Jelle Raaijmakers 7a783d3a89 LibWeb: Account for intrinsic width or height in flex base size
In calculating the base size of a flex item, we have a piece of ad-hoc
code that deals with an item that does have an instrinsic aspect ratio,
but not a cross size to resolve that ratio against. In determining the
actual flex item size however, we also take into account the minimum
content width and height, which assumes the box' intrinsic width or
height when available. This would break having an image as a flex item,
which gets stretched to its maximum size within the flex container
instead of the flex item being shrunk to the instrinsic size of the
image.

Fix this by only stretching flex items that do not have an instrinsic
width nor height set.
2024-08-09 17:01:50 +01:00

Ladybird

Ladybird is a truly independent web browser, using a novel engine based on web standards.

Important

Ladybird is in a pre-alpha state, and only suitable for use by developers

Features

We aim to build a complete, usable browser for the modern web.

Ladybird uses a multi-process architecture with a main UI process, several WebContent renderer processes, an ImageDecoder process, and a RequestServer process.

Image decoding and network connections are done out of process to be more robust against malicious content. Each tab has its own renderer process, which is sandboxed from the rest of the system.

At the moment, many core library support components are inherited from SerenityOS:

  • LibWeb: Web rendering engine
  • LibJS: JavaScript engine
  • LibWasm: WebAssembly implementation
  • LibCrypto/LibTLS: Cryptography primitives and Transport Layer Security
  • LibHTTP: HTTP/1.1 client
  • LibGfx: 2D Graphics Library, Image Decoding and Rendering
  • LibArchive: Archive file format support
  • LibUnicode: Unicode and locale support
  • LibAudio, LibMedia: Audio and video playback
  • LibCore: Event loop, OS abstraction layer
  • LibIPC: Inter-process communication

How do I build and run this?

See build instructions for information on how to build Ladybird.

Ladybird runs on Linux, macOS, Windows (with WSL2), and many other *Nixes.

How do I read the documentation?

Code-related documentation can be found in the documentation folder.

Get in touch and participate!

Join our Discord server to participate in development discussion.

Before opening an issue, please see the issue policy and the detailed issue-reporting guidelines.

A general guide for contributing can be found in CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

Ladybird is licensed under a 2-clause BSD license.

Description
No description provided
Readme BSD-2-Clause 280 MiB
Languages
C++ 66.2%
HTML 21.5%
JavaScript 10%
CMake 0.7%
Objective-C++ 0.5%
Other 1%