying to push state that contains objects that we don't know how
to serialize.
This avoids looking at every single installed typeface to see if there's
a family name match.
Fixes a large performance regression introduced when making
StyleComputer consider system fonts in CSS font fallback.
Regressed with 69a81243f5.
As it turns out, there are popular User-Agent blacklists out there with
the string "LibWeb" in them. Such entries have been added long before
our LibWeb existed, so "LibWeb" has presumably been used by some bot
that people got tired of.
Trying to chase down everyone who has installed these blacklists is
obviously a losing battle, so this patch simply removes the engine part
of our default UA string.
We were relying on the table fixup algorithm to insert the missing table
row, which fails to do so when we only have an image in the button.
While that might be a problem with the table fixup algorithm, we should
build a correct layout tree explicitly anyway.
Fixes crashes on GitHub.
With this change, elements that want to receive viewport rect updates
will need to register on document instead of the browsing context.
This change solves the problem where a browsing context for a document
is guaranteed to exist only while the document is active so browsing
context might not exit by the time DOM node that want to register is
constructed.
This is a part of preparation work before switching to navigables where
this issue becomes more visible.
Fixes stack-use-after-return bug found by ASAN that happens when
`response` reference captured by `process_response` is modified
after navigation has been canceled.
Fixes bug when "clip" property does not affect abspos children.
This change makes "clip" property to be applied together with
"overflow: hidden" in `apply_clip_overflow_rect()` that already
handles abspos children correctly.
Instead of calling to_lowercase() on two strings for every step while
iterating over the HTMLCollection returned by getElementsByTagName(),
we now cache the lowercased tag name beforehand and reuse it.
2.4x speed-up on WebKit/PerformanceTests/DOM/DOMDivWalk.html
User styles are applied after the UserAgent's built-in styles, and
before the Author styles that are part of the web page.
Because they're neither part of the page, but can still be modified
while the page is open, caching is a little tricky. The approach here
is to piggy-back on the StyleComputer's rule caches, which already get
rebuilt whenever the styles change. This is not the smartest approach,
since it means re-parsing the style sheet more often than is necessary,
but it's simple and works. :^)
This matches if the element has a placeholder, and that placeholder is
currently visible. This applies to `<input>` and `<textarea>` elements,
but our `<textarea>` is very limited so does not support placeholders.
As noted in a9620d8784 we don't currently
set the target element so this does not function, so no tests. But it
should work once we have a fleshed out Navigables implementation. :^)