Previously, has_scrollable_overflow was a purely geometric check, true
whenever content extended beyond the padding box regardless of the
overflow property. This caused unnecessary scroll frame allocation for
boxes with `overflow:visible`.
Per CSS Overflow 3, scrollable overflow is only defined for scroll
containers (overflow: auto/hidden/scroll). Gate the flag on
`is_scroll_container()` so that only actual scroll containers get scroll
frames assigned.
Compute inline-block baselines by traversing into nested block children
to find the last in-flow line box, using correct offsets relative to the
margin box edge.
Also ensure inline-flex and inline-grid containers always derive their
baseline from content (per CSS Align), and add special handling for
<input> elements which have `overflow: clip` in the UA stylesheet but
should still align adjacent text with their internal content.
Inline nodes in our layout tree have a position, so let's show it. By
centralizing the logic for this, block nodes now lose their redundant
'content-size' dump info which is already part of the box model dump.
Browsers such as Chrome and Firefox apply an arbitrary scale to the
current font size if `normal` is used for `line-height`. Firefox uses
1.2 while Chrome uses 1.15. Let's go with the latter for now, it's
relatively easy to change if we ever want to go back on that decision.
This also requires updating the expectations for a lot of layout tests.
The upside of this is that it's a bit easier to compare our layout
results to other browsers', especially Chrome.
This is a part of refactoring towards making the paintable tree
independent of the layout tree. Now, instead of transferring text
fragments from the layout tree to the paintable tree during the layout
commit phase, we allocate separate PaintableFragments that contain only
the information necessary for painting. Doing this also allows us to
get rid LineBoxes, as they are used only during layout.
This patch makes a few changes to the way we calculate line-height:
- `line-height: normal` is now resolved using metrics from the used
font (specifically, round(A + D + lineGap)).
- `line-height: calc(...)` is now resolved at style compute time.
- `line-height` values are now absolutized at style compute time.
As a consequence of the above, we no longer need to walk the DOM
ancestor chain looking for line-heights during style computation.
Instead, values are inherited, resolved and absolutized locally.
This is not only much faster, but also makes our line-height metrics
match those of other engines like Gecko and Blink.