The specification doesn't say how to deal with percentages when
determining the minimum and maximum size of a table grid, so follow the
approach that Chromium uses.
Essentially, figure out the "missing" percentage from the non-percentage
columns and then use that to work backwards to fine the size of the
percentage ones.
This change is larger than one might expect, because this percentage
approach shouldn't happen for tables that are descendants of a flex,
grid or table container (except when there is an interceding absolute).
We have to pass this information down when building the box tree. This
will also make it easier to improve propagated text decorations in the
future.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
This adds initial support for table captions. To do this, the idea of
the table wrapper becomes a bit more concrete. Even so, the wrapper is
still reponsible for allocating space for the grid's border and padding,
as those properties are specified on the wrapper and not grid in CSS.
In order to account for this weirdness of HTML/CSS captions and grid are
now laid out and placed with a negative offset in the table wrapper
content rect.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
A sequence of whitespace shouldn't generate an anonymous table row/cell,
but we can't just throw away the leading whitespace, because afterwards
we may encounter some other content, and then the leading whitespace
should appear in the cell (noticeable with e.g. `white-space: pre`).
This change adds a version of row height distribution that follows the
distribtuion algorithm used for tables in Blink's LayoutNG. This is just
an intermediate step toward implementing a distribution algorithm for
both rows and columns more similar to Layout NG.
The CSS Table 3 specification is often wrong with regard to web
compatability, which is why we have abandoned it in favor of the Layout
NG algorithm for row height distribution. this work.
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
This adds support for table rows, columns, rowgroups and colgroups.
There are few additions here:
1. The createion of fragments, which allows script queries and hit
testing to work properly. These fragments are empty as all cells are
still direct descendants of the table fragment.
2. Properly handling size information from tracks and track groups as
well as frustrating rules about reordering rowgroups.
3. Painting a background seemlessly across track groups and groups. This
is a thing that isn't done in legacy layout (nor WebKit)!
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
* layout: Add *very* basic support for table layout
This is the first step to proper table layout. It implements a naive
layout algorithm, notably only taking into account the preferred widths
of the first table row. Still, it causes some float tests to start
passing, so turn on the `layout.tables.enabled` preference for those
directories.
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
* Address review comments
* Fix a crash with rowspan=0
* Turn on pref and update results for `/css/css-tables` and `/css/CSS2/tables`
---------
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>