We were previously not allowing the user to select text when the clicked
position represented a click-focusable area. This included text within
dialogs (as the dialog element is click-focusable) and labels (as the
associated input element would be considered click-focusable).
We now no longer consider associated input elements when clicking on a
label. This is handled separately already by the label's activation
behavior steps, so there is no loss of functionality here. In those
steps, though, we now no longer propagate the click event to the input
element if a selection was made during the click. This matches the
behavior of Firefox and Chrome.
With label elements no longer considered here, we can then enter the
character selection mode when click-focusable areas are clicked.
We were using a separately fired timer for auto scrolling ticks, but it
makes more sense to tie this into the rendering steps of which
`::run_the_scroll_steps()` is a part. Should fix the flaky
`Text/input/viewport-auto-scroll.html` test.
Fixes#7939.
When the mouse is dragged from inside a scrollable container to outside
of it, we now automatically scroll the container so the selection can be
extended. Scroll speed scales with the distance past the scrollport
edge, capped at a maximum. Edges close to the viewport boundary get a
wider activation zone so the speed ramp works predictably even when the
mouse has limited room to move.
The logic is encapsulated in AutoScrollHandler, which EventHandler
creates lazily on mouse selection start.
When editing or changing the selection inside an <input> or <textarea>,
we should scroll the container so the cursor is always visible. Note
that currently the cursor might still become invisible at the end of the
container since we do not reserve enough space for it to be made
visible.
When triple clicking on text, we should select the entire paragraph, or
entire line in <input>s and <textarea>s. If the mouse button is held
down and the user starts dragging, the selection expands with additional
paragraphs or lines.
This expands on the work of Kai Wildberger (PR #7681) but was adjusted
for the work that happened previously to support double click + drag
moves and includes triple click support for our Qt UI.
Co-authored-by: Kai Wildberger <kiawildberger@gmail.com>
In EventHandler, we now keep track of a mouse selection mode which is
either None, Character or Word. By double clicking a word and
immediately dragging, you can now extend the selection word by word
instead of by character.
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.
Adds pinch event handling that adjusts the VisualViewport scale and
offset. VisualViewport's (offset, scale) is then used to construct a
transformation matrix which is applied before display list execution.
We have to prevent from including any SDL headers in LibWeb headers.
Otherwise there will be transitive Windows.h includes that will
re-declare some of our existing forward decls/defines in
LibCore/SocketAddressWindows.h
The faux position we created here is adjusted by the device pixel ratio
later on, which would invoke integer overflow on screens with a DPR
greater than 1.
Instead of creating special data for a mouse move event, let's just add
an explicit leave event handler.
Resulting in a massive rename across almost everywhere! Alongside the
namespace change, we now have the following names:
* JS::NonnullGCPtr -> GC::Ref
* JS::GCPtr -> GC::Ptr
* JS::HeapFunction -> GC::Function
* JS::CellImpl -> GC::Cell
* JS::Handle -> GC::Root
Bring the names of various boxes closer to spec language. This should
hopefully make things easier to understand and hack on. :^)
Some notable changes:
- LayoutNode -> Layout::Node
- LayoutBox -> Layout::Box
- LayoutBlock -> Layout::BlockBox
- LayoutReplaced -> Layout::ReplacedBox
- LayoutDocument -> Layout::InitialContainingBlockBox
- LayoutText -> Layout::TextNode
- LayoutInline -> Layout::InlineNode
Note that this is not strictly a "box tree" as we also hang inline/text
nodes in the same tree, and they don't generate boxes. (Instead, they
contribute line box fragments to their containing block!)
To implement form controls internally in LibWeb (necessary for multi
process forms), we'll need the ability to handle events since we can't
rely on LibGUI widgets anymore.
A LayoutNode can now override wants_mouse_events() and if it returns
true, it will now receive mousedown, mousemove and mouseup events. :^)
You can now cycle through focusable elements (currently only hyperlinks
are focusable) with the Tab key.
The focus outline is rendered in a new FocusOutline paint phase.
This works everywhere right now, but it's obviously not going to stay
that way forever. :^)
Note that this does not advance the cursor correctly for whitespace
since the cursor is DOM-based and doesn't take whitespace collapsing
into account yet.