When a FreeText editor is pasted then it hasn't an editorDiv yet when added
to the layer, hence it's empty.
So this patch just move the call to addToAnnotationStorage to ensure we've
what we need.
An annotation doesn't have to be in the text flow, hence it's likely a bad idea
to insert its text in the text layer. But the text must be visible from a screen
reader point of view so it must somewhere in the DOM.
So with this patch, the text from a FreeText annotation is extracted and added in
a div in its HTML counterpart, and with the patch #15237 the text should be visible
and positioned relatively to the text flow.
To improve performance of the sidebar we use the page-canvases to generate the thumbnails whenever possible, since that avoids unnecessary re-rendering when the sidebar is open. This works generally well, however there's an old problem in PDF documents that contain interactive forms (when those are enabled): Note how the thumbnails become partially (or fully) blank, since those Annotations are not included in the OperatorList.[1]
We obviously want to keep using the `PDFThumbnailView.setImage`-method for most documents, however we need a way to skip it only for those pages that contain interactive forms.
As it turns out it's unfortunately not all that simple to tell, after the fact, from looking only at the OperatorList that some Annotations were skipped. While it might have been possible to try and infer that in the viewer, it'd not have been pretty considering that at the time when rendering finishes the annotationLayer has not yet been built.
The overall simplest solution that I could come up with, was instead to include a *summary* of the interactive form-state when doing the final "flushing" of the OperatorList and expose that information in the API.
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[1] Some examples from our test-suite: `annotation-tx2.pdf` where the thumbnail is completely blank, and `bug1737260.pdf` where the thumbnail is missing the "buttons" found on the page.
Currently some `OPS.beginAnnotation` arguments will contain a `Number` value for the `isUsingOwnCanvas`-parameter, or in some cases an `undefined` value, which is inconsistent from an API perspective.
We can undo/redo a command which will at some point add a command in the queue: typically
it can happening when redoing an addition.
So the idea is to lock the queue when undoing/redoing.
This will allow us to improve the `PDFThumbnailView.setImage` handling in the viewer, and thanks to the added caching this should be reasonbly efficient.
Given that Optional Content visibility is only intended/supported to be updated via the `OptionalContentConfig.setVisibility`-method, this patch actually enforces that now.
Note that this will be used by the next patch in the series, and will help prevent inconsistent state in the `OptionalContentConfig`-class.
*Please note:* This patch also uncovered a pre-existing bug, related to iterating through the visibility groups in the constructor, for the `baseState === "OFF"` case.
- After undoing a deletion of several editors, they appeared to be selected (they had a red border)
when in fact they were not, consequently, this patch aims to remove the selectedEditor class when
an editor is removed;
- Add a test with some ink editors.
The previous version was maybe functional but definitely painful to maintain
(maybe more efficient... I don't know) so this patch aims to simplify it and
it adds some basic unit tests.
The elements in the annotationEditor layer are rearranged to make them
more accessible, but we must draw them in the order they have been created,
hence this patch adds a z-index to the editors.
- This way, the keyboard callbacks are called even if the page has not
the focus, hence the user doesn't have to guess that they have to click
on the page which is a bit painful especially in Ink mode.
- Add two keyboard shortcuts to commit a Freetext editor (ctrl+enter and
escape).
In the referenced PDF document the fonts have /CIDToGIDMap-entries that cannot be loaded. Hence, only when `ignoreErrors` is set, we'll now ignore these corrupt /CIDToGIDMap-entries and fallback to simply assume that no such data is available.
Given that this is *clearly* a case of a corrupt PDF document, there's no guarantee that this will "fix" things in the general case since a /CIDToGIDMap may be *required* in order for some composite fonts to render correctly. However, attempting to render *something* is surely better than skipping a font altogether.
- In the annotationEditorLayer, reorder the editors in the DOM according
the position of the elements on the screen;
- add an aria-owns attribute on the "nearest" element in the text layer
which points to the added editor.
- in using the global clipboard, it'll be possible to copy from a
pdf and paste in an other one;
- it'll allow to edit a previously created annotation;
- copy the editors in the current page.
Previously, we had to set the #allowClick property by hand which was
a bit painful because it's easy to overlook one case or an other.
So with this patch a new editor (for now FreeText one only because the
Ink one is a bit different) is created on the first click if none is selected
on mousedown, else the first click will just commit the data and then the
second will creater a new editor.
The problem is clearly visible when the thickness is at max.
It's mainly because the thickness was not taken into account when
translating the div but it was when the line is drawn on the canvas.
Note that these cases, which are all in older code, were found using the [`unicorn/no-for-loop`](https://github.com/sindresorhus/eslint-plugin-unicorn/blob/main/docs/rules/no-for-loop.md) ESLint plugin rule.
However, note that I've opted not to enable this rule by default since there's still *some* cases where I do think that it makes sense to allow "regular" for-loops.
