We cache on the AST node side as this is easier to track a position, we
just have to take care to wrap the values in a handle to make sure they
are not garbage collected.
Since tagged template literals can inspect the raw string it is not a
syntax error to have invalid escapes. However the cooked value should be
`undefined`.
We accomplish this by tracking whether parse_string_literal
fails and then using a NullLiteral (since UndefinedLiteral is not a
thing) and finally converting null in tagged template execution to
undefined.
We use strtod to convert a string to number after checking whether the
string is [+-]Infinity, however strtod also checks for either 'inf' or
'infinity' in a case-insensitive.
There are still valid cases for strtod to return infinity like 10e100000
so we just check if the "number" contains 'i' or 'I' in which case
the strtod infinity is not valid.
Assuming we had at least one argument meant that the ...arg count would
underflow causing the bound function to have length 0 instead of the
given length when binding with no arguments.
This hook allows us to reject private elements on certain exotic
objects like the window object in browser.
Note that per the spec we should only call this hook if the host is a
web browser, however because LibJS has no way of knowing whether it is
in a web browser environment we just always call the host hook.
Widget::handle_leave_event() hides the tooltip if one is shown. That's
usually fine and hides the widget's tooltip, but it can happen that
another widget managed to show a tooltip after the Leave event was
triggered and before it's processed.
Thus change handle_leave_event() to only hide the tooltip if it was show
by the widget.
Fixes the case where this could happen in the flame graph in Profiler
when moving the mouse over the tooltip window itself #14852.
This is a basic attempt at trying to handle parent container case
justify-content: flex-end.
Test-scenario:
Head to https://ryanwatkins.me and note that now the header nav is on
the right as opposed to the left in-line with how Chrome/Firefox would
respectively handle it also, i.e. 'flex-end'
Implementation:
Move cursor to the end and render in reverse backwards shifting the
cursor leftwards.
Since we already have the directory open, let's have an API to fchown()
the underlying file descriptor instead of forcing clients to do another
path lookup.
Other programs use Core::Account::login(), notably su(1), which stopped
working due to a missing "cpath" pledge promise.
This patch moves the /tmp/user/ creation logic to a separate function
that LoginServer can call.
These arrows were previously drawn using the code points U+2B06 and
U+2B07. The .png files for these emoji were removed in commit bfe99eb
and added to the Katica Regular 10 font in commit cf62d08. The emoji
were not added to the bold Katica variants that are used by the table
header view. The effect is that a "?" replacement character was
rendered.
Instead of rendering the emoji, we can draw the arrows programatically,
like we do in other GUI components (e.g. the scrollbar).
Using the fact that there are 2^52-2 NaN representations we can
"NaN-box" all the Values possible. This means that Value no longer has
an explicit "Type" but that information is now stored in the bits of a
double. This is done by "tagging" the top two bytes of the double.
For a full explanation see the large comment with asserts at the top of
Value.
We can also use the exact representation of the tags to make checking
properties like nullish, or is_cell quicker. But the largest gains are
in the fact that the size of a Value is now halved.
The SunSpider and other benchmarks have been ran to confirm that there
are no regressions in performance compared to the previous
implementation. The tests never performed worse and in some cases
performed better. But the biggest differences can be seen in memory
usage when large arrays are allocated. A simple test which allocates a
1000 arrays of size 100000 has roughly half the memory usage.
There is also space in the representations for future expansions such as
tuples and records.
To ensure that Values on the stack and registers are not lost during
garbage collection we also have to add a check to the Heap to check for
any of the cell tags and extracting the canonical form of the pointer
if it matches.
Since Completion has an enum for state we have plenty of space to add
an extra type which indicates on empty completion.
Since Optional<Completion> is used in every ThrowCompletionOr<...>
this saves quite some stack space as most function in LibJS return
types like that.
This saves 8 bytes for every Optional<Completion>.
Values can be "empty" which only has a valid meaning for array holes.
We can however use this state the represent the empty state of an
Optional<Value> which is used in a lot of placed, because of Completion
having one.
This saves 8 bytes for every Optional<Value>.
This patch allows to insert "%uid" in `IPC_CLIENT_CONNECTION`
declaration and in SystemServer's ini files. This pattern is replaced
then replaced by the UID of the owner of the service. It opens a path
for seamlessly managed, per-user portal.
The `/tmp/user` directory is owned by root, this solution prevents
malicious users to interfere with other users' portals.
This commit also moves `launch`'s portal in the user directory.
This makes modifications in FontEditor more visible, both so you know
what you've changed, and for taking a handy "here's what's changed"
screenshot for a font PR. :^)
The background color for new glyphs is green, modified glyphs is blue,
and deleted glyphs is red. The changes persist until you load a new
font file, so you can continue saving your work as you go and still be
able to take a convenient screenshot at the end.
I didn't feel like this one use was enough to add 3 new color roles to
themes, so to make this look decent on dark themes, it detects if the
theme is marked as dark, and uses darker colors for the highlights
which look nice with a light text color.