the float ceiling.
As the float ceiling is relative to the border box, not the margin box,
of the parent flow, top margin must not be included.
This exposed a pre-existing bug whereby margins are discarded if a block
contains only floats and no content, affecting the tests
`float_intrinsic_height.html` and `margins_inside_floats_a.html`. As a
workaround, some invisible content has been added to the bodies of both
tests.
when estimating the inline size of block formatting contexts.
The speculated inline-size of the preceding floats was forced to zero at
the wrong time if the float was itself cleared, causing it to overwrite
the speculated value. Shuffling the code around a bit fixes the problem.
I think this should have been changed in #3618 but was missed. r? @pcwalton
I wasn't able to come up with a good test case for this, partly because of other bugs related to floats and formatting contexts.
This fixes a bug in finding the top left corner of an RTL block in physical
coordinates. (The old code used the `start` point of the `position` rect,
which is not always the top left.)
It also fixes the setting of `position.start.i` in certain mixed LTR/RTL
cases.
There is still a bug related to `position.size` for RTL blocks with margins.
See the FIXME comments for details.
`cellspacing` attribute per HTML5 § 14.3.9.
Table layout code has been refactored to push the spacing down to
rowgroups and rows; this will aid the implementation of
`border-collapse` as well.
This commit also fixes two nasty issues in table layout:
* In fixed layout, extra space would not be divided among columns that
had auto width but had nonzero minimum width.
* In automatic layout, extra space would be distributed to constrained
columns as well even if unconstrained columns with percentage equal to
zero were present.
§ 12.3-12.5.
Only simple alphabetic and numeric counter styles are supported. (This
is most of them though.)
Although this PR adds a sequential pass to layout, I verified that on
pages that contain a reasonable number of ordered lists (Reddit
`/r/rust`), the time spent in generated content resolution is dwarfed by
the time spent in the parallelizable parts of layout. So I don't expect
this to negatively affect our parallelism expect perhaps in pathological
cases.
...and vice-versa. This is not a complete fix for all mixed-direction layout
cases, but it fixes enough problems to make some simple test cases pass, like
tha attached reftest.
There are FIXME comments for many of the remaining issues. In particular,
this does not yet handle RTL layout of fixed/absolute elements.
Only simple alphabetic and numeric counter styles are supported. (This
is most of them though.)
Although this PR adds a sequential pass to layout, I verified that on
pages that contain a reasonable number of ordered lists (Reddit
`/r/rust`), the time spent in generated content resolution is dwarfed by
the time spent in the parallelizable parts of layout. So I don't expect
this to negatively affect our parallelism expect perhaps in pathological
cases.
Moved from #4544, because Critic.
Fixes#4544.
§ 12.3-12.5.
Only simple alphabetic and numeric counter styles are supported. (This
is most of them though.)
Although this PR adds a sequential pass to layout, I verified that on
pages that contain a reasonable number of ordered lists (Reddit
`/r/rust`), the time spent in generated content resolution is dwarfed by
the time spent in the parallelizable parts of layout. So I don't expect
this to negatively affect our parallelism expect perhaps in pathological
cases.
through display list building.
The old `flow_origin` concept was ill-defined (sometimes the border box
plus the flow origin, sometimes including horizontal margins and
sometimes not, sometimes including relative position and sometimes not),
leading to brittleness and test failures. This commit reworks the logic
to always pass border box origins in during display list building.
The rendering is still wrong beause of #2795, but at least we get a rendering.
(This test change is just for readability, it should be equivalent to before.)
r? @mbrubeck
The rendering is still wrong beause of #2795, but at least we get a rendering.
(This test change is just for readability, it should be equivalent to before.)
The exact rendering is ill-spec'd. Some things are ugly (especially the
width and height of list style images) but they are infrequently used
and I believe this implementation matches the spec. Numeric lists are
not supported yet, since they will require a separate layout pass.
The implementation is a subclass of `BlockFlow`, on advice from Robert
O'Callahan.
I had to use a somewhat unconventional method of computing text
indentation (propagating from blocks down to inlines) because of the way
containing blocks are handled in Servo.
(As a side note, neither Gecko nor WebKit correctly handles percentages
in `text-align`, at least incrementally -- i.e. when the percentages are
relative to the viewport and the viewport is resized.)
By "idempotent" I mean that later passes do not stomp on data from
earlier passes, so that we can run the passes individually for
incremental reflow. The main change here was to stop overwriting the
"minimum inline-size" field of each column with the column's computed
inline-size.
This adds the infrastructure necessary to support stacking contexts that
are not containing blocks for absolutely-positioned elements. Our
infrastructure did not support that before. This minor revamp actually
ended up simplifying the logic around display list building and
stacking-relative position computation for absolutely-positioned flows,
which was nice.