Those type tests are performing type checking on a project using DOM APIs, intended to reflect the usage in a non-node project.
Not loading the node types in that project ensures that the library type declarations don't force a dependency on the node types.
Currently we modify the EXIF-block in place, which may end up "breaking" the JPEG-data of the original PDF document since e.g. saving it from the viewer no longer contains the real EXIF-block.
Hence the EXIF-block replacement is moved into the `JpegStream` class, such that we can copy the data before doing the replacement.
During the XRef stream parsing we're attempting to lookup an entry that hasn't yet been found, since parsing is currently running, and given that we'd also cache free/missing XRef entries we'd then return an incorrect value during normal PDF parsing.
The simplest solution here is to just not cache free/missing XRef entries, since a properly generated PDF document shouldn't be trying to access objects it doesn't contain.
Furthermore, the amount of "extra" parsing now needed for such XRef entries shouldn't be significant enough to be an issue.
It fixes#19505.
We were invaliding throwing actions (in setting event.rc to false) and all the event process was stopped.
Now we're just dumping the exception in the console: the action is skipped and event.rc is not set
else the input fields aren't updated wit KeyStroke actions.
Currently this rule is disabled in a number of spots across the code-base, and unless absolutely necessary we probably shouldn't disable linting, so let's just update the code to fix all the outstanding cases.
Rather than modifying the "raw" dimensions of the page, we'll instead apply the `userUnit` as an *additional* scale-factor via CSS.
*Please note:* It's not clear to me if this solution is fully correct either, or if there's other problems with it, but it at least *appears* to work.
---
With these changes, the following CSS variables are now assumed to be available/set as necessary: `--total-scale-factor`, `--scale-factor`, `--user-unit`, `--scale-round-x`, and `--scale-round-y`.
Given that most inferred links will overlap existing LinkAnnotations, creating a lot of unused `borderStyle` objects seem unnecessary.
Hence we can move that into the `AnnotationLayer.prototype.addLinkAnnotations` method instead, which also allows us to slightly reduce the API-surface.
*Note:* For the issue mentioned on Matrix it'll obviously still make sense to improve the regular expression to detect more URL edge-cases.
However it occurred to me that even once that particular case is fixed there'll always be a risk that inferred links could overlap, and effectively block, the actual LinkAnnotations.
Hence this patch removes the URL comparison to ensure that overlapping inferred links will always be ignored.
To avoid being able to introduce dependencies between tests, and to
bring existing dependencies to the surface, this commit makes sure that
we close the document between tests so that we can't accidentally rely
on state set by a previous test. This prevents multiple tests from
failing if one of them fails and makes debugging easier by being able to
run each test on their own independent of other tests.
This commit, combined with the previous one, is enough to make the ink
editor integration test suite pass consistently if random mode in
Jasmine is enabled, proving that the tests are fully isolated now.
The second test of the basic operations block for the ink editor
depends on the first test to work. This becomes visible if we only run
the second test, using `fit`, which always fails with:
`ProtocolError: Waiting for selector '.annotationEditorLayer' failed:
Runtime.callFunctionOn timed out. Increase the 'protocolTimeout' setting
in launch/connect calls for a higher timeout if needed.`
The problem is that the second test doesn't enable the ink editor and
relies on the first test having done that already (because we don't
close the document between tests yet). This commit fixes the issue by
unconditionally enabling the ink editor in the second test to remove the
dependency between the two tests so they both pass in isolation.
Automatically detect links in the text content of a file and automatically
generate link annotations at the appropriate locations to achieve
automatic link detection and hyperlinking.
This pattern was already followed quite consistently outside of the
freetext editor integration tests, so this commit aligns the remaining
places for consistency. This also helps to make the tests more compact
and to reduce the number of changes in follow-up changes.
In most integration tests we already use the pattern of defining the
editor selector once and reusing it in the rest of the test, but it's
not fully consistent everywhere yet. This commit fixes that for the
freetext editor integration tests, which has multiple advantages:
- it improves consistency between the various editor integration tests;
- it removes duplicate function calls and aligns variable definitions;
- it reduces the number of `getEditorSelector` calls that contained
hardcoded IDs, which helps to isolate the tests and to simplify
follow-up patches.
In most integration tests we already use the pattern of defining the
editor selector once and reusing it in the rest of the test, but it's
not fully consistent everywhere yet. This commit fixes that for the
highlight editor integration tests, which has multiple advantages:
- it improves consistency between the various editor integration tests;
- it removes duplicate function calls and aligns variable definitions;
- it reduces the number of `getEditorSelector` calls that contained
hardcoded IDs, which helps to isolate the tests and to simplify
follow-up patches.
This patch fixes a bug that caused incorrect curve shapes when an endpoint lies beyond the page boundaries. It adds a check for the endpoint's position, and if it is outside the page, the point is excluded from the shape's coordinates.
With the changes in PR 18843 the `AnnotationEditorUIManager.prototype.updateMode` method is now asynchronous, which we need to take into account when dispatching the "annotationeditormodechanged" event.
It fixes#19360.
Each glyph in the test case has a fill and a stroke pattern, so the current transform used
to scale the glyph outline must be the same.
In setting the stroke color to green, I noticed that the last outline contains some non-closed
subpaths, so when generating the glyph outline, every time we 'moveTo', we close the previous
subpath.
In most integration tests we already use the pattern of defining the
editor selector once and reusing it in the rest of the test, but it's
not fully consistent everywhere yet. This commit fixes that for the
ink editor integration tests, which has multiple advantages:
- it improves consistency between the various editor integration tests;
- it removes duplicate function calls and aligns variable definitions;
- it reduces the number of `getEditorSelector` calls that contained
hardcoded IDs, which helps to isolate the tests and to simplify
follow-up patches.
In most integration tests we already use the pattern of defining the
editor selector once and reusing it in the rest of the test, but it's
not fully consistent everywhere yet. This commit fixes that for the
stamp editor integration tests, which has multiple advantages:
- it improves consistency between the various editor integration tests;
- it removes duplicate function calls and aligns variable definitions;
- it reduces the number of `getEditorSelector` calls and other helper
function calls that contained hardcoded IDs (by updating them to take
editor selectors as arguments instead of editor IDs), which helps to
isolate the tests and to simplify follow-up patches.
Puppeteer recently got updated to version 24.0.0+, so we're past version
23.9.1- where the integration test failed before and we can enable it
again now that it passes in Chrome.
This has multiple advantages:
- it improves consistency between the various editor integration tests;
- it makes the code easier to read/understand;
- it reduces code duplication.