Looking at `ColorSpace.parseToIR`, it will do one of the following things when called:
1. Return a String.
2. Return an Array.
3. Throw a `FormatError`.
4. In one case, return the result of *another* `ColorSpace.parseToIR` call.
However, under no circumstances will it ever return an `AlternateCS` instance.
Since it's often useful to understand why code, which has become unused, existed in the first place, let's grab a hard hat and a shovel and start digging through the history of this code :-)
The current condition was introduced in commit c198ec4323, in PR 794, but it was actually already obsolete by that time.
The preceeding `instanceof SeparationCS` condition predates commit a7278b7fbc, in PR 700.
That condition was originally introduced all the way back in commit 4e3f87b60c, in PR 692. However, it was made obsolete by commit 9dcefe1efc, which is included in the very same PR!
Hence we're left with the conclusion that not only has this code be unused for *almost* six years, it was basically never used at all save for a few refactoring commits that're part of PR 692.
Bug 1392647 has a PDF where the default width of the font
is 0. It draws some charcodes that don't have glyphs, but
we were wrongly using the 1000 default width for these
charcodes causing some text to be overlapping.
The `DOMParser` is most likely overkill and may be less secure.
Moreover, it is not supported in Node.js environments.
This patch replaces the `DOMParser` with a simple XML parser. This
should be faster and gives us Node.js support for free. The simple XML
parser is a port of the one that existed in the examples folder with a
small regex fix to make the parsing work correctly.
The unit tests are extended for increased test coverage of the metadata
code. The new method `getAll` is provided so the example does not have
to access internal properties of the object anymore.
(for issue #6289)
This does the same for 16 bit as the existing 8 bit tiff predictor code, an addition of the last word to this word.
The last two "& 0xFF" may or may not be needed, I see this isn't done in the 8 bit code, but I'm not a JS developer.
Currently `PDFFunction` is implemented (basically) like a class with only `static` methods. Since it's used directly in a number of different `src/core/` files, attempting to pass in `isEvalSupported` would result in code that's *very* messy, not to mention difficult to maintain (since *every* single `PDFFunction` method call would need to include a `isEvalSupported` argument).
Rather than having to wait for a possible re-factoring of `PDFFunction` that would avoid the above problems by design, it probably makes sense to at least set `isEvalSupported` globally for `PDFFunction`.
Please note that there's one caveat with this solution: If `PDFJS.getDocument` is used to open multiple files simultaneously, with *different* `PDFJS.isEvalSupported` values set before each call, then the last one will always win.
However, that seems like enough of an edge-case that we shouldn't have to worry about it. Besides, since we'll also test that `eval` is actually supported, it should be fine.
Fixes 5573.
This patch provides a new unit tested factory for creating SVG
containers and elements. This code is duplicated twice in the
codebase, but with upcoming changes this would need to be duplicated
even more. Moreover, consolidating this code in one factory allows
us to replace it easily for e.g., supporting Node.js. Therefore, move
this to a central place and update/ES6-ify the related code.
Finally, we replace `setAttributeNS` with `setAttribute` because no
namespace is provided.
Rather than displaying links that does *nothing* when clicked, it probably makes more sense to simply not render them instead. Especially since it turns out that, at least at this point in time, this is *very* easy to both implement and test.
Fixes 3897.
It seems that the status check, for non-HTTP loads, causes the default viewer to *refuse* to open local PDF files.
***STR:***
1. Make sure that fetch support is enabled in the browser. In Firefox Nightly, set `dom.streams.enabled = true` and `javascript.options.streams = true` in `about:config`.
2. Open https://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html.
3. Click on the "Open file" button, and open a new PDF file.
***ER:***
A new PDF file should open in the viewer.
***AR:***
The PDF file fails to open, with an error message of the following format:
`Message: Unexpected server response (200) while retrieving PDF "blob:https://mozilla.github.io/a4fc455f-bc05-45b5-b6aa-2ecff3cb45ce".`
When looking briefly at using `Number.isInteger`/`Number.isNan` rather than `isInt`/`isNaN`, I noticed that there's a couple of not entirely straightforward cases to consider.
At first I really couldn't understand why `parseInt` is being used like it is in `XRef.fetchUncompressed`, since the `num` and `gen` properties of an object reference should *always* be integers.
However, doing a bit of code archaeology pointed to PR 4348, and it thus seem that this was a very deliberate change. Since I didn't want to inadvertently introduce any regressions, I've kept the `parseInt` calls intact but moved them to occur *only* when actually necessary.[1]
Secondly, I noticed that there's a redundant `isCmd` check for an edge-case of broken operators. Since we're throwing a `FormatError` if `obj3` isn't a command, we don't need to repeat that check.
In practice, this patch could perhaps be considered as a micro-optimization, but considering that `XRef.fetchUncompressed` can be called *many* thousand times when loading larger PDF documents these changes at least cannot hurt.
---
[1] I even ran all tests locally, with an added `assert(Number.isInteger(obj1) && Number.isInteger(obj2));` check, and everything passed with flying colours.
However, since it appears that this was in fact necessary at one point, one possible explanation is that the failing test-case(s) have now been replaced by reduced ones.
Since this patch will now treat (some) `NUL` bytes as "ASCII", the number of `followingBytes` checked are thus increased to (hopefully) reduce the risk of introducing new false positives.
Fixes 8823.
According to the specification, see http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#page=377, a `Dest` entry in an outline item should *not* contain a dictionary.
Unsurprisingly there's PDF generators that completely ignore this, treating is an `A` entry instead.
The patch also adds a little bit more validation code in `Catalog.parseDestDictionary`.