Compute the contributions to a spanning cell width from each cell in the
span. This better handles uneven column widths, since each cell
contribution is proportional with its own width as opposed to the own
width of the first cell in the span.
This better matches the behavior of other browsers and further aligns
with the specification.
The part in FFC where we ask the parent formatting context to size the
flex container midway through layout is really weird, but let's at least
be consistently weird for BFC and IFC. Since IFC always works within its
parent BFC, it can simply forward these requests to the BFC.
This fixes an issue where inline-flex containers incorrectly had main
axis margins subtracted from their content size.
Two files are used both as test inputs for the webp decoder test and
for the icc profile test.
Use redundant copies of these two files for the two usecases, since
different parts of the files are used in both tests (and we could
remove the unneeded parts later).
With multi-line text cells, we don't reliably know the height would stay
the same as the one set by the independent format context run. In such
situations, we can end up with a table box which is sized inconsistently
with the grid boxes of the table due to differences in line breaks.
simple-vp8l-alpha-used-false.webp is a copy of simple-vp8l.webp,
with the byte at offset 0x18 changed from 0x10 to 0x00 -- that
is, the bit in the VP8L header that stores `is_alpha_used` is cleared.
We would already allocated a BGRx8888 instead of a BGRA8888 bitmap,
but keep actual alpha data in the `x` channel.
That lead to at least `image` still writing a PNG with an alpha channel.
So explicitly set the alpha channel to 0xff when is_alpha_used is false,
to make sure all consumers of decoded lossless webp data have behavior
consistent with other webp readers.
In practice, webp encoders usually don't write files that have
`is_alpha_used` set to false and then write actual alpha data to their
output. So this is rarely observable. However, for example for
lossy+ALPH webp files, the lossless webp used to store the ALPH channel
has `is_alpha_used` set to false and all channels but green are 0
(since the lossless green channel stores the alpha channel of a
lossy+ALPH webp). So if we dump such a bitmap to a standalone webp
file (e.g. with the temporary debugging code in fc3249a1ca),
then without this commit here, `image` would convert that webp to
a fully transparent webp, while other webp software would correctly
display the green image with opaque alpha.
I was debugging a different issue in Ladybird, and noticed that
completing relative file URLs with URL::complete_url didn't seem to work
right. This test case covers both the working https case, as well as the
file URL case fixed by the previous commit.
In compute_table_box_width_inside_table_wrapper, we should only consider
available_width when it's valid. Values which come from {min,
max}-content constraints aren't meaningful and shouldn't be considered
for the cap.
Absolutely positioned elements should have their percentage sizes
resolved against the padding box of the containing block, not the
content box.
From CSS-POSITION-3 <https://www.w3.org/TR/css-position-3/#def-cb>
"..the containing block is formed by the padding edge of the ancestor.."
When resolving a percentage min-width or min-height size against a
containing block currently under a min-content constraint, we should act
as if the containing block has zero size in that axis.
"display: max-content" is not a thing. The test was actually not working
correctly, it just looked like it did. Now it has correct metrics for
the body element.
Don't try to implement this AO in bytecode. Instead, the bytecode
Interpreter class now has a run() API with the same inputs as the AST
interpreter. It sets up the necessary environments etc, including
invoking the GlobalDeclarationInstantiation AO.
Since both the WebDriver and Browser API are currently unstable during
WPT tests, it's a good idea to make sure that WPT passes even if there
are unexpected results. This will help avoid having failures marked as
red in the CI system caused by flaky WPT tests.
This is technically "undefined behavior" per CSS 2.2, but it seems
sensible to mirror the behavior of max-height in the same situation.
It also appears to match how other engines behave.
Fixes#19242
The margin from the containing blocks shouldn't be included in the
amount by which we increment x after a float was places. That coordinate
should be relative to the containing block.
Fixes the comments layout on https://lobste.rs.
Introduce very initial and basic support for running Web Platform Tests
for Ladybird. This change includes simple bash script that currently
works only on Debian and could run tests with patched runner.
For now script to run WPT is not integrated in CI.
There is also a bunch of metadata required to run WPT. To avoid
introducing thousands of files in the initial commit for now it is
limited to run only css/CSS2/floats tests subdirectory.
The spec says the result of this algorithm is undefined in such cases,
and it appears that other engines yield a zero size.
More importantly, this prevents us from leaking a non-finite value into
the layout tree.
Although DistinctNumeric, which is supposed to abstract the underlying
type, was used to represent CSSPixels, we have a whole bunch of places
in the layout code that assume CSSPixels::value() returns a
floating-point type. This assumption makes it difficult to replace the
underlying type in CSSPixels with a non-floating type.
To make it easier to transition CSSPixels to fixed-point math, one step
we can take is to prevent access to the underlying type using value()
and instead use explicit conversions with the to_float(), to_double(),
and to_int() methods.
Instead of hard-coding a check for "calc", we now call out to
parse_dynamic_value() which allows use of other functions like min(),
max(), clamp(), etc.
Add logic to compute {min, max}-height and use min-height when
calculating table height, per specifications.
Fixes some issues with phylogenetic tree visualizations on Wikipedia.
Before this change we always returned the font's point size as the
x-height which was basically never correct.
We now get it from the OS/2 table (if one with version >= 2 is available
in the file). Otherwise we fall back to using the ascent of the 'x'
glyph. Most fonts appear to have a sufficiently modern OS/2 table.
The specification isn't explicit about it, but the contribution we
compute should be distributed to all columns, not just the first one.
The first reason for it is symmetry, it doesn't make sense for the
increased width of the spanning column to only affect the first column
in the span.
The second reason is the formula for the cell contribution, which is
weighted by the non-spanning width of the cell relative to the total
width of the columns in the same row. This only covers a fraction of the
gap, in order to fully cover it we have to add it to all columns in the
span. For this to be exactly the case when the columns don't all have
the same width, we'd have to add additional weighting based on the width
ratios, but given that the specification doesn't suggest it at all we'll
leave it out for now.