There are some predefined counter styles (such as the longhand east
asian ones) which are too complex to be defined here and will need to be
implemented ad-hoc, this remains as a FIXME for now.
...instead of returning the one from its associated style sheet.
This reverts 848a250b29 where I made
`CSSImportRule.media` nullable.
CSSImportRule may not have an associated style sheet, because of not
matching a supports condition, or just failing to load the URL.
Regardless of whether we do or not, the expected (non-spec) behaviour
is that we should return a MediaList always, which matches the media
queries specified on the `@import` rule.
The previous implementation assumed that the contents of `supports()`
was either a raw declaration, or a block containing some number of them.
This meant we wouldn't parse things like `supports(not (a:b))` or
`supports(selector(*))`.
`parse_a_supports()` actually does what we want in every case except for
raw declarations (`supports(a: b)`), so let's always call it first, and
then fall back to parsing a single declaration.
This reverts 0e3487b9ab.
Back when I made that change, I thought we could make our StyleValue
classes match the typed-om definitions directly. However, they have
different requirements. Typed-om types need to be mutable and GCed,
whereas StyleValues are immutable and ideally wouldn't require a JS VM.
While I was already making such a cataclysmic change, I've moved it into
the StyleValues directory, because it *not* being there has bothered me
for a long time. 😅
Now we pass all WPT tests in:
`css/css-properties-values-api/at-property-cssom`.
Note: Failing tests were false positives.
Proper handling of inheriting values and detecting computational
independence will be done in another PR.
QualifiedRule::for_each_as_declaration_list() now takes a rule_name, so
that the error message can actually be useful - we only know what a
qualified rule is by context.
This is a bit under-specced, specifically there's no definition of
CSSMarginDescriptors so I've gone with CSSStyleProperties for now. Gets
us 17 WPT subtests.
I was wrong when I added those notes before about this being impossible,
it's *very* possible, for example with the `@page margin` descriptor.
However, until we have a large number of these shorthands and not just a
single example, we can get away with hard-coding support for it.
Ideally we'd be able to share the code between page selectors and style
ones, but given how simple page selectors are, some code duplication is
the simpler option.
The regression in the "conditional-CSSGroupingRule" test is we now fail
the "inserting an `@import`" subtests differently and the subtests
aren't independent. Specifically, we don't yet implement the checks in
`CSSRuleList::insert_a_css_rule()` that reject certain rules from being
inserted. Previously we didn't insert the `@import` rule because we
failed to parse its relative URL. Now we parse it correctly, we end up
inserting it.
It's possible to parse an `@import` rule that isn't attached to a
document. We only actually need it to have one when fetching the linked
style sheet, and that should only happen when the CSSImportRule is
attached to a document. So, we can just accept a null pointer when
constructing it.
We relied on that Document to get the Realm, so pass that in as a
separate parameter.
Our previous approach to `<url>` had a couple of issues:
- We'd complete the URL during parsing, when we should actually keep it
as the original string until it's used.
- There's nowhere for us to store `<url-modifier>`s on a `URL::URL`.
So, `CSS::URL` is a solution to this. It holds the original URL string,
and later will also hold any modifiers. This commit parses all `<url>`s
as `CSS::URL`, but then converts it into a `URL::URL`, so no user code
is changed. These will be modified in subsequent commits.
For `@namespace`, we were never supposed to complete the URL at all, so
this makes that more correct already. However, in practice all
`@namespace`s are absolute URLs already, so this should have no
observable effects.
To prepare for introducing a CSS::URL type, we need to qualify any use
of LibURL as `::URL::foo` instead of `URL::foo` so the compiler doesn't
get confused.
Many of these uses will be replaced, but I don't want to mix this in
with what will likely already be a large change.
CSSFontFaceRule now stores its values as a CSSFontFaceDescriptors, with
a ParsedFontFace produced on request. This is exposed via the `style`
attribute, so we pass a lot of tests that try to read values from
that.
We have one test regression, which we passed by mistake before: The test
wanted to ensure we don't allow `@font-face` nested inside other rules.
We passed it just because we discarded any `@font-face` without a
`font-family`. What we're supposed to do is 1) keep at-rules with
missing required descriptors and just not use them, and 2) reject
certain ones when nested.
We may want to cache the ParsedFontFace in the future, but I didn't here
because 1) it's called rarely, and 2) that would mean knowing to
invalidate it when the CSSFontFaceDescriptors changes, which isn't
obvious to me right now.
There were several issues with the previous parsing code, like ignoring
trailing tokens, not handling whitespace, and not requiring the value
to be a `<family-name>`. So, fix all that.
Also correct the serialization code, which didn't call
`serialize_a_string()` previously.