Let's get this right before trying to make it fast. This patch removes
the code that tried to do less work when an element's style changes,
and instead simply invalidates the entire document.
Note that invalidations are still coalesced, and will not be
synchronized until update_style() and/or update_layout() is used.
If the style is dirty, update_style() may cause layout to become dirty.
Therefore we must always update style when updating layout, to ensure
up-to-date results.
This forces us to recompute style everywhere, since all kinds of
selectors may produce different results now.
In the future, we should look at narrowing down the invalidation that
occurs here, but for now let's just invalidate everything and make the
results correct before worrying about performance.
We were handing out stale values from window.getComputedStyle() objects
after the first layout.
Fix this by always updating layout on property access. This is not
necessary for all properties, but for now let's go with the simplest
approach to make it work correctly.
These steps run when a node is about to be removed from its parent,
and adjust the position of any live NodeIterators so that they don't
point at a now-removed node.
Note that while this commit implements what's in the DOM specification,
the specification doesn't fully match what other browsers do.
Spec bug: https://github.com/whatwg/dom/issues/907
This patch adds NodeIterator (created via Document.createNodeIterator())
which allows you to iterate through all the nodes in a subtree while
filtering with a provided NodeFilter callback along the way.
This first cut implements the full API, but does not yet handle nodes
being removed from the document while referenced by the iterator. That
will be done in a subsequent patch.
This Adds an element size preview widget to the inspector widget
in a new tab. This functions similar to chrome and firefox and
shows the margin, border, padding, and content size of the selected
element in the inspector.
The colors for the size preview widget are taken from the chrome
browser.
Note that we don't put absolutely positioned items on a line! This is
just so that IFC can discover boxes and pass them along to BFC.
This fixes an issue where only direct children of the IFC containing
block were considered for absolute positioning. Now we pick up
absolutely positioned children of nested inline nodes as well.
As noted, the Parser can't handle the `<number>` syntax for this - it
gets parsed instead by the `<number>` branch. We can't actually resolve
the ambiguity without making the Parser aware of what type each
media-feature is, but I will get to that soon. :^)
This patch adds support for "crisp-edges", "high-quality" and "smooth"
for the CSS image-rendering property.
"crisp-edges" maps to nearest-neighbor scaling for <canvas> and <img>
elements, while "high-quality" and "smooth" both use bilinear blending.
Previously, the decoration was painted behind the text. This probably
wasn't noticed before, as we didn't compute `text-decoration-color`
values yet and the decoration had the same color anyway.
Previosly, we used only the text color as a line decoration color.
The FIXME comment has been directly copy-pasted from the border color
note a few lines below.
The spec says "fire an event named resize at the Window object
associated with doc."
However, we were accidentally firing it at `doc` instead of the Window.
If the content wants to be pixelated, we should honor that and paint
with nearest-neighbor scaling. The fact that it's faster is a nice bonus
as well. :^)