Originally the `PDFSidebarResizer` class was slightly larger, since the code used to contain e.g. feature testing for older (and no longer supported) browsers.
Given that there's some amount of overlap, when it comes to what DOM-elements and state that these classes need, it now seems reasonable to simply move the sidebar-resizing into the `PDFSidebar` class.
For the MOZCENTRAL build-target this patch reduces the size of the *built* `web/viewer.js` file by just over `1.1` kilobytes.
Similar to other toolbar/secondaryToolbar buttons that open toolbars or dialogs, it seems reasonable to use "aria-controls" for the editor-toolbar buttons as well.
- Replace FoxitSans with LiberationSans: LiberationSans is already there (for XFA) and we can use
it as a good replacement of FoxitSans.
- For now we just try to substitue standard fonts, the strategy is the following:
* we try to find a font locally from a hardcoded list;
* if it fails then we use Liberation as fallback (only for Helvetica for the moment);
* else we just fallback on the system serif/sansserif/monospace font.
The fallback code-path has never really been used, since the `PDFSidebar` is only used in the default viewer (and has never been exposed in e.g. the COMPONENTS-build).
This patch tries to simplify, and improve, the thumbnail styling:
- For rendered thumbnails there's one less DOM-element per thumbnail, which can't hurt in longer documents.
- Use CSS-variables to set the dimensions of all relevant DOM-elements at once.
- Simplify the visual styling of the thumbnails, e.g. remove the border since the viewer no longer has visible borders around pages, since the relevant CSS-rules are quite old code.
These changes also, at least in my opinion, makes the relevant CSS-rules much easier to understand and work with.
- Make it easier to work on e.g. [bug 1690428](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1690428) without affecting the other sidebarViews.
Now that https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1247687 has landed in Firefox, we're able to use worker-modules during development :-)
This removes the final piece of SystemJS usage from the PDF.js library, thus allowing a fair bit of clean-up, and we now use *only* native `import`/`export` statements everywhere in development mode.
This patch tries to mimic the look of the message-element in the Firefox browser-findbar, and thus makes the following changes:
- Remove the red colour, since it didn't take the light/dark themes into account.
- Display the "notFound" message in bold.
Currently we only prevent triggering the actual text-extraction multiple times in "parallel", when using the "copy all text" feature, however the "copy"-event itself is not prevented.
The result is that if the user selects all text in a long PDF document and then uses the copy-shortcut multiple times in quick succession, we'll actually populate the clipboard with "incomplete" contents (via a `TextLayerBuilder` copy-listener) until all text-extraction finishes.
In PR #16295 one occurrence of this was changed, but a few more remained
in the codebase. This commit fixes the other occurrences so that we
don't use the deprecated way of creating custom events anywhere anymore.
According to MDN, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CustomEvent/initCustomEvent,
using the `CustomEvent.initCustomEvent` method is deprecated and the
`CustomEvent` constructor should be used instead.
Extends d9bf571f5c.
When permissions are enabled and the PDF document doesn't have the COPY-flag set, it shouldn't be possible for the user to trigger the "copy all text" feature.
While this slightly reduces duplication in the CSS rules, some of the auto-formatting done by Prettier is perhaps not great. (Given the overall advantage of using Prettier, we'll probably have to simply accept this.)
Hopefully these changes make sense (since this functionality is new to me), however the existing `xfa`-tests should help avoid any outright regressions.
Some arabic chars like \ufe94 could be searched in a pdf, hence it must be normalized
when creating the search query. So to avoid to duplicate the normalization code,
everything is moved in the find controller.
The previous code to normalize text was using NFKC but with a hardcoded map, hence it
has been replaced by the use of normalize("NFKC") (it helps to reduce the bundle size
by 30kb).
In playing with this \ufe94 char, I noticed that the bidi algorithm wasn't taking into
account some RTL unicode ranges, the generated font wasn't embedding the mapping this
char and the unicode ranges in the OS/2 table weren't up-to-date.
When normalized some chars can be replaced by several ones and it induced to have
some extra chars in the text layer. To avoid any regression, when copying some text
from the text layer, a copied string is normalized (NFKC) before being put in the
clipboard (it works like this in either Acrobat or Chrome).