Now if you add a new inherited, pref-controlled property, you must
declare whether it can have an effect on scrollbar styles. If no,
then the property will be skipped in the assertions that check
whether our cached styles are equal to those we would compute.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D37507
I think this is a good change regardless of other discussion in bug 1552587. If
we decide to move `mColor` to the top-level of the struct that can be done
separately.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D32726
This method is used when updating the SMIL override style and from Web
Animations' Animation.commitStyles method. By using update we accurately return
false when no change is made to a declaration block.
For SMIL this simply acts as an optimization, meaning we can avoid updating the
SMIL override style ub some cases.
For Animation.commitStyles, however, this allows us to avoid generating
a mutation record. Normally making a redundant change to an attribute *does*
generate a mutation record but the style attribute is different. All browsers
avoid generating a mutation record for a redundant change to inline style.
This is specified in the behavior for setProperty[1] which does not update the
style attribute if updated is false.
[1] https://drafts.csswg.org/cssom/#dom-cssstyledeclaration-setproperty
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D30871
Also, buffer the errors, since we're going to want to look at the whole
declaration block to skip reporting them.
This shouldn't change behavior, just moves some work to the caller, and defers a
bit the work so that it happens only when error reporting is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D30200
The text-decoration-line is a drive-by thing, but I can put it in a separate
patch if you want. It was needed for Servo (to compute
-servo-text-decorations-in-effect), but I moved Servo away from that model a
while ago.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D26254
We don't have lossy currentcolor in the style system anymore, except for a
single property -moz-font-smoothing-background-color.
I could've converted it into a proper StyleColor and thread down all the
necessary information to the font metrics code.
But it doesn't really seem worth it given it's not exposed to the web, so I just
did the simplest thing, which is making currentcolor compute to transparent to
that specific property.
This patch also removes the stores_complex_colors_lossily code and related,
since now we always can cache computed colors.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D26187
It's not very easy to understand on its current state, and it causes subtle bugs
like bug 1533654.
It could be simpler if we centralized where the interactions between properties
are handled. This patch does this.
This patch also changes how MathML script sizes are tracked when scriptlevel
changes and they have relative fonts in between.
With this patch, any explicitly specified font-size is treated the same (being a
scriptlevel boundary), regardless of whether it's either an absolute size, a
relative size, or a wide keyword.
Relative lengths always resolve relative to the constrained size, which allows
us to avoid the double font-size computation, and not give up on sanity with
keyword font-sizes.
I think given no other browser supports scriptlevel it seems like the right
trade-off.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D23070
The way the copy-on-write stuff works, and the way that we have to apply
properties from most specific to less specific guarantees that always that we're
going to inherit an inherited property, or reset a reset property, we have
already the right value on the style.
Revert relies on that, so there doesn't seem to be a reason to not use that fact
more often and skip useless work earlier.
Font-size is still special of course... I think I have a way to move the
specialness outside of the style, but piece by piece.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D21882
The only fishy bit is the animation stuff. In particular, there are two places
where we just mint the revert behavior:
* When serializing web-animations keyframes (the custom properties stuff in
declaration_block.rs). That codepath is already not sound and I wanted to
get rid of it in bug 1501530, but what do I know.
* When getting an animation value from a property declaration. At that point
we no longer have the CSS rules that apply to the element to compute the
right revert value handy. It'd also use the wrong style anyway, I think,
given the way StyleBuilder::for_animation works.
We _could_ probably get them out of somewhere, but it seems like a whole lot
of code reinventing the wheel which is probably not useful, and that Blink
and WebKit just cannot implement either since they don't have a rule tree,
so it just doesn't seem worth the churn.
The custom properties code looks a bit different in order to minimize hash
lookups in the common case. FWIW, `revert` for custom properties doesn't seem
very useful either, but oh well.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D21877
It's a global object, it doesn't have to be stored in nsFont. Pass it from the
caller like the user font set and co.
Depends on D20141
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D20142
This is more consistent with what the Rust bits of the style system do, and
removes a pointer from ComputedStyle which is always nice.
This also aligns the Rust bits with the C++ bits re. not treating xul pseudos as
anonymous boxes. See the comment in nsTreeStyleCache.cpp regarding those.
Can't wait for XUL trees to die.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D19002
This patch:
* Makes LengthPercentageOrAuto generic, and removes a bunch of code fo
LengthPercentageOrNone, which was used only for servo and now can use the
normal MaxLength (with a cfg() guard for the ExtremumLength variant).
* Shrinks MaxLength / MozLength's repr(C) reperesentation by reducing enum
nesting. The shrinking is in preparation for using them from C++ too, though
that'd be a different bug.
* Moves NonNegative usage to the proper places so that stuff for them can be
derived.
I did this on top of bug 1523071 to prove both that it could be possible and
that stuff wasn't too messy. It got a bit messy, but just because of a bug I
had fixed in bindgen long time ago already, so this updates bindgen's patch
version to grab a fix instead of ugly workarounds :)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17762
It does not represent `<length> | <percentage>`, but `<length-percentage>`, so
`LengthOrPercentage` is not the right name.
This patch is totally autogenerated using:
rg 'LengthOrPercentage' servo | cut -d : -f 1 | sort | uniq > files
for file in $(cat files); do sed -i "s#LengthOrPercentage#LengthPercentage#g" $file; done
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D15812
This implements the mechanism reusing the animation machinery for now, so it
asserts in a few cases that this wouldn't handle correctly.
For shorthands that have colors and other bits we'd need a more sophisticated
mechanism with a bit more code (that resolves colors and such), but it'd look
something like this regardless, and we should have this in any case.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11944
There are better ways, plus the existing code didn't handle aliases at
all (not that it needed to, but it's better if it does).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10838
Most of the change is moving sets around to be static functions on
LonghandIdSet. I think I like that pattern, but I can also make the new set a
global static and add mako code to be `pub` or something.
Though I think the LonghandIdSet::foo().contains(..) pattern is nice to read :)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10653