There's a couple of `getDocument` parameters that should be numbers, but which are currently not *fully* validated to prevent issues elsewhere in the code-base.
Also, improves validation of the `ownerDocument` parameter since we currently accept more-or-less anything here.
Note that the Prettier update made it possible to move a couple of comments after `default:`-cases back to their original/intended positions, please see https://prettier.io/blog/2022/03/16/2.6.0.html
*Please note:* This is another step in what will, time permitting, become a series of patches to simplify/modernize the viewer CSS.
Rather than having to manually specify ltr/rtl-specific float-values in the CSS, we can use logical `inline-start`/`inline-end` instead (and similar for some related left/right occurrences).
These logical properties depend on, among other things, the direction of the HTML document which we *always* specify in the viewer.
Given that most of these logical CSS properties are fairly new, and that cross-browser support is thus somewhat limited (see below), we rely on PostCSS plugins in order to support this in the GENERIC viewer.
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/float#browser_compatibility
- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/inset-inline-end#browser_compatibility
Currently we're resolving the Promises in the `_extractTextPromises` Array with the page-index, despite that not really being necessary since the Promises in the Array are explicitly inserted in the correct order.
Furthermore, we can replace the standard `for`-loop with a `for...of`-loop which results in ever so slightly more compact code.
This patch removes the existing `forEach` methods, in favor of making the classes properly iterable instead. Given that the classes are using a `Set` respectively a `Map` internally, implementing this is very easy/efficient and allows us to simplify some existing code.
Rather than *manually* specifying a "mode", we can simply use the regular `defines` directly instead. To improve consistency, in the `external/builder/builder.js` file, a couple of parameters are also re-named.
Given that we now only use Workers when `postMessage` transfers are supported, there's really no point in trying to send a "test" message *without* transfers present.
Hence, if `postMessage` transfers are not supported by the browser, we'll now fallback to "fake" Workers immediately instead. The comment about Opera is also removed, since it was originally added back in PR 983 and mentions Opera `11.60` [which was released in 2011](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Opera_web_browser#Version_11).
Given that none of these methods were ever intended to be accessed directly from the outside, we can use modern ECMAScript features to ensure that they are indeed private.
This patch also makes `fieldData` private, to remove the old hack used to prevent it from being modified from the outside.
Given that we're now *building* the `web/viewer.css` file used in the development viewer, i.e. with `gulp server`, we no longer need to hard-code these `-webkit`-prefixed rules and can instead let Autoprefixer handle that for us.
To allow using modern CSS features that currently only Mozilla Firefox supports[1], while still enabling development/testing in recent Google Chrome versions, we'll have to start building the `web/viewer.css` file with `gulp server` as well.
In my testing, building the development CSS (and copying the images) takes *less than* `200 ms` on average which is hopefully an acceptable overhead for this sort of feature.
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[1] In particular `float`, with `inline-start`/`inline-end` values.
Every single call-site has always passed in `true` for this parameter, ever since the function was first added back in PR 8023. Hence the parameter appears to be completely unnecessary, which is why it's removed and the function is updated to *unconditionally* strip out any license headers (in the middle of the file).
Apparently this unit-test works in Node.js now, hence it's *possible* that the reason it didn't work previously is that there were bugs in our old `structuredClone` polyfill.
This patch fixes an old inconsistency, when using `BasePreferences.{reset, set}`, where the internal Preference values would be kept even if writing them to storage failed.
Given that none of these fields were ever intended to be accessed directly from the *outside*, since that will lead to inconsistent/broken state, we can use modern ECMAScript features to ensure that they are indeed private.
These changes make sense for two reasons:
- Given that the parameters are potentially passed to the worker-thread, depending on the `useWorkerFetch` parameter, we need to prevent errors if the user provides values that aren't clonable.
- By ensuring that the default values are indeed `null`, we'll trigger main-thread fetching (of CMaps and Standard fonts) as intended in the `PartialEvaluator` and thus potentially provide better Error messages.
This function is currently placed in the `src/shared/util.js` file, which means that the code is duplicated in both of the *built* `pdf.js` and `pdf.worker.js` files. Furthermore, it only has a single call-site which is also specific to the `GENERIC`-build of the PDF.js library.
Hence this helper function is instead moved into the `src/display/api.js` file, in such a way that it's conditionally defined but still can be unit-tested.
Besides converting the `send` function to use the Fetch API, this patch also changes the method to return a `Promise` to get rid of the callback function. (Although, currently there's no call-site passing in a callback function.)