- Take into account the page translation,
- Take into account the correct translation for the editor border,
- Take into account the position of the first glyph in the annotation,
- Take into account the rotation of the editor.
Close#16633.
createImageBitmap doesn't work with svg files (see bug 1841972), so we need to workaround
this in using an Image.
When printing/saving we must rasterize the image, hence we get the biggest bitmap as image
reference to avoid duplications or poor quality on rendering.
The existing code is unable to *correctly* extract the color from the appearance-stream when the ColorSpace-data is "complex". To reproduce this:
- Open `freetexts.pdf` in the viewer.
- Note the purple color of the "Hello World from Preview" annotation.
- Enable any of the Editors.
- Note how the relevant annotation is now black.
When there was a rotation, the generated bbox was wrong because of an inversion
between width and height.
This patch aims to fix this issue in re-writing the FreeText code generation
to have something similar to what Acrobat does.
And fix the name of the font which wasn't the correct one when calling the
evaluator.
Rather than having to *manually* determine the potential `transfers` at various spots in the API, we can let the `AnnotationStorage.serializable` getter include this.
To further simplify things, we can also let the `serializable` getter compute and include the `hash`-string as well.
In order to minimize the size the of a saved pdf, we generate only one
image and use a reference in each annotation using it.
When printing, it's slightly different since we have to render each page
independantly but we use the same image within a page.
It occurred to me that we can actually run this unit-test in Node.js environments by making use of the preprocessor to stub out the browser globals there.
Until now we've not actually had *any* tests that ensure that the *official* PDF.js-viewer API exposes the intended functionality, which means that things can easily break accidentally.
*Please note:* This unit-test cannot (easily) be run in Node.js-environments, since the `external/webL10n/l10n.js` file contains various browser-specific 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.
With the changes in PR 16552 we can now move general translation into the `AnnotationLayer` itself, which should improve things ever so slightly in third-party implementations where the default viewer isn't used.
- it'll help to be able to move popups on screen to let the user read the text
- popups won't inherit some properties from their parent:
- the popup can be misrendered if for example the parent has a clip-path property.
- add an outline to the popup when the parent is focused.
- hide a popup when it's clicked.
Fix handling of /Filter-entries, since the current implementation could potentially corrupt the data if there's multiple filters present.
Please note that filters are applied *sequentially* during decoding, starting from the first one in the Array, hence the first Array-entry needs to be /FlateDecode in order for things to actually work correctly.
To prevent a future bug, if we want to save more "complex" data such as images, also ensure that we include any existing /DecodeParms-entries when updating the /Filter-entry.
The existing unit-test doesn't work as intended, since the page never actually renders. Note how `cleanup` is *not* allowed to run when parsing and/or rendering is ongoing, however an (old) incorrect condition could prevent rendering from ever starting.
This is very old code, which has been slightly re-factored a couple of times (many years ago), however this doesn't appear to affect e.g. the default viewer since the incorrect behaviour seem highly dependent on "unlucky" timing.
Note also how at the start of the `PDFPageProxy.prototype.render`-method we purposely cancel any pending `cleanup`-call, to prevent unnecessary re-parsing for multiple sequential `render`-calls.
Finally, avoid running `cleanup` when document/page destruction has already started since it's pointless in that case.