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.
When clicking on the `pageNumber` input, or when using the keyboard shortcut <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>Alt</kbd>+<kbd>G</kbd>, the element isn't just focused but its contents is actually *selected* so that the user doesn't need to clear the input before entering a new `pageNumber`.
However, the `GoToPage` named action is only using `focus`, so let's change this to be consistent.
The following document can be used for testing: http://www2.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~frank/ENG/beamer/example/Beamer-class-example1.pdf#zoom=page-fit
[screeenshot]
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
The PDF file contains an image that we're allowed to use, since it's just the PDF.js logo.
The logo image was simply inverted (so that it requires a /Decode entry in the image dictionary that triggers the use of `jpg.js` instead of the browser), converted to JPEG, and finally edited by hand to change the order of the DQT/SOF{n} markers.
Ensure that the zoom buttons are disabled correctly if the `scale` is smaller/larger than `MIN_SCALE/MAX_SCALE` in `PDFViewerApplication._updateUIToolbar`
In the `zoom{In, Out}` functions in `PDFViewerApplication`, we prevent the zoom value from becoming smaller/larger than `MIN_SCALE/MAX_SCALE`.
However, if the user sets the zoom level through the hash parameter the zoom buttons might not be correctly disabled; try http://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html#zoom=10.
Note that this issue has been present since "forever", but given that the solution is so simple I think that we should just fix this. (I'm also fixing a stupid typo I previously made in the JSDoc comment.)
Since the `mobile-viewer` example is based on the old FirefoxOS/B2G PDF viewer, it didn't need to have the same kind of `open/close` methods as the default viewer.
However, now that it has been re-purposed as a simple `mobile-viewer` example, it seems like a good idea to ensure that it has proper asynchronous `open/close` methods.
Fixes 7571.
When adding new entries to `ProblematicCharRanges`, you have to be careful to not make any mistakes since that could cause glyph mapping issues.
Currently the existing reference tests should probably help catch any errors, but based on experience I think that having a unit-test which specifically checks `ProblematicCharRanges` would be both helpful and timesaving when modifying/reviewing changes to this code.
Hence this patch which adds a function (and unit-test) that is used to validate the entries in `ProblematicCharRanges`, and also checks that we don't accidentally add more character ranges than the Private Use Area can actually contain.
The way that the validation code, and thus the unit-test, is implemented also means that we have an easy way to tell how much of the Private Use Area is potentially utilized by re-mapped characters.
Instead of having `Parser_getObj` fail unconditionally for the referenced PDF file, this patch attempts to let searching for the main trailer continue even if there are errors.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1250079.
This is similar to the existing `isCmd` and `isDict` functions, which already support similar kind of checks.
With the updated `isName` function, we'll be able to simplify many callsites from: `isName(someVariable) && someVariable.name === 'someName'` to: `isName(someVariable, 'someName')`.
With the viewer code now being split into various components/files, having an obsolete comment in `PDFViewer` that references thumbnails despite there being no other mentions of them in the entire file seems strange.
*Note:* This comment is simply a left-over from older versions of PDF.js, where the *entire* default viewer code was placed in just one file (and where we unconditionally created thumbnails, regardless whether they were visible or not).
There are PDF generators which create destinations with e.g. too large top values, which cause the wrong page to be scrolled into view because the offset becomes negative.
By ignoring negative offsets, we can prevent this issue, and get a similar behaviour as in Adobe Reader.
However, since we're also using `PDFViewer_scrollPageIntoView` in more cases than just when links (in the document/outline) are clicked, the patch adds a way to allow the caller to opt-out of this behaviour.
In e.g. the following situations, I think that we still want to be able to allow negative offsets: when restoring a position from the `ViewHistory`, when the `viewBookmark` button is used to obtain a link to the current position, or when maintaining the current position on zooming.
Rather than adding another parameter to `PDFViewer_scrollPageIntoView`, I've changed the signature to take an parameter object instead. To maintain backwards compatibility, I've added fallback code enclosed in a `GENERIC` preprocessor tag.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=874482.
With PR 7502 we no longer dispatch an event when the `val` is out of bounds, so to better communicate why nothing happens this patch logs an error in that case (similar to the logging of errors when trying to set an invalid scale).
The way that the default viewer is currently implemented, means that e.g. keyboard short-cuts could trigger the new error. Hence this patch also adds the necessary validation code, both to `app.js` and `pdf_link_service.js` to prevent unnecessary errors.