Make nsIFrame::GetParentStyleContextFrame return the frame directly
instead of indirectly through an out parameter. Remove the unused
nsPresContext parameter.
Implement GetChildList(ChildListID) and GetChildLists(nsTArray<ChildList>*)
for various frame classes. Remove GetAdditionalChildListName(PRInt32)
methods and associated macros and list index constants.
Change the quirks mode text-decoration code (soon to be used for all
modes) to follow CSS 2.1's rules for positioning of decoration lines.
Decorations are now drawn at a constant vertical position established by
the element creating the decoration, and more than one of the same type
(underline, overline, line-through) of decoration are supported on the
same piece of text.
This means that text-decorations can now significantly overflow a text
frame, since the vertical-alignment of the element with text-decoration
may be substantially different from the vertical alignment of the text.
Set overflow areas for text frames with text decorations in
nsLineLayout::RelativePositionFrames since it must happen *after*
vertical alignment is done, and when relative positioning data are
consistent (nsIFrame::GetRelativeOffset matches the offset that has been
applied).
This lets us avoid clamping the scale in more situations. We should only clamp the scale when we think
the scale is changing due to a changing transform --- the goal of clamping is to not have to redraw the content
too often when the content is zooming in or out.
The basic idea is that whenever a layer transaction updates the window, we clear out the invalidation state for the canvas rendering context,
using a DidTransactionCallback registered on the layer(s) for the canvas, which calls MakeContextClean.
The DidTransactionCallbacks are directed to the user data attached to the Layer, which holds a strong reference to the canvas element. This
ensures that the element lives as long as the layer. Layers are destroyed when the presentation is torn down (including if the frame is destroyed),
so we can't have a leak here. The reference to the canvas element is only strong because the layer might briefly outlive the frame (the layer
won't be destroyed until the next paint of the window).
This patch moves responsibility for calling CanvasLayer::Updated and nsFrame::MarkLayersActive from the canvas context to nsHTMLCanvasElement::InvalidateFrame.
We call Updated on the retained CanvasLayer, if there is one; any other CanvasLayers created for this canvas would only be used once, and have Updated
called on them in BuildLayer when created.
The basic idea is that whenever a layer transaction updates the window, we clear out the invalidation state for the canvas rendering context,
using a DidTransactionCallback registered on the layer(s) for the canvas, which calls MakeContextClean.
The DidTransactionCallbacks are directed to the user data attached to the Layer, which holds a strong reference to the canvas element. This
ensures that the element lives as long as the layer. Layers are destroyed when the presentation is torn down (including if the frame is destroyed),
so we can't have a leak here. The reference to the canvas element is only strong because the layer might briefly outlive the frame (the layer
won't be destroyed until the next paint of the window).
This patch moves responsibility for calling CanvasLayer::Updated and nsFrame::MarkLayersActive from the canvas context to nsHTMLCanvasElement::InvalidateFrame.
We call Updated on the retained CanvasLayer, if there is one; any other CanvasLayers created for this canvas would only be used once, and have Updated
called on them in BuildLayer when created.