This will be inherited by documents and workers, to provide a common
abstraction for script execution. (We don't have workers yet, but we
might as well make this little space for them now to simplify things
down the road.)
Note that there is currently no way to display them as we can't
currently clone nodes.
Adds special case for templates for dumping to console.
Doesn't add it to the DOM inspector as I'm not sure how to do it.
...{All} to ParentNode. Exposes createDocumentFragment and
createComment on Document. Stubs out the document.body setter.
Also adds ParentNode back :^).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
This patch implements most of the HTML fragment parsing algorithm and
ports Element::set_inner_html() to it. This was the last remaining user
of the old HTML parser. :^)
To make this possible, I also had to give each LayoutNode a Document&
so it can resolve document-specific colors correctly. There's probably
ways to avoid having this extra member by resolving colors later, but
this works for now.
The more generic virtual variant is renamed to node_name() and now only
Element has tag_name(). This removes a huge amount of String ctor/dtor
churn in selector matching.
Returning it by reference can lead to unpleasant situations if we use
this getter when the document may go away. Better to make the getter
return a copy than have to think about this everywhere.
This makes stuff inside <noscript> correctly not show up since we run
with scripting enabled.
In the future, we can add a way to disable scripting, but for now,
Document::is_scripting_enabled() just returns true.
Until now we would simply apply stylesheets in the order they finished
loading. This patch adds a StyleSheetList object that hangs off of each
Document and contains all the style sheets in document order.
There's still a lot of work to do for a proper cascade, but at least
this makes us consistently wrong every time. :^)
This patch adds two script lists to Document:
- Scripts to execute when parsing has finished
- Scripts to execute as soon as possible
Since we don't actually load scripts asynchronously yet (we just do a
synchronous load when parsing the <script> element for simplicity),
these are already loaded by the time we get to "The end" of parsing.
Every Document now has an Origin, found via Document::origin().
It's based on the URL of the document.
This will be used to implement things like the same-origin policy.
LibWeb now creates a WindowObject which inherits from GlobalObject.
Allocation of the global object is moved out of the Interpreter ctor
to allow for specialized construction.
The existing Window interfaces are moved to WindowObject with their
implementation code in the new Window class.
This currently returns a JS::Array of elements matching a selector.
The more correct behavior would be to return a static NodeList, but as
we don't have NodeLists right now, that'll be a task for the future.
This function allows you to throw away the entire layout tree if that's
something you want to do.
It's certainly not super cheap to reconstruct, but hey, who am I to
tell you what to do? :^)
This patch introduces the Wrapper and Wrappable classes.
Node now inherits from Wrappable, and can be wrapped in a GC-allocated
Bindings::NodeWrapper object. The only property we expose right now is
the very simple nodeName property.
When a Document's JS::Interpreter is first instantiated, we add a
"document" property with a DocumentWrapper object to the global object.
This is pretty cool! :^)
This patch begins integrating LibJS into LibWeb. Document holds the
JS::Interpreter for now, and it is created on demand when you first
call Document::interpreter().
We also add a simple "alert()" function to the global object.