This commit adds `scrollModeOnLoad` and `spreadModeOnLoad` preferences
that control the default viewer state when opening a new document for
the first time.
This commit also contains a minor refactoring of some of the option UI
rendering code in extensions/chromium/options/options.js, as I couldn't
bear creating two more functions nearly identical to the four that
already existed.
This builds on the scrolling mode work to add three buttons for joining
page spreads together: one for the default view, with no page spreads,
and two for spreads starting on odd-numbered or even-numbered pages.
Prior to this commit, if the vertical scroll bar is absent and the horizontal
scroll bar is present, a link to a particular point on the page which should
induce a horizontal scroll did not do so, because the absence of a vertical
scroll bar meant that the viewer was not recognized as the nearest scrolling
ancestor. This commit adds a check for horizontal scroll bars when searching
for the scrolling ancestor.
In `rasterizeAnnotationLayer` we load the source CSS files directly, so
these are not processed by Autoprefixer. Since the prefixed rules have
now been removed from the source CSS files, we must manually provide one
prefixed rule that Chrome needs in the overrides CSS file for checkbox
and radio button rendering to work in the reference tests.
SystemJS version 0.21.0 works, but version 0.21.1 breaks with various
`Unable to load transpiler to transpile` errors. Pin the version to
0.21.0 for now to avoid this issue.
We need to pass `disableFontFace` and `nativeImageDecoderSupport`
because Node.js has no native support for `@font-face` and `Image`.
Doing so makes it possible to render e.g., the Tracemonkey paper, which
failed before. I made this PDF file the default because it's also the
default in other examples/demos and because it showcases the
possibilities better than the very simple hello world PDF file.
Building the library with `gulp dist-install` is easier and is already
recommended in the other examples.
*This is a final piece of clean-up of code that I recently wrote, after which I'm done :-)*
When the `getMainThreadWorkerMessageHandler` function was added, in PR 9385, it did so by basically introducing a `web/app.js` dependency in `src/display/api.js` through the `window.pdfjsNonProductionPdfWorker` property[1]. Even though this is limited to non-`PRODUCTION` mode, i.e. `gulp server`, it still seems unfortunate to have that sort of viewer dependency in the API code itself.
With the new, much nicer and shorter, names introduced in PR 9565 we can remove this non-`PRODUCTION` hack and just use `window.pdfjsWorker` in both the viewer and the API regardless of the build mode.
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[1] It didn't seem correct to piggy-back on the `window.pdfjsDistBuildPdfWorker` property in non-`PRODUCTION` mode.
Please note that this patch *purposely* doesn't add every standard (or semi-standard) page name in existence, but rather only a few common ones. This is done to lessen the burden on localizers, since it's quite possible that all of the page names could need translation (depending on locale).
It's easy to add more standard page sizes in the future, but we should take care to *only* add those that are very commonly used in actual PDF files.
This uses a whitelist, based on the locale, to determine where non-metric units should be used.
Note that the behaviour implemented here seem consistent with desktop PDF viewers (e.g. Adobe Reader), where the pageSizes are *always* displayed with locale dependent units rather than pageSize dependent ones (since the latter would probably be quite confusing).
A couple of basic unit-tests are added, and a manual `isLandscape` check (in `web/base_viewer.js`) is also converted to use the helper function instead.