Previously, the `|=` would not compare strings containing `-`
characters correctly because it would only compare the element
attribute up to the first `-` character.
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.
Previously, if a transition property was not wrapped in a list, it
would be replaced with the default value in
`StyleComputer::compute_transitioned_properties`.
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.
We have two different code paths that implement the "parse a CSS
declaration block" algorithm, for properties and descriptors. COmbining
them isn't straightforward, and doesn't seem especially useful.
Before this change, we were going through the chain of base classes for
each IDL interface object and having them set the prototype to their
prototype.
Instead of doing that, reorder things so that we set the right prototype
immediately in Foo::initialize(), and then don't bother in all the base
class overrides.
This knocks off a ~1% profile item on Speedometer 3.
Before this change, we were waiting for Document to lazily evaluate
sheet media and media rules. This often meant that we'd get two
full-document style invalidations: one from adding a new style sheet,
and one from the media queries changing state.
By evaluating the rules eagerly on insertion, we coalesce the two
invalidations into one. This reduces the number of full-document
invalidations on Speedometer 3 from 51 to 34.
We achieve this by keeping track of all checked pseudo class selectors
in the SelectorEngine code. We also give StyleComputer per-pseudo-class
rule caches.
Previously, `CSSStyleSheet.replace()` and `CSSStyleSheet.replaceSync()`
parsed the given CSS text into a temporary stylesheet object, from
which a list of rules was extracted. Doing this had the unintended
side-effect that a fetch request would be started if the given CSS text
referenced any external resources. This fetch request would cause a
crash, since the temporary stylesheet object didn't set the constructed
flag, or constructor document. We now parse the given CSS text as a
list of rules without constructing a temporary stylesheet.