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
Not the prettiest, but it will work, and LengthPercentage will be 12 bytes which
is pretty good (we could do better if wanted I guess):
* Au(i32) length;
* f32 percentage;
* AllowedNumericType(u8) clamping_mode;
* bool has_percentage;
* bool was_calc;
This will allow me to start moving C++ stuff to use this representation.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16929
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 is a first step to share LengthOrPercentage representation between Rust and
Gecko.
We need to preserve whether the value came from a calc() expression, for now at
least, since we do different things depending on whether we're calc or not right
now. See https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/3482 and dependent bugs for
example.
That means that the gecko conversion code needs to handle calc() in a bit of an
awkward way until I change it to not be needed (patches for that incoming in the
next few weeks I hope).
I need to add a hack to exclude other things from the PartialEq implementation
because the new conversion code is less lossy than the old one, and we relied on
the lousiness in AnimationValue comparison (in order to start transitions and
such, in [1] for example).
I expect to remove that manual PartialEq implementation as soon as I'm done with
the conversion.
The less lossy conversion does fix a few serialization bugs for animation values
though, like not loosing 0% values in calc() when interpolating lengths and
percentages, see the two modified tests:
* property-types.js
* test_animation_properties.html
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D15793