Soon, CSSColorValue will be an abstract class, and we'll instead create
a CSSRGB, CSSHSL, or other specific color type from the Typed-OM spec.
However, it's still useful to have an easy "just give me a style value
for this color" method. So change the name to distinguish this from the
usual StyleValue::create() methods.
`BrowsingContext::m_parent` has been removed from the spec,
and previously `m_parent` was always null.
`BrowsingContext::is_top_level` was already always returning
true before because of that, and the updated spec algorithm
causes assertions to fail.
This fixes the following example:
```html
<a href="about:blank" target="test">a
<iframe name="test">
```
clicking the link twice no longer causes it to open in a new tab.
The CRC2D path should be unaffected by the CRC2D transform changing.
To achieve this, we transform the path to compensate whenever the
CRC2D transform is changed.
This thing is essentially a wrapper around an SkPath, although we do
some indirection via a PathImpl class to keep the door open for
alternative rasterizer/path backends in the future.
We also update the 2D canvas code, since that was the only code that
used Painter+DeprecatedPath, and this allows us to just drop that
code instead of temporarily supporting it until the next commit.
This new painter is written with a virtual interface from the start,
and we begin with a Skia backend.
This patch adds enough to support our basic 2D HTML canvas usecase.
...if only the scroll offset is updated.
Currently, on any document with a large amount of content, the process
of building a display list is often more expensive than its
rasterization. This is because the amount of work required to build a
display list is proportional to the size of the paintable tree, whereas
rasterization only occurs for the portion visible in the viewport.
This change is the first step toward improving this process by caching
the display list across repaints when neither style nor layout requires
invalidation. This means that repainting while scrolling becomes
significantly less expensive, as we only need to reapply the scroll
offsets to the existing display list.
The performance improvement is especially visible on pages like
https://ziglang.org/documentation/master/ or
https://www.w3.org/TR/css-grid-2/
Copy a display list item and apply scroll offset instead of mutating
display list directly.
It's a preparation for upcoming changes where a display list will be
cached across repaints and used multiple times with different scroll
offsets.
This factory forced callers to make a list of GC-allocated FileAPI::File
objects. This isn't safe - this opens a window for these files to be
garbage collected before the FileList object stores / visits the list.
Instead, only allow creating an empty FileList and incrementally adding
files to that list.
This allows us to use HeapFunction all of the way down, allowing us
to remove the Handle usage in after_session_callback for
create_new_child_navigable.
...For the completion steps. This is quite nice, as we can simply
capture this in the heap function where it is used instead of
needing to establish a new root.
Note that with these changes, to represent 'an empty algorithm', we now
use a null HeapFunction and do not invoke the steps.
For a long time, we've used two terms, inconsistently:
- "Identifier" is a spec term, but refers to a sequence of alphanumeric
characters, which may or may not be a keyword. (Keywords are a
subset of all identifiers.)
- "ValueID" is entirely non-spec, and is directly called a "keyword" in
the CSS specs.
So to avoid confusion as much as possible, let's align with the spec
terminology. I've attempted to change variable names as well, but
obviously we use Keywords in a lot of places in LibWeb and so I may
have missed some.
One exception is that I've not renamed "valid-identifiers" in
Properties.json... I'd like to combine that and the "valid-types" array
together eventually, so there's no benefit to doing an extra rename
now.