This is a bit under-specced, specifically there's no definition of
CSSMarginDescriptors so I've gone with CSSStyleProperties for now. Gets
us 17 WPT subtests.
I was wrong when I added those notes before about this being impossible,
it's *very* possible, for example with the `@page margin` descriptor.
However, until we have a large number of these shorthands and not just a
single example, we can get away with hard-coding support for it.
Ideally we'd be able to share the code between page selectors and style
ones, but given how simple page selectors are, some code duplication is
the simpler option.
Math functions like abs(), clamp(), round(), etc, can be used by
themselves in property values, without wrapping them in calc().
Before this change, we were neglecting to run calc simplification on the
generated calculation node trees. By doing that manually after parsing a
standalone math function, we score at least a couple hundred WPT points.
Whenever we introduce a block element in a container that at that point
has only had inline children, we create an anonymous wrapper for all the
inline elements so we can keep the invariant that each container
contains either inline or non-inline children. For some reason, we
ignore all the out-of-flow nodes since they are layed out separately and
it was thought that this shouldn't matter.
However, if we are dealing with inline blocks and floating blocks, the
order of the inline contents _including_ out-of-flow nodes becomes very
important: floating blocks need to take the order of nodes into account
when positioning themselves.
Fix this by simply hoisting the out-of-flow nodes into the anonymous
wrapper as well.
Fixes the order of blocks in #4212. The gap is still not present.
Instead, use the generic create_independent_formatting_context_if_needed
so that unusual situations like image-as-table-caption don't crash.
This logic clearly needs more work, but let's at least do better than
crashing. This gives us 26 new subtest passes on WPT.
We were incorrectly deciding that abspos elements shouldn't treat many
max-width and max-height values as `none`. My best understanding is that
this was a hack in 2023 for an issue that has been solved since then.
By removing the incorrect short-circuit, we stop at least one WPT test
from crashing due to infinite recursion and get ourselves +34 passes.
Keep track of which CSSRule owns a CSSRuleList, and then use that to
produce a stack of RuleContexts for the CSS Parser to use.
There are certainly other places we should do this!
The spec algorithm changed at some point to support nested declarations,
but I only just noticed. The subtest regression is one we were passing
incorrectly.