Previously we implemented an all encompassing `MathDepthStyleValue`
specifically for the `math-depth` property, this was unnecessary since
we can represent `auto-add` and `<integer>` using existing `StyleValue`
classes.
This brings the values created from parsing in line with those set via
`StylePropertyMap` which allows us to simplify computation
Replace two uses of heap-allocated Bitmap with stack-allocated
FixedBitmap. The sizes are known at compile time, so there's no need
to hit malloc for these.
Previously we would just set the attributes to the serialized
descriptors, even if they were the empty string.
We now apply defaults when we have empty descriptors and apply parsing
logic from the various `set_*` methods (only applicable to `font-family`
so far where we now extract the value from either a string or a
custom-ident)
Fixes an issue in some css/css-shapes WPT tests where we weren't
properly matching fonts.
Previously we would always try to load the font URL relative to the
document's base URL. This commit means that for CSS-connected
`FontFace`s we now try to load relative to the URL of the stylesheet
that contains the associated `CSSFontFaceRule`
The spec states that updates to descriptors in a `@font-face` rule
should be reflected in the connected `FontFace`'s attributes.
Previously this was achieved by directly accessing those descriptors
when calling the attribute getters, but this has a couple of issues:
a) The changes are only reflected if we use the accessors (i.e.
`FontFace::family()` rather than `FontFace::m_family`) which isn't
the case everywhere
b) The changes aren't persisted after the `FontFace` is disconnected
from it's `CSSFontFaceRule`
To fix these issues we now reparse and store the `FontFace`'s attributes
whenever the `CSSFontFaceRule`'s descriptors change.
This means we now allow oblique angles when parsing the `font`
shorthand.
This also required us to rename the existing `FontStyle` enum to
`FontStyleKeyword`
Use the newly added `partial interface mixin` support to move the
CSS animation event handler attributes to their proper location as
specified in CSS Animations Level 1.
The exact same two steps are repeated for all of these in
CSSNumericValue. These steps are complicated enough that it makes
sense to factor them out into some helpers.
Add ElementResizeAction to Page (maybe there's a better place). It's
just a mousemove delegate that updates styles on the target element.
Add ChromeMetrics for zoom-invariant chrome like scrollbar thumb
thickness, resize gripper size, paddings, etc. It's not user-stylable
but separates basic concerns in a way that a visually gifted
designer unlike myself can adjust to taste.
These values are pre-divided by zoom factor so that PaintableBox can
continue using device_pixels_per_css_pixel calls as normal.
The adjusted metrics are computed on demand from Page multiple times
per paint cycle, which is not ideal but avoids lifetime management and
atomics. Maybe someone with more surety about the painting flow control
can improve this, but it won't be a huge win. If profiling shows
this slowing paints, then Ladybird is in good shape.
Update PaintableBox to draw the resize gripper and deconflict
the scrollbars. Set apropriate cursors for scrollbars and gripper in
mousemove. We override EventHandler's cursor handling because nothing
should ever come between a man and his resize gripper.
Chrome metrics use the CSSPixels class. This is good because it's
broadly compatible but bad because they're actually different units
when zoom is not 1.0. If that's a problem, we could make a new type
or just use double.
Previously we would do two cascaded property lookups per property during
style computation - the first to get the value of the property and the
second to check whether it was marked as important. We now do this as a
single lookup to save some unnecessary work.
Previously we would run it once within `set_src()` and then again within
`set_property()` which would lead to us creating two new `FontFace`s
instead of just one
Previously, we registered `@property` rules during parsing, and treated
them the same as `CSS.registerProperty()` calls. This is not correct
for a couple of reasons: One, the spec wants us to distinguish between
those two sources of registered custom properties, with
`CSS.registerProperty()` calls taking precedence. Two, we never removed
the registered property when its `@property` was removed from the
document.
This commit deals with this by iterating active CSSPropertyRules to find
which ones currently apply, and storing those in a cache. This cache is
invalidated whenever the Document's style is invalidated, which happens
whenever a CSSRule is added or removed from the Document.
The attached test demonstrates this now working as it should.
If a custom property is registered, then it may have an initial value
which we should fall back to here.
This is a temporary hack until we cascade our custom properties (see
https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/pull/6608).
Previously, some StyleValues created a large number of intermediate
strings during serialization. Passing a StringBUilder into the
serialization function allows us to avoid a large number of these
unnecessary allocations.
This adds visit_edges(Cell::Visitor&) methods to various helper structs
that contain GC pointers, and makes sure they are called from owning
GC-heap-allocated objects as needed.
These were found by our Clang plugin after expanding its capabilities.
The added rules will be enforced by CI going forward.