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>
* Fix size of tables in flow layout
The contents of a table can make it bigger than what we would expect
from its 'width', 'min-width', 'height' and ' min-height' properties.
Also, 'width: auto' doesn't stretch it to fill the containing block.
We had to refactor the resolution of margins to happen after layout,
otherwise 'auto' margins wouldn't align correctly.
Co-authored-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
* Feedback
* Consistently use `containing_block_for_table` in table layout
* Update test result
---------
Co-authored-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
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 `border-spacing` property. Note that we do
not yet support the collapsed border model.
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>