Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Jenwald
8a979c2d0e [api-minor] Remove Outliner from the official API
As far as I can tell `Outliner` is only exposed in the API because we need to access it when running some of the reference-tests, but is otherwise not used.
Hence this seems like something that should be kept *internal* and thus only exposed in TESTING-builds.
2024-07-16 13:08:26 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
f3d177e3e4 [api-minor] Remove the deprecated renderTextLayer and updateTextLayer functions (PR 18104 follow-up) 2024-06-30 15:16:00 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
15b5808eee [api-minor] Re-factor the basic textLayer-functionality
This is very old code, and predates e.g. the introduction of JavaScript classes, which creates unnecessarily unwieldy code in the viewer.
By introducing a new `TextLayer` class in the API, similar to how e.g. the `AnnotationLayer` looks, we're able to keep most parameters on the class-instance itself. This removes the need to manually track them in the viewer, and simplifies the call-sites.

This also removes the `numTextDivs` parameter from the "textlayerrendered" event, since that's only added to support default-viewer functionality that no longer exists.

Finally we try, as far as possible, to polyfill the old `renderTextLayer` and `updateTextLayer` functions since they are exposed in the library API.
For *simple* invocations of `renderTextLayer` the behaviour should thus be the same, with only a warning printed in the console.
2024-05-17 14:20:20 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
e4d0e84802 [api-minor] Replace the PromiseCapability with Promise.withResolvers()
This replaces our custom `PromiseCapability`-class with the new native `Promise.withResolvers()` functionality, which does *almost* the same thing[1]; please see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/withResolvers

The only difference is that `PromiseCapability` also had a `settled`-getter, which was however not widely used and the call-sites can either be removed or re-factored to avoid it. In particular:
 - In `src/display/api.js` we can tweak the `PDFObjects`-class to use a "special" initial data-value and just compare against that, in order to replace the `settled`-state.
 - In `web/app.js` we change the only case to manually track the `settled`-state, which should hopefully be OK given how this is being used.
 - In `web/pdf_outline_viewer.js` we can remove the `settled`-checks, since the code should work just fine without it. The only thing that could potentially happen is that we try to `resolve` a Promise multiple times, which is however *not* a problem since the value of a Promise cannot be changed once fulfilled or rejected.
 - In `web/pdf_viewer.js` we can remove the `settled`-checks, since the code should work fine without them:
     - For the `_onePageRenderedCapability` case the `settled`-check is used in a `EventBus`-listener which is *removed* on its first (valid) invocation.
     - For the `_pagesCapability` case the `settled`-check is used in a print-related helper that works just fine with "only" the other checks.
 - In `test/unit/api_spec.js` we can change the few relevant cases to manually track the `settled`-state, since this is both simple and *test-only* code.

---
[1] In browsers/environments that lack native support, note [the compatibility data](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/withResolvers#browser_compatibility), it'll be polyfilled via the `core-js` library (but only in `legacy` builds).
2024-04-01 11:42:37 +02:00
Calixte Denizet
ff23d37fa2 [Editor] Add a color picker with predefined colors for highlighting text (bug 1866434)
The doorhanger for highlighting has a basic color picker composed of 5 predefined colors
to set the default color to use.
These colors can be changed thanks to a preference for now but it's something which could
be changed in the Firefox settings in the future.
Each highlight has in its own toolbar a color picker to just change its color.
The different color pickers are so similar (modulo few differences in their styles) that
this patch introduces a new class ColorPicker which provides a color picker component
which could be reused in future editors.
All in all, a large part of this patch is dedicated to color picker itself and its style
and the rest is almost a matter of wiring the component.
2023-12-05 23:27:22 +01:00
Calixte Denizet
31d9b9f574 [Editor] Add a way to extract the outlines of a union of rectangles
The goal is to be able to get these outlines to fill the shape corresponding
to a text selection in order to highlight some text contents.
The outlines will be used either to show selected/hovered highlights.
2023-11-20 18:45:19 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
709d89420e Re-factor how the GenericL10n class fetches localization-data
- Re-factor the existing `fetchData` helper function such that it can fetch more types of data, and it now supports "arraybuffer", "json", and "text".
   This only needed minor adjustments in the `DOMCMapReaderFactory` and `DOMStandardFontDataFactory` classes.[1]

 - Expose the `fetchData` helper function in the API, such that the viewer is able to access it.

