Our codebase assumes that a selector only contains a single
pseudo-element, and that it's in the final compound selector. If there
are multiple of them, or they're somewhere else in the selector, we
just silently pretend the others aren't there, which is *not* what we
want, and causes the selector to match things it shouldn't.
A proper fix is quite involved, so as a temporary fix, just reject any
selector that doesn't fit our assumptions during parsing. That way we
get false negatives instead of false positives.
...selector. Grammar per spec: `::slotted( <compound-selector> )`, so
we should reject selector as invalid if first compound selector is
followed by something else.
This change makes layout more correct on https://www.rottentomatoes.com/
This reverts e7890429aa and partly reverts
a59c15481f.
The one pseudo-class that accepted multiple of these was :heading(), and
since that got changed to take integers instead, there's no need to keep
this extra complexity (and memory usage) around.
The upcoming `:heading()` pseudo-class takes multiple comma-separated
An+Bs. Also rename this field as the `:nth-[last-]child()`
pseudo-classes are only a subset of the users.
Resolves a FIXME in `CSSRuleList::insert_a_css_rule`. Gets us a bit
closer to passing https://wpt.live/css/cssom/at-namespace.html but that
requires more work around parsing of selectors with namespaces (namely
disallowing use of undeclared selectors), which I have added a FIXME
for.
The spec requires us to accept any ident here, not just ltr/rtl, and
also serialize it back out. That means we need to keep the original
string around.
In order to not call keyword_from_string() every time we want to match
a :dir() selector, we still attempt to parse the keyword and keep it
around.
A small behaviour change is that now we'll serialize the ident with its
original casing, instead of always lowercase. Chrome and Firefox
disagree on this, so I think either is fine until that can be
officially decided.
Gets us 2 WPT passes (including 1 from the as-yet-unmerged :dir() test).
"Functional" as in "it's a function token" and not "it works", because
the behaviour for these is unimplemented. :^)
This is modeled after the pseudo-class parsing, but with some changes
based on things I don't like about that implementation. I've
implemented the `<pt-name-selector>` parameter used by view-transitions
for now, but nothing else.
We previously supported a few -webkit vendor-prefixed pseudo-elements.
This patch adds those back, along with -moz equivalents, by aliasing
them to standard ones. They behave identically, except for serializing
with their original name, just like for unrecognized -webkit
pseudo-elements.
It's likely to be a while before the forms spec settles and authors
start using the new pseudo-elements, so until then, we can still make
use of styles they've written for the non-standard ones.
The upcoming generated types will match those for pseudo-classes: A
PseudoElementSelector type, that then holds a PseudoElement enum
defining what it is. That enum will be at the top level in the Web::CSS
namespace.
In order to keep the diffs clearer, this commit renames and moves the
types, and then a following one will replace the handwritten enum with
a generated one.
Attempt 2! Reverts 2a5dbedad4
This time, set up a different combinator when producing a relative
invalid selector rather than a standalone one. This fixes the crash.
Original description below for simplicity because it still applies.
---
Selectors like `:is(.valid, &!?!?!invalid)` need to keep the invalid
part around, even though it will never match, for a couple of reasons:
- Serialization needs to include them
- For nesting, we care if a `&` appeared anywhere in the selector, even
in an invalid part.
So this patch introduces an `Invalid` simple selector type, which simply
holds its original ComponentValues. We search through these looking for
`&`, and we dump them out directly when asked to serialize.
Selectors like `:is(.valid, &!?!?!invalid)` need to keep the invalid
part around, even though it will never match, for a couple of reasons:
- Serialization needs to include them
- For nesting, we care if a `&` appeared anywhere in the selector, even
in an invalid part.
So this patch introduces an `Invalid` simple selector type, which simply
holds its original ComponentValues. We search through these looking for
`&`, and we dump them out directly when asked to serialize.