The existing unit-test doesn't work as intended, since the page never actually renders. Note how `cleanup` is *not* allowed to run when parsing and/or rendering is ongoing, however an (old) incorrect condition could prevent rendering from ever starting.
This is very old code, which has been slightly re-factored a couple of times (many years ago), however this doesn't appear to affect e.g. the default viewer since the incorrect behaviour seem highly dependent on "unlucky" timing.
Note also how at the start of the `PDFPageProxy.prototype.render`-method we purposely cancel any pending `cleanup`-call, to prevent unnecessary re-parsing for multiple sequential `render`-calls.
Finally, avoid running `cleanup` when document/page destruction has already started since it's pointless in that case.
After PR 16226 the deprecated SVG back-end is now unused in development mode, with the exception of unit-tests, hence we can re-factor how it's exposed in the API to avoid including a useless webpack-closure in e.g. the *built-in* Firefox PDF Viewer.
Given that this API method isn't used anywhere within the PDF.js library itself, except for the unit-tests, we can avoid including what's effectively dead code in e.g. the *built-in* Firefox PDF Viewer.
As far as I can tell there's no particular reason for initializing `KeyboardManager`-instances eagerly, since the user may never use editing, and we can easily do this lazily instead by utilizing shadowed getters.
- Remove the dependency on fit-curve;
- Improve the way to draw the current line in using a Path2D and
in clearing only the last part of the curve instead of clearing
all the canvas;
- Smooth the curve when drawing to avoid to have some changes after
the drawing ends;
- Make the smoothing a bit less agressive.
The pdf linked in bug 1135277 contains a lot of stroke instructions.
In using the Firefox profiler, this patch helps to reduce the overall
spent time in this function by 30%.
When fixing bug 1766987, I thought the field formatted value came from
the result of the format callback: I was wrong. The format callback is ran
but the value is unused (maybe it's useful to set some global vars... or
it's just a bug in Acrobat). Anyway the value to display is the one rendered
in the AP stream.
The field value setter has been simplified and that fixes issue #16409.
On my computer, it takes few tenths of a second to load a local font.
Since a font can be used several times in a document, the cache will
improve performances.
- 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.
Now that we no longer depend on the old Babel version in SystemJS we can remove the `static get ...` work-arounds used to define constants, which leads to slightly more compact code.
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.
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).
This *special* build-target is very old, and was introduced with the first pre-processor that only uses comments to enable/disable code.
When the new pre-processor was added `PRODUCTION` effectively became redundant, at least in JavaScript code, since `typeof PDFJSDev === "undefined"` checks now do the same thing.
This patch proposes that we remove `PRODUCTION` from the JavaScript code, since that simplifies the conditions and thus improves readability in many cases.
*Please note:* There's not, nor has there ever been, any gulp-task that set `PRODUCTION = false` during building.