Resources can come from other sources (e.g., XObjects), and since the
only attribute we are reading from Page are its resources it makes sense
to receive resources instead. That way we'll be able to pass down
arbitrary resources that are not necessarily declared at the page level.
Old situation:
Object.h defines Object
Object.h defines ArrayObject
ArrayObject requires the definition of Object
ArrayObject requires the definition of Value
Value.h defines Value
Value requires the definition of Object
Therefore, a file with the single line "#include <Value.h>" used to
raise compilation errors; certainly not something that one might expect
from a library.
This patch splits up the definitions in Object.h to break the cycle.
Now, Object.h only defines Object, Value.h still only defines Value (and
includes Object.h), and the new header ObjectDerivatives.h defines
ArrayObject (and includes both Object.h and Value.h).
This isn't tested all that well, as the PDF I am testing with only uses
it for black (which is trivial). It can be tested further when LibPDF
is able to process more complex PDFs that actually use this color space
non-trivially.