...{All} to ParentNode. Exposes createDocumentFragment and
createComment on Document. Stubs out the document.body setter.
Also adds ParentNode back :^).
This requires moving remove_all_children() from ParentNode to
Node, which makes ParentNode.cpp empty, so remove it.
It also co-opts the existing Node::text_content() method and
tweaks it slightly to fit the semantics of Node.textContent.
You can now cycle through focusable elements (currently only hyperlinks
are focusable) with the Tab key.
The focus outline is rendered in a new FocusOutline paint phase.
Decorated Interpreter::call() with [[nodiscard]] to provoke thinking
about the returned value at each call site. This is definitely not
perfect and we should really start thinking about slimming down the
public-facing LibJS interpreter API.
Fixes#3136.
We don't want to carry over exceptions across multiple
Document::run_javascript() calls as Interpreter::run() and every of its
exception checks will get confused - in this case there would be an
exception, but not because a certain action failed.
Real-life example:
<script>var a = {}; a.test()</script>
<script>alert("It worked!")</script>
The above HTML will invoke Document::run_javascript() twice, the first
call will result in a TypeError, which is still stored during the second
call. The interpreter will eventually call the following functions (in
order) for the alert() invocation:
- Identifier::execute()
- Interpreter::get_variable()
- Object::get() (on the global object)
That last Object::get() call has an exception check which is triggered
as we still carry around the exception from earlier - and eventually
returns an empty value.
Long story short, the second script will wrongly fail with
"ReferenceError, 'alert' is not defined".
Fixes#3091.
This is mostly to get the grunt work of the way. This is split up into
multiple commits to hopefully make it more manageable to review.
Note that these are not full implementations, and the bindings mostly
get the low hanging fruit.
Also implements some attributes that I kept out because they had
dashes in them. Therefore, this closes#2905.
Now that document element returns a generic DOM element, we need to
make sure head and body get a html element.
The spec just says to check if the document element is a html element,
so let's do that.
Also change DOM::Document::document_element() to return an Element*
and not an HTML::HTMLHtmlElement since that's not the only kind of
documentElement we might encounter.
HTMLElement is the only interface that includes ElementContentEditable
in the HTML specification. This makes sense, as Element is also a base
class for elements in other specifications such as SVG,
which definitely shouldn't be editable.
Also adds a test for the attribute based on what Andreas did in the
video that added it.
This works everywhere right now, but it's obviously not going to stay
that way forever. :^)
Note that this does not advance the cursor correctly for whitespace
since the cursor is DOM-based and doesn't take whitespace collapsing
into account yet.
Note that these aren't full implementations of the bindings. This
mostly implements the low hanging fruit (namely, basic reflections)
There are some attributes that should be USVString instead of
DOMString. However, USVString is a slightly different definition
of DOMString, so it should suffice for now.
LibWeb keeps growing and the Web namespace is filling up fast.
Let's put DOM stuff into Web::DOM, just like we already started doing
with SVG stuff in Web::SVG.
This commit starts adding a basic SVG element. Currently, svg elements
have support for the width and height properties, as well as the stroke,
stroke-width, and fill properties. The only child element supported
is the path element, as most other graphical elements are just shorthand
for paths.
To prepare for fully qualified tag names, let's call this local_name.
Note that we still keep an Element::tag_name() around since that's what
the JS bindings end up calling into for the Element.tagName property.
Presentation attribute lengths (width, height, etc.) can always be
unit-less (e.g "400") so going via the normal CSS parsing path only
works when the document is in quirks mode.
Add a separate parse_html_length() that always allows unit-less values.
This allows us to determine which mode to render the page in.
Exposes "doctype" and "compatMode" on Document.
Exposes "name", "publicId" and "systemId" on DocumentType.
Since the vast majority of message boxes should be modal, require
the parent window to be passed in, which can be nullptr for the
rare case that they don't. By it being the first argument, the
default arguments also don't need to be explicitly stated in most
cases, and it encourages passing in a parent window handle.
Fix up several message boxes that should have been modal.
Fixes https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/2649
Loading a page with iframes could lead to a scenario, where the iframe
document finished layout prior to the main frame beeing laid out
initially. This caused a crash/assertion of the browser.