Now we pass all WPT tests in:
`css/css-properties-values-api/at-property-cssom`.
Note: Failing tests were false positives.
Proper handling of inheriting values and detecting computational
independence will be done in another PR.
If an editing host receives focus, we would always set a new selection
range. However, we only need to do that if we're not already part of the
active range. This corresponds to behavior shown by Chrome and Firefox.
This parses `anchor-size(..)` functions in CSS, but does not yet result
in a useful `Size`: we need style & layout interleaving similar to
container queries for this, since the resulting value depends on layout
results.
Not supported yet: `anchor-size()` appearing inside a `calc()` node.
Adds 4280 WPT subtest passes in `css/css-anchor-position`.
The HTML specification does not explicitly require
a specific return type for parseFromString(),
but according to Web Platform TestsDOMParser-parseFromString.html,
the expected return value for
XML MIME types is a Document—not an XMLDocument.
The spec tells us to reject the promise with a RuntimeError instead of a
LinkError whenever the module's start function fails during module
instantiation. Fixes 1 WPT subtest in `wasm/core`.
Both sides of the Editing internals now have to deal with some awkward
converting between UTF-8 and UTF-16, but the upside is that it
immediately exposed an issue with the `insertText` command: instead of
dealing with code units, it was iterating over code points causing the
selection to be updated only once instead of twice. This resulted in the
final selection potentially ending up in between a surrogate pair.
Fixes#5547 (pasting/typing surrogate pairs).
...for `text-justify: inter-character`.
We previously had this mapped in Enums.json, but the behaviour is
different: `a=b` in Enums.json keeps `a` around but makes it behave the
same as `b`. A legacy name alias is instead expected to replace `a`
with `b`, so we have to do that separately.
...elements. Adds missing pseudo-element type passed into computed
properties getter.
Previously, due to this bug, we were using the element's computed
properties as the previous computed properties for its pseudo-elements.
This caused an excessive number of unintended CSS transitions to run.
The issue was particularly noticeable in Discord's emoji picker, where
each emoji has `::after` pseudo-element. We were incorrectly triggering
transitions on all their properties, resulting in significant
unnecessary work in style computation and animation event dispatching.
We now do the proper thing in terms of:
- Allowing percentages
- Returning the computed value in getComputedStyle
- Handling values out of the [0,1] range
Gains us 13 WPT passes in the imported tests.
Add global registry for registered properties and partial support
for `@property` rule. Enables registering properties with initial
values. Also adds basic retrieval via `var()`.
Note: This is not a complete `@property` implementation.
When setting a declaration for a property in a logical property group,
it should appear after all other declarations which belong to the same
property group but have different mapping logic (are/aren't a logical
alias).
Gains us 1 WPT pass.
We should not serialize a group of properties `longhands` as a single
shorthand if there is any property declared between the first and
last property in `longhands` which is not part of `longhands` but
belongs to the same logical property group, and has different mapping
logic to any of property in `longhands`
When parsing values in `process_a_keyframes_argument` we don't expand
properties using `StyleComputer::for_each_property_expanding_shorthands`
unlike most other places - this means that if we parse a `border` we end
up with the `border`'s sub-properties (`border-width`, `border-style`,
`border-color`) still in their unexpanded forms (`CSSKeywordValue`,
`LengthStyleValue`, `StyleValueList`, etc) rather than
`ShorthandStyleValue`s which causes a crash when serializing the
`border` value in `KeyframeEffect::get_keyframes`.
The proper fix here is to parse `border`'s sub-properties directly to
`ShorthandStyleValue`s instead of relying on
`StyleComputer::for_each_property_expanding_shorthand` to do this
conversion for us but this may be a while off.
This commit also imports the previously crashing tests.
We were previously handling this ad-hoc via logic in
`get_property_internal` but this didn't cover all contexts (for
instance `CSSStyleProperties::serialized`.
Gains us 9 more WPT tests as we now cover properties which weren't
included in the previous ad-hoc approach.
Our currently implementation of structured serialization has a design
flaw, where if the serialized/transferred type was not used in the
destination realm, it would not be seen as exposed and thus we would
not re-create the type on the other side.
This is very common, for example, transferring a MessagePort to a just
inserted iframe, or the just inserted iframe transferring a MessagePort
to it's parent. This is what Google reCAPTCHA does.
This flaw occurred due to relying on lazily populated HashMaps of
constructors, namespaces and interfaces. This commit changes it so that
per-type "is exposed" implementations are generated.
Since it no longer relies on interface name strings, this commit
changes serializable types to indicate their type with an enum,
in line with how transferrable types indicate their type.
This makes Google reCAPTCHA work on https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api2/demo
It currently doesn't work on non-Google origins due to a separate
same-origin policy bug.