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.
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.
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. :^)
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.
When recomputing the style for an element that previously didn't have
a corresponding layout node, it may become necessary to create a layout
node for it.
However, we should not do this if it's within a subtree that can't have
layout children. Nor should we do it for elements who have an ancestor
with display:none.
Our setInterval implementation currently crashes on DuckDuckGo when it's
invoked with a string argument. In this path, we were creating a native
function to evaluate and execute that string. That evaluation was always
returning a Completion, but NativeFunction expects ThrowCompletionOr.
The conversion from Completion to ThrowCompletionOr would fail a VERIFY
because that conversion is only valid if the Completion is an error; but
we would trigger this conversion even on success.
This change re-implements setTimeout & setInterval in direct accordance
with the spec. So we avoid making that NativeFunction altogether, and
DDG can progress past its invocation to the timer. With this change, we
also have other features we did not previously support, such as passing
any number of arguments to the timers. This does not implement handling
of nesting levels yet.
Build the final custom property map right away instead of first making
a temporary pointer-only map. We also precompute the final needed
capacity for the map to avoid incremental rehashing.
We were mixing up the "name character" and "name start character"
validation checks. Also, we were not checking the first character after
a colon against the "name start character" set.
We now consider a layout box as having definite size in these cases:
- The size is a <length>.
- The size is a <percentage> and the containing block has definite size.
This is not complete, but a bit more accurate than what we had before.
We now validate that the provided tag names are valid XML tag names,
and otherwise throw an "invalid character" DOM exception.
2% progression on ACID3. :^)
Instead of just the outline, fill them with some semi-transparent color.
Also add tag name, ID, classes and coordinates to the little tooltip.
Finally, use the border box instead of the context box for metrics,
same as other browsers.
This means we can instantiate them for pseudo-elements, which don't have
an associated Element. They all pass it to their parent as a
`Layout::Node*` and handle a lack of `layout_node()` already so this
won't affect any functionality.
There were a couple issues here:
1. The line feed should only be appended once, rather than one per
string.
2. The new_strings list of strings was unused (we were creating the new
list, then passing the old list to Document.write).