This method creates quite a few intermediate strings on each call and
it's called often, even for smaller documents like the Tracemonkey
document. Scrolling from top to bottom in that document resulted in
12936 strings being created in this method. With this commit applied,
this is reduced to 3610 strings.
It is only used in a few places to handle prefixing style properties if
necessary. However, we used it only for `transform`, `transformOrigin`
and `borderRadius`, which according to Can I Use are supported natively
(unprefixed) in the browsers that PDF.js 2.0 supports. Therefore, we can
remove this class, which should help performance too since this avoids
extra function calls in parts of the code that are called often.
This patch adds Streams API support in getTextContent
so that we can stream data in chunks instead of fetching
whole data from worker thread to main thread. This patch
supports Streams API without changing the core functionality
of getTextContent.
Enqueue textContent directly at getTextContent in partialEvaluator.
Adds desiredSize and ready property in streamSink.
http://eslint.org/docs/rules/comma-danglehttp://eslint.org/docs/rules/object-curly-spacing
Given that we currently have quite inconsistent object formatting, fixing this in *one* big patch probably wouldn't be feasible (since I cannot imagine anyone wanting to review that); hence I've opted to try and do this piecewise instead.
Please note: This patch was created automatically, using the ESLint `--fix` command line option. In a couple of places this caused lines to become too long, and I've fixed those manually; please refer to the interdiff below for the only hand-edits in this patch.
```diff
diff --git a/src/display/canvas.js b/src/display/canvas.js
index 5739f6f2..4216b2d2 100644
--- a/src/display/canvas.js
+++ b/src/display/canvas.js
@@ -2071,7 +2071,7 @@ var CanvasGraphics = (function CanvasGraphicsClosure() {
var map = [];
for (var i = 0, ii = positions.length; i < ii; i += 2) {
map.push({ transform: [scaleX, 0, 0, scaleY, positions[i],
- positions[i + 1]], x: 0, y: 0, w: width, h: height, });
+ positions[i + 1]], x: 0, y: 0, w: width, h: height, });
}
this.paintInlineImageXObjectGroup(imgData, map);
},
diff --git a/src/display/svg.js b/src/display/svg.js
index 9eb05dfa..2aa21482 100644
--- a/src/display/svg.js
+++ b/src/display/svg.js
@@ -458,7 +458,11 @@ SVGGraphics = (function SVGGraphicsClosure() {
for (var x = 0; x < fnArrayLen; x++) {
var fnId = fnArray[x];
- opList.push({ 'fnId': fnId, 'fn': REVOPS[fnId], 'args': argsArray[x], });
+ opList.push({
+ 'fnId': fnId,
+ 'fn': REVOPS[fnId],
+ 'args': argsArray[x],
+ });
}
return opListToTree(opList);
},
```
Please see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/object-shorthand.
For the most part, these changes are of the search-and-replace kind, and the previously enabled `no-undef` rule should complement the tests in helping ensure that no stupid errors crept into to the patch.
Fixes extra canvas create calls.
Fixes unnecessary call of `new DOMCanvasFactory`.
Fixes undefined error of DOMCanvasFactory.
Fixes failures in some of the tests.
Fixes expected behaviour.
Remove unused vars.
See http://eslint.org/docs/rules/brace-style.
Having the opening/closing braces on the same line can often make the code slightly more difficult to read, in particular for `if`/`else if` statements, compared to using new lines.
This patch also, for consistency with `mozilla-central`, enables the [`no-iterator`](http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-iterator) rule. Note that this rule didn't require a single code change.
I intended to provide proper benchmarking results here, as outlined in https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/wiki/Benchmarking-your-changes, but after wasting a couple of hours over the weekend getting weird results I gave up.
It appears that there's a lot of, i.e. way too much, variance between subsequent runs of `text` tests for the results to be meaningful.
(Previously I've only benchmarked `eq` tests, so I don't know if the `text` tests has never worked well or if it's a newer problem. For reference, please see the results of back-to-back benchmark runs on the current `master` with a *very* simple manifest file: [link here].)
Instead I used `console.time/timeEnd` in `appendText` and `expandTextDivs` to be able to compare the performance with/without the patch. The entire viewer was (skip-cache) reloaded between measurements, and the result are available here: [link here].
Given the troubles I've had with benchmarking, I've not yet computed any statistics on the results (e.g. mean, variance, confidence intervals, and so on).
However, just by looking at the data I think it's safe to say that this patch first of all doesn't seem to regress the current performance. Secondly it certainly looks *very* likely that this patch actually improves the performance, especially for the one-glyph-per-text-div case (cf. issue 7224).
Re: issue 7584.
This patch avoids having to calculate the scale twice by saving it in
the properties object.
Moreover, we remove a temporary variable and place parentheses around a
calculation inside a string concatenation.
This patch improves performance by avoiding unnecessary type
conversions, which also help the JIT for optimizations.
Moreover, this patch fixes issues with the div expansion code where
`textScale` would be undefined in a division. Because of the `dataset`
usage, other comparisons evaluated to `true` while `false` would have
been correct. This makes the expansion mode now work correctly for cases
with, for example, each glyph in one div.
The polyfill for `WeakMap` has been provided by @yurydelendik.
We pass many parameters to `appendText` while we might as well pass the
`task` object that contains them. This saves a few lines of code and
makes the signature of `appendText` more clear. We do the same for
`expand`, which is useful for the next commit in which we replace
`div.dataset` with a `WeakMap`.
Furthermore, this patch adds a missing parameter to a comment block to
make it clear which parameters remain.
1. Expanding divs to improve text selection. (Yury)
2. Adding enhanceTextSelection as an option.
3. Moving feature functionality from text_layer_builder.js to text_layer.js.
4. Added expandTextDivs method to only load expanded divs on first click, and only show on subsequent clicks
These have been found using `gulp lint` in combination with the `unused:
true` parameter for JSHint. Unfortunately there are too many false
positives to enable this feature, but now that most globals have been
removed because of the conversion to UMD the results are much more
useful than before.
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.