 - Use the `fetchData` helper function in the `GenericL10n` class, since this should allow fetching of localization-data even if the default viewer is run in an environment without support for the Fetch API.

---
[1] While testing this I also noticed a minor inconsistency when handling standard font-data on the worker-thread.
2023-11-14 13:45:14 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
927e50f5d4 [api-major] Output JavaScript modules in the builds (issue 10317)
At this point in time all browsers, and also Node.js, support standard `import`/`export` statements and we can now finally consider outputting modern JavaScript modules in the builds.[1]

In order for this to work we can *only* use proper `import`/`export` statements throughout the main code-base, and (as expected) our Node.js support made this much more complicated since both the official builds and the GitHub Actions-based tests must keep working.[2]
One remaining issue is that the `pdf.scripting.js` file cannot be built as a JavaScript module, since doing so breaks PDF scripting.

Note that my initial goal was to try and split these changes into a couple of commits, however that unfortunately didn't really work since it turned out to be difficult for smaller patches to work correctly and pass (all) tests that way.[3]
This is a classic case of every change requiring a couple of other changes, with each of those changes requiring further changes in turn and the size/scope quickly increasing as a result.

One possible "issue" with these changes is that we'll now only output JavaScript modules in the builds, which could perhaps be a problem with older tools. However it unfortunately seems far too complicated/time-consuming for us to attempt to support both the old and modern module formats, hence the alternative would be to do "nothing" here and just keep our "old" builds.[4]

---
[1] The final blocker was module support in workers in Firefox, which was implemented in Firefox 114; please see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/import#browser_compatibility

[2] It's probably possible to further improve/simplify especially the Node.js-specific code, but it does appear to work as-is.

[3] Having partially "broken" patches, that fail tests, as part of the commit history is *really not* a good idea in general.

[4] Outputting JavaScript modules was first requested almost five years ago, see issue 10317, and nowadays there *should* be much better support for JavaScript modules in various tools.
2023-10-07 09:31:08 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
3ced0dec1b [api-major] Remove the SVG back-end (PR 15173 follow-up)
This has been deprecated since version `2.15.349`, which is a year ago.
Removing this will also simplify some upcoming changes, specifically outputting of JavaScript modules in the builds.
2023-10-01 23:14:29 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
9624505f0f Use a standard export statement in the web/pdfjs.js file
This removes the only remaining old and non-standard handling of exports in the `web/`-folder, since some initial attempts at outputting JavaScript modules in the builds have identified this file as a potential problem.
While this uses a hard-coded list, for overall simplicity, I don't believe that that's a big problem since:
 - Generating this file automatically would require a bunch more parsing *every single time* that the library is built.
 - The official API-surface doesn't change often enough for this to really impede development in any significant way.
 - The added unit-test helps ensure that this list cannot accidentally become outdated.
2023-09-30 12:10:02 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
1df31c0284 Use one noContextMenu function in both the src/- and web/-folders
Currently we duplicate this event handler function in multiple places, which seems unnecessary.
2023-09-23 15:37:13 +02:00
Calixte Denizet
6545551e76 [Editor] Avoid to darken the current editor when opening the alt-text dialog 2023-09-21 20:44:53 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
d022912719 Remove most build-time require-calls from the src/display/-folder
By leveraging import maps we can get rid of *most* of the remaining `require`-calls in the `src/display/`-folder, since we should strive to use modern `import`-statements wherever possible.
The only remaining cases are Node.js-specific dependencies, since those seem very difficult to convert unless we start producing a bundle *specifically* for Node.js environments.
2023-07-17 19:47:13 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
0bbadce066 Add a unit-test to check that the *official* PDF.js API exposes the expected functionality
Until now we've not actually had *any* tests that ensure that the *official* PDF.js API exposes the intended functionality, which means that things can easily break accidentally.
2023-06-22 15:21:10 +02:00