- 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 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.
Note how the "page"-div, "canvasWrapper"-div, and `textLayer`-div all have *integer* dimensions (rounded down) rather than using the "raw" viewport-dimensions.
Hence it seems reasonable that the same should apply to the "annotationLayer"-div, now that it's explicit dimensions set.
There are obviously cases where using `concat` makes perfect sense, since that method doesn't change any of the existing Arrays; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/concat
However, in a few cases throughout the code-base that's not an issue and using `concat` only leads to unnecessary intermediate allocations. With modern JavaScript we can thus replace those with a combination of `push` and spread-syntax, which wasn't originally possible when the code was written.
- each annotation has its coordinates/dimensions expressed in percentage,
hence it's correctly positioned whatever the scale factor is;
- the font sizes are expressed in percentage too and the main font size
is scaled thanks a css var (--scale-factor);
- the rotation is now applied on the div annotationLayer;
- this patch improve the rendering of some strings where the glyph spacing
was not correct (it's a Firefox bug);
- it helps to simplify the code and it should slightly improve the update of
page (on zoom or rotation).
We want to avoid adding regular `id`s to Annotation-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 Annotation-elements directly.
Unfortunately these changes required updating most of the integration-tests, and to reduce the amount of repeated code a couple of helper functions were added.
- Since the border belongs to the section containing the HTML
counterpart of an annotation, this section must be hidden when
a JS action requires it;
- it wasn't possible to hide a button in using JS.
- Right now, we must select the tool, then click to select a page and
click to start drawing and it's a bit painful;
- so just create a new ink editor when we're hovering a page without one.
Apparently the ESLint rule added in PR 15031 wasn't able to catch all cases that can be converted, which is probably not all that surprising given how some of these call-sites look.
- Use `Element.prepend()` to insert nodes before all other ones in the element, rather than using `firstChild` with `insertBefore`-calls; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/prepend
- Fix one *incorrect* `insertBefore` call, in the AnnotationLayer-code.
Initially the patch simply changed that to an `Element.before()`-call, however that broke one of the integration-tests. It turns out that the `index` may try to access a non-existent select-child, which triggers undefined behaviour; note the warning in https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node/insertBefore#parameters
Fixes two recent "Code scanning alerts" on GitHub, which likely happened because these calls originally used `parseInt` instead (during initial development).
After the changes in PR 14998, these operators are now no-ops in the `src/display/canvas.js` code and should no longer be necessary.
Given that `beginAnnotations`/`endAnnotations` are not in the PDF specification, but are rather *custom* PDF.js operators, it seems reasonable to stop using them now that they've become no-ops.
While `TextLayerRenderTask` apparently makes sense in TypeScript environments, given that it's being returned by the `renderTextLayer`-function in the API, we really don't want to extend the *public* API by simply exporting the class directly in `src/pdf.js` since it should never be called/initialized manually.
Hence we follow the same pattern as in PR 14013, and add some very basic unit-tests to ensure that `renderTextLayer` always returns a `TextLayerRenderTask`-instance as expected.
In PR #14717, the type was changed from a HTMLElement to a DocumentFragment.
This broke TypeScript projects that use a HTMLElement container.
To remedy this, we extend the type of container to also include HTMLElement.
- Approximate the drawn curve by a set of Bezier curves in using
js code from https://github.com/soswow/fit-curves.
The code has been slightly modified in order to make the linter
happy.
This only applies to *corrupt* PDF documents, where Annotations are missing the required /Rect-entry. Rendering PopupAnnotations unconditionally shouldn't be a problem, since we're not using a `BaseSVGFactory`-instance in that case.
- each annotation must be rendered independently of the others. So
after having rendered each annotation, the canvas states are reset
in order to have something clean to render the next one.
While calling `JSON.stringify(...)` on a class-instance obviously "works" (as in it doesn't throw), since it's really just an Object, it doesn't really make much sense in the context of the `AnnotationStorage.hash`-getter.
Also, access the *inverse* Viewport-transform correctly in `FreeTextEditor.serialize` to prevent errors being thrown when that method is invoked.
Finally, slightly updates the `AnnotationStorage.serializable`-getter to improve consistency within the class.
*This fixes a regression from PR 14754.*
We didn't lookup the image-data correctly, with the result that we tried to render some ImageMasks using a string rather than the intended TypedArray. To make matters worse, this code-path was apparently not *properly* covered by existing test-cases.
- Ensure that the modified-warning won't be displayed, when navigating away from the viewer, if the user has added custom Annotations and then *removed all* of them.
- Ensure that the *initial* editor-buttons state, i.e. the `toggled`-class, is correctly displayed in the toolbar when then viewer loads.
- Tweak the CSS-classes for the editor-buttons, such that they use the correct focus/hover-rules (similar to the sidebar-buttons).
- Remove a no longer accurate comment from the `BaseViewer.annotationEditorMode`-setter.
- Address a couple of *smaller* outstanding review comments, including some re-formatting changes, from PR 14976.
This patch contains a small optimization specifically for the case when `getDocument` is called with TypedArray-data. In that case we'll still hold onto that data, which could obviously be large, even after the "GetDocRequest"-message has been sent to the worker-thread.
In practice this will most likely not affect memory usage in any noticeable way, since the application calling `getDocument` will probably also be keeping a reference to the TypedArray-data. However, it seems like a good idea to ensure that the PDF.js API *itself* won't unnecessarily keep this data alive.
- it's a regression from PR #14247:
- before the PR, the button was rendered on the canvas whatever its status was;
- after the PR, the button image has been moved in an other canvas so when the button is not renderable
(because it has no actions) then the image is not added the HTML element.
- the buttons in the pdf in bug 1737260 or in the pdf in #14308 were not visible
- make the button always renderable but don't add the link element if it's useless.
- right now we're using the font size from the pdf itself but we use an other font
in the annotation layer. So this size doesn't really make sense and leads to bad
rendering (see pdf in #14928);
- use a sans-serif font for the fields containing text (fix issue #14736);
- remove useless padding in text-based fields (fix issue #14301);
- text fields allow/disallow scrolling bars (see bit 24 in Ff entry), so use this
value to hide/show scrollbars in annotation layer.
In the `src/display/canvas.js` code the `d1` operator will be used to set the clipping region, and it obviously cannot be empty since that prevents the Type3-glyph from rendering.
Also, the patch removes an outdated comment; refer to PR 12718.
If the computed background/foreground colors are identical, the `canvas` would be rendered mostly blank with only images visible. Hence it seems reasonable to also ignore the `pageColors`-option in this case.
Also, the patch