- when binding (after parsing) we get a map between some template nodes and some data nodes;
- so set user data in input handlers in using data node uids in the annotation storage;
- to save the form, just put the value we have in the storage in the correct data nodes, serialize the xml as a string and then write the string at the end of the pdf using src/core/writer.js;
- fix few bugs around data bindings:
- the "Off" issue in Bug 1716980.
According to a comment in `readCmapTable`, we're assuming that the cmap tables (when more than one exist) are sorted in ascending order. If that's not the case, keep checking the following cmap tables in order to fix the referenced issue.
Given that this property is only used with password protected documents, and is consequently document-specific rather than viewer-specific, ensure that `IPDFLinkService.externalLinkEnabled` is actually being reset by `PDFViewerApplication.close`.
To make things less confusing/inconsistent, remove the *undocumented* `externalLinkEnabled` property from the `PDFLinkService` constructor and force it to always be manually set when needed.
- when the CSS line-height property is set to 'normal' then the value depends of the user agent. So use a line height based on the font itself and if for any reasons this value is not available use 1.2 as default.
- it's a partial fix for https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1717681.
This patch provides an overall simpler *and* more consistent way of handling the `viewport` parameter during printing of XFA forms, since it's now again guaranteed to always be an instance of `PageViewport`.
Furthermore, for anyone attempting to e.g. implement custom printing of XFA forms this probably cannot hurt either.
Given that the "print"-intent is special, and that we should always fallback to the "display"-intent, let's ensure that the code actually reflects that.
Also, ensure that the method always returns a `Promise` since that's what the documentation says.
The `web/ui_utils.js` file should be usable from basically anywhere in the `web/`-folder, hence it should ideally not have any dependecies on its own and particularily *not* onces that pull in entire (large) factories.
Apparently some really bad PDF software can create documents with *empty* `Name`-entries, which we thus need to somehow deal with.
While I don't know if this patch is necessarily the best solution, it should at least ensure that the *empty* `Name`-instance cannot accidentally match a proper `Name`-instance (and it doesn't require changes to a lot of existing code).[1]
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[1] I briefly considered using a `Symbol` rather than an Object, but quickly decided against that since the former one [is not clonable](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Workers_API/Structured_clone_algorithm#supported_types) and `Name`-instances may be sent to the API.
This extends the approach in PRs 12848 and 13606 to also apply to the `xfaLayer`, since otherwise XFA forms will be similarly broken in most non-default scroll/spread modes.
- it aims to fix https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1716838.
- some fonts in the pdf in the bug where bold when they shouldn't so write the font properties in the html to avoid to use some wrong inherited ones.
Note that as far as I can tell, this is *not* a regression but rather a bug which has existed since basically "forever".
**In order to reproduce this easily:**
- Open the viewer.
- Set the zoom level to `400%`,
- Search for "expression".
The problem here is that when scrolling matches into view, we're scrolling to the start of the *containing* `textLayer` element rather than the start of the highlighted match itself.[1] When the entire width (or at least most) of the page is visible in the viewer, that doesn't really matter though which is likely why this bug has gone unnoticed for so long.[2]
Given that the highlighted match can be placed anywhere, e.g. even at the very end, within its `textLayer` element it's quite easy to see why the current implementation becomes a problem at higher zoom levels. All of this is then *further* exacerbated by `PDFFindController.scrollMatchIntoView` using a negative left offset, to ensure that the current match has some (visible) context available once scrolled into view.
In order to address this long-standing bug, we'll determine the (left) offset of the `selected` match and use that to modify the final position scrolled to in `PDFFindController.scrollMatchIntoView` such that the match is visible regardless of zoom level.
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[1] Unfortunately we cannot directly scroll to the `selected` match, since it's not absolutely positioned and changing that would cause other bugs/regressions (note recent patches in that area).
[2] I did actually stumble upon this problem a little while ago, while working on PR 13482, but forgot to look into this again until I saw the new issue.