Some browsers render certain special characters with width 0, others with strictly positive width. (For example, the Greek Delta, Δ, has width 0 in Google Chrome, and a positive width in Firefox.) The `if` clause in operation so far results in different text layer DOM trees for different browsers.
This commit fixes that by adding the elements independently of their width.
This is required to be able to use it in the annotation display code,
where we now apply it to sanitize the filename of the FileAttachment
annotation. The PDF file from https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1230933 has shown that some PDF generators include the path of the file rather than the filename, which causes filenames with weird initial characters. PDF viewers handle this differently (for example Foxit Reader just replaces forward slashes with spaces), but we think it's better to only show the filename as intended.
Additionally we add unit tests for the `getFilenameFromUrl` helper
function.
Currently the `C` entry in an outline item is returned as is, which is neither particularly useful nor what the API documentation claims.
This patch also adds unit-tests for both the color handling, and the `F` entry (bold/italic flags).
Reverts "Hack to avoid intermidiate Chrome failures during tests."
(2b2c521213).
require.js uses importScript asynchronously, which activates the worker
GC bug in WebKit. This patch works around a bug in a way that is similar
in the upcoming (but not yet released) require.js 2.1.23
The advantage of the new work-around is that it allows the runtime to
garbage-collect idle Workers.
References:
- https://crbug.com/572225
- https://webkit.org/b/153317
Re: issue 5089.
(Note that since there are other outline features that we currently don't support, e.g. bold/italic text and custom colours, I thus think we can keep the referenced issue open.)
Apparently some PDF files can have annotations with `URI` entries ending with `null` characters, thus breaking the links.
To handle this edge-case of bad PDFs, this patch moves the already existing utility function from `ui_utils.js` into `util.js`, in order to fix those URLs.
Fixes 6832.
Currently we're not applying Patterns for text, but only for graphics.
This patch is unfortunately not a complete solution, but rather a step on the way, since there are still some PDF files where the Patterns look more like a solid colour, rather than the intended gradient.
I've been unable to fix these issues completely, and I've not managed to determine if the remaining issues are caused either by the pattern code, the canvas code, or perhaps both.
However, given that even this simple patch improves the current situation quite a bit, I figured that it couldn't hurt to submit it as-is.
- Fixes 5804.
- Fixes 6130.
- Improves 3988 a lot, since the text is now visible. However, it looks like the text is *one* solid colour, instead of the correct gradient.
- Improves 5432, since the text is no longer gray. (This file also suffers from the same problem as the previous one.)
Most code for Popup annotations is already present for Text annotations.
This patch extracts the popup creation logic from the Text annotation
code so it can be reused for Popup annotations.
Not only does this add support for Popup annotations, the Text
annotation code is also considerably easier. If a `Popup` entry is
available for a Text annotation, it will not be more than an image. The
popup will be handled by the Popup annotation. However, it is also
possible for Text annotations to not have a separate Popup annotation,
in which case the Text annotation handles the popup creation itself.
Additionally simplify the div creation logic (it needs to happen only
once, so it should not be in the for-loop) and remove/rename variables
for shorter code.
This patch goes a bit further than issue 6612 requires, and replaces all kinds of whitespace with standard spaces.
When testing this locally, it actually seemed to slightly improve two existing test-cases (`tracemonkey-text` and `taro-text`).
Fixes 6612.
This patch:
- Updates the JSDoc comment in `api.js`, to more clearly point out that `PDFJS.openExternalLinksInNewWindow` is deprecated, and explains what to use instead.
- Changes the `warn`, in `isExternalLinkTargetSet()`, to use the new `deprecated` function instead. Also updates the message with more detailed information about what to use instead.
- Changes the pre-processor tag to ensure the deprecation warning is seen in all build types where it could possibly matter (in case people are using `PDFJS.openExternalLinksInNewWindow` in e.g. custom-built extensions).
These changes were prompted by seeing http://stackoverflow.com/questions/33813373/pdf-js-how-to-open-hyperlinks-in-a-new-tab-window, since it seems to me that the current comments/warnings might not be worded well enough.
