There's a subtle difference here. A "block box" in the spec is a
block-level box, while a "block container" is a box whose children are
either all inline-level boxes in an IFC, or all block-level boxes
participating in a BFC.
Notably, an "inline-block" box is a "block container" but not a "block
box" since it is itself inline-level.
Instead of doing layout synchronously whenever something changes,
we now use a basic event loop timer to defer and coalesce relayouts.
If you did something that requires a relayout of the page, make sure
to call Document::set_needs_layout() and it will get coalesced with all
the other layout updates.
There's lots of room for improvement here, but this already makes many
web pages significantly snappier. :^)
Also, note that this exposes a number of layout bugs where we have been
relying on multiple relayouts to calculate the correct dimensions for
things. Now that we only do a single layout in many cases, these kind of
problems are much more noticeable. That should also make them easier to
figure out and fix. :^)
This patch adds the "has a rendering opportunity" concept from the spec
to BrowsingContext and uses it to filter out contexts that are unable
to render right now when doing the event loop's rendering updates.
Note that we actually consider all contexts to have a rendering
opportunity at all times right now. Coming up with reasons to avoid
rendering is left as a FIXME. :^)
This namespace will be used for all interfaces defined in the URL
specification, like URL and URLSearchParams.
This has the unfortunate side-effect of requiring us to use the fully
qualified AK::URL name whenever we want to refer to the AK class, so
this commit also fixes all such references.
Any browsing context that doesn't have a parent browsing context is now
considered a top-level browsing context. This matches the HTML spec.
This means we no longer keep a pointer to the top-level context, since
we can simply walk the parent chain until we find the topmost ancestor.
We already have a base class for frame elements that we call
BrowsingContextContainer. This patch makes BrowsingContext::container()
actually return one of those.
This makes us match the spec names, and also solves a FIXME about having
a shared base for <frame> and <iframe>. (We already had the shared base,
but the pointer we had there wasn't tightly typed enough.)
If the text-for-rendering of the last selected node is empty, the select
all implementation would end up setting the index to -1. This value is
used directly for a substring length in the copy text implementation,
thus would cause a failed assertion.
Our "frame" concept very closely matches what the web specs call a
"browsing context", so let's rename it to that. :^)
The "main frame" becomes the "top-level browsing context",
and "sub-frames" are now "nested browsing contexts".
2021-05-30 12:39:53 +02:00
Renamed from Userland/Libraries/LibWeb/Page/Frame.cpp (Browse further)