Previously we were doing a couple things wrong:
- Using the cascaded rather than computed value (so we didn't support
CSS-wide keywords)
- Only supporting the case where we had one animation-play-state
Previously we would only update these if:
a) We had a cascaded value for `transition-property`
b) The source of that cascaded value had changed since we last
registered transitions
This meant that there were a lot of changes we didn't apply:
- Changes exclusively to properties other than `transition-property`
(e.g. `transition-duration`, `transition-behavior`, etc)
- Removing the `transition-property` property
- Updating the `transition-property` property in a way that didn't
change it's source (e.g. setting it within inline-style)
Unfortunately this does mean that we now register transitions for all
properties on most elements since "all" is the initial value for
"transition-property" which isn't great for performance, but that can be
looked at in later commits.
Also renames the `clear_transitions` function to clarify this doesn't
affect the associated transition animations.
This fixes an issue where transitions weren't being cancelled when the
relevant transition-property entry was no longer present
This updates the `parse_text_decoration_line_value` to reject values
which non-exclusively include `none` e.g. `underline none`.
It also simplifies handling by always producing a Vector (except for
`none`) and adding VERIFY_NOT_REACHED in more places which shouldn't be
reachable.
We were doing this manually within `Document::update_layout()` and
`CSSStyleProperties::get_direct_property()` but we should do it for all
callers of `Document::update_style()`
Unrecognized property names should still be kept in the list to preserve
matching of indices (e.g. that the Nth property should associate with
the Nth duration)
This excludes `step-end` and `step-start` which are expected to be
converted to the equivalent function at parse time.
We are expected to serialize these as the explicit keywords - previously
we would parse as `EasingStyleValue` and serialize equivalent functions
as the keywords. This caused issues as we would incorrectly serialize
even explicit functions as the keyword.
This also allows us to move the magic easing functions to
`EasingFunction` rather than `EasingStyleValue` which is a bit tidier
We now:
- Serialize longhands in the correct order
- Support serializing multiple values
- Include default longhands where required (to distinguish
animation-name from that longhand).
As `recompute_inherited_style` works in-place rather than building
ComputedProperties from scratch we need to keep track of which animated
properties are inherited to know whether we should remove them when we
have no more inherited value.
When serializing the "style" attribute, we were incorrectly assuming
that some of the grid-related CSS properties would never contain var()
substitution functions.
With this fixed, we can now book appointments on https://cal.com/ :^)
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.
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`
Make sure we have a parent element before trying to look at it!
I've also pulled out a stub function for getting a custom property's
initial value, so that there's only one place to change once we support
`@property` more.
Previously if we encountered a keyword other than `fill` when parsing
`<border-image-slice` we would return a nullptr.
This could cause issues when we parse `<border-image-slice>` as part of
parsing `border-image`, for example `border-image: 100% none` would fail
as we would try parse `none` as part of the `<border-image-slice>`
instead of `<border-image-source>`.
This change makes it so that we don't consume the token and leave it to
be parsed as part of the next section of the grammar.
Custom properties are required to produce a computed value just like
regular properties. The computed value is defined in the spec as
"specified value with variables substituted, or the guaranteed-invalid
value", though in reality all arbitrary substitution functions should be
substituted, not just `var()`.
To support this, we parse the CSS-wide keywords normally in custom
properties, instead of ignoring them. We don't yet handle all of them
properly, and because that will require us to cascade them like regular
properties. This is just enough to prevent regressions when implementing
ASFs.
Our output in this new test is not quite correct, because of the awkward
way we handle whitespace in property values - so it has 3 spaces in the
middle instead of 1, until that's fixed.
It's possible this computed-value production should go in
cascade_custom_properties(), but I had issues with that. Hopefully once
we start cascading custom properties properly, it'll be clearer how
this should all work.
Previously the type argument in attr() could be the name of a CSS type
on its own. This has changed, and now only `raw-string`
(previously `string`) or the name of a dimension unit is allowed. Other
types and more complex grammar use the `type()` function, which we
don't yet support.
I've updated the syntax comment, but not the algorithm itself, which
will be reimplemented in a later commit.
...with inline children. This fixes an issue when we ignore abspos boxes
contained by PaintableWithLines while calculating overflow rect size.
Lots of layout tests are affected, because now PaintableWithLines has
overflow rect.
`Text/input/DOM/Element-set-scroll-left.html` is also affected and now
matches other browsers.
Previusly the implementation only was serializing PseudoElements if they
were the last element in the CompoundSelector. This caused bugs on
Javascript code that referenced their selectorText, where it would be
wrong.
The "longhands" array is populated in the code generator to avoid the
overhead of manually maintaining the list in Properties.json
There is one subtest that still fails in
'cssstyledeclaration-csstext-all-shorthand', this is related to
us not maintaining the relative order of CSS declarations for custom vs
non-custom properties.
url() has some limitations because of allowing unquoted URLs as its
contents. For example, it can't use `var()`. To get around this, there's
an alternative `src()` function which behaves the same as `url()` except
that it is parsed as a regular function, which makes `var()` and friends
work properly.
There's no WPT test for this as far as I can tell, so I added our own.
Resolves a FIXME in `CSSRuleList::insert_a_css_rule`. Gets us a bit
closer to passing https://wpt.live/css/cssom/at-namespace.html but that
requires more work around parsing of selectors with namespaces (namely
disallowing use of undeclared selectors), which I have added a FIXME
for.
The test CSSStyleDeclaration-has-indexed-property-getter is a frequent
source of merge conflicts between PRs that are adding to or otherwise
modifying the list of supported CSS properties.
This is primarily because the test prints out a numeric index of each
property along with the property. As far as I can tell the indexes are
inconsequential for what the test is trying to verify. So lets modify
the printout to only contain the properties without indexes.
This exposed a few bugs which caused the following tests to behave
incorrectly:
- `tab-size-text-wrap.html`: This previously relied on a bug where we
incorrectly treated `white-space: pre` as allowing text wrapping. The
fix here is to implement the text-wrap CSS shorthand property.
- `execCommand-preserveWhitespace.html`: We don't correctly serialize
shorthand properties. This is covered by an existing FIXME in
`CSSStyleProperties::serialized()`
- `white-space-shorthand.html`: The last 5 subtests here fail as we
don't correctly handle shorthand properties in
`CSSStyleProperties::remove_property()`. This is covered by an
existing FIXME in said function.
Submitted to WPT as https://github.com/web-platform-tests/wpt/pull/52598
but in the meantime here's a local version.
The spec for this isn't super thorough, so the tests are based on how
Chrome and Firefox behave. Specifically, Firefox returns the ltr/rtl
keyword in lowercase but Chrome keeps the original case for it.
We currently fail most of these but that will be fixed in subsequent
commits.