Note how we currently throw a "raw" Error, which is problematical since all of the `PartialEvaluator.loadFont` call-sites expect a Promise to be returned. Furthermore, this also means that we don't benefit from the fallback code-path that now exists below.
*Please note:* Unfortunately I don't have a test-case that fails without this patch, since it's something I happened to notice when reading the code while working on another patch.
Previously it was created only on mouseover event but on a touch screen
there are no fingerover event...
The idea behind creating the ink editor on mouseover was to avoid to have
a canvas on each visible page.
So now, when the editor is created, the canvas has dimensions 1x1 and
only when the user starts drawing the dimensions are set to the page ones.
We want to avoid adding regular `id`s to xfaLayer-elements, since that means that they become "linkable" through the URL hash in a way that's not supported/intended. This could end up clashing with "named destinations", and that could easily lead to bugs; see issue 11499 and PR 11503 for some context.
Rather than using `id`s, we'll instead use a *custom* `data-element-id` attribute such that it's still possible to access the DOM-elements directly if needed. *Please note:* This is basically the xfaLayer-equivalent of PR 15057.
- and because of rounding errors it led to slightly resize again and again
the ink container;
- when zooming the size is changing but not the ratio, so in this case we
don't need to change the dimension of the container.
`HTMLSectionElement` is not part of the DOM, so the generated typescript definitions contain a non-existing type.
HTML Section elements have to be handled as simple `HTMLElements`.
fixing punctuation and lint problems
[jsdoc] failing typescript builds - wrong type
Rather than including all of this external code in the PDF.js repository, we should be using the npm package instead.
Unfortunately this is slightly more complicated than you'd hope, since the `fit-curve` package (which is older) isn't directly compatible with modern JavaScript modules.
In particular, the following cases needed to be considered:
- For the development viewer (i.e. `gulp server`) and the unit-tests, we thus need to build a fitCurve-bundle that can be directly `import`ed.
- For the actual PDF.js build-targets, we can slightly reduce the sizes by depending on the "raw" `fit-curve` source-code.
- For the Node.js unit-tests, the `fit-curve` package can be used as-is.
- this way the context menu in Firefox can take into account what we
have in the clipboard, if an editor is selected, ...
- when the user will click on a context menu item, an action will be
triggered, hence this patch adds what is required to handle it;
- some tests will be added in the Firefox' patch.
This extends PR 13461, by also building a fallback bounding box for Type3 fonts that contain a much too small /FontBBox-entry.
*Please note:* While this patch improves things overall, copy-and-pasting still doesn't work perfectly for this document. In particular the lowercase letter "c" cannot be selected/copied, however this can be reproduced in both Adobe Reader and PDFium (in Google Chrome) too, which is caused by a lack of proper /ToUnicode-data in the PDF document.
Rather than forcing the user to *manually* call `setDimensions`, which is also breaking any existing third-party code, it seems that we can simply let the `AnnotationLayer.{render, update}`-methods handle that internally.
As far as I can tell, based on testing manually in the viewer *and* running the browser-tests, everything still appears to work correctly with this patch.
After the changes in PR 15036, the trigger-element created in `FileAttachmentAnnotationElement.render` is now too small. This can be fixed by using the same approach as in PR 15065, and the patch can be tested using the `annotation-fileattachment.pdf` document in the test-suite.
- for example in Dusk theme (Windows 11), black appears to be white, so
the user will draw something in white. But if they want to print or
save the used color must be black.
- fix a bug with the color input which only accepts hex string colors;
- adjust outline color of the selected/hovered editors in HCM.
This replaces the boolean `annotationEditorEnabled` option/preference with a "proper" `annotationEditorMode` one. This way it's not only possible for the user to control if Editing is enabled/disabled, but also which *specific* Editing-mode should become enabled upon PDF document load.
Given that Editing is not enabled/released yet, I cannot imagine that changing the name and type of the option/preference should be an issue.
- As in the annotation layer, use percent instead of pixels as unit;
- handle the rotation of the editor layer in allowing editing when rotation
angle is not zero;
- the different editors are rotated counterclockwise in order to be usable
when the main page is itself rotated;
- add support for saving/printing rotated editors.
Given that Annotations can also have an `OC`-entry, we need to take that into account when generating their operatorLists.
Note that in order to simplify the patch the `getOperatorList`-methods, for the Annotation-classes, were converted to be `async`.
- the annotations must be rendered in the same order as the chronological one.
- fix a bug in document.js which avoids to read a saved pdf correctly in Acrobat:
there is no need to reset the xref state: it's done in worker.js once everything
has been saved.
Given that printing is triggered *synchronously* in browsers, it's thus possible for scripting (in PDF documents) to modify the Annotation-data while printing is currently ongoing.
To work-around that we add a new printing-specific `AnnotationStorage`, where the serializable data is *frozen* upon initialization, which the viewer can thus create/utilize during printing.