Currently `getAnnotations` will *only* fetch annotations that are either `viewable` or `printable`. This is "hidden" inside the `core.js` file, meaning that API consumers might be confused as to why they are not recieving *all* the annotations present for a page.
I thus think that the API should, by default, return *all* available annotations unless specifically told otherwise. In e.g. the default viewer, we obviously only want to display annotations that are `viewable`, hence this patch adds an `intent` parameter to `getAnnotations` that makes it possible to decide if only `viewable` or `printable` annotations should be fetched.
*Follow-up to PR 6546.*
If rendering has already started when the document is destroyed, then `this.pageCache[data.pageIndex]` may already have been cleared when the `StartRenderingPage`/`RenderPageChunk` messages are recieved in `api.js`, which results in `TypeError`s being thrown.
We should never actually try to execute `paintXObject` in canvas.js, but in some cases where we fail to parse the PDF file correctly it can happen. Currently this will potentially cause an entire page to fail to render, which seems suboptimal.
With this patch, we will instead continue rendering with a warning that things might not work correctly.
Replaces `PDFJS.openExternalLinksInNewWindow` with a more generic configuration option.
*Note:* `PDFJS.openExternalLinksInNewWindow = true;` is equal to `PDFJS.externalLinkTarget = PDFJS.LinkTarget.BLANK;`.
According to the PDF spec 5.3.2, a positive value means in horizontal,
that the next glyph is further to the left (so narrower), and in
vertical that it is further down (so wider).
This change fixes the way PDF.js has interpreted the value.
In some cases, such as in use with a CSP header, constructing a function with a
string of javascript is not allowed. However, compiling the various commands
that need to be done on the canvas element is faster than interpreting them.
This patch changes the font renderer to instead emit commands that are compiled
by the font loader. If, during compilation, we receive an EvalError, we instead
interpret them.
Currently non-embedded ArialBlack fonts are not rendered bold enough, compared to e.g. Adobe Reader.
The issue is that we set the font weight to `bolder`, but since that is actually relative to the font weight of the parent, the result is that there's no practical difference from just using `bold`.
This patch attempts to address that, by explicitly setting the font weight to the maximum value instead (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/font-weight).
*Note:* I expect one test "failure" in `issue5801`, which in this case is an improvement, since that PDF file uses ArialBlack.
Instead of trying to hack around various browser defects, let's just disable PresentationMode in the affected browsers. This patch:
- Disables PresentationMode in IE11+ when the viewer is embedded; fixes 4711.
Set transformation matrix in (polyfilled) mozPrintCallback when a scale
is applied. Removed _scaleX and _scaleY in favor of _transformMatrix to
emphasize that the caller MUST ensure that the state of the matrix is
correct before `addContextCurrentTransform` is called.
This change does the following:
* Address TODO to remove getEmptyContainer helper.
* Not set container bg-color. The old code is incorrect, causing it to
not have any effect. It sets color to an array (item.color) rather
css string. Also in most cases it would set it to black background
which is incorrect.
* only add border instructions when there is actually a border
* reduce memory consumption by not creating new 3 element arrays for
annotation colors. In fact according to spec, this would be incorrect,
as the default should be "transparent" for an empty array. Adobe
Reader interprets a missing color array as black however.
Note that only Link annotations were actually setting a border style and
color. While Text annotations might have calculated a border they did
not color it. This behaviour is now controlled by the boolean flag.
maskData comes out of maskCtx.getImageData, so is 0..255 clamped, and
the used multiplications will not create fractions needing rounding,
neither would addition.
After PR 5263, setting `disableAutoFetch = true` in the generic viewer no longer works correctly, since the entire file loads even with `disableStream = true`.
Currently when an exception is thrown, we try to reject `workerReadyCapability` with multiple arguments in src/core/api.js. This obviously doesn't work, hence this patch changes that to instead reject with the exception object as is.
In src/core/worker.js the exception is currently (unncessarily) wrapped in an object, so this patch also simplifies that to directly send the exception object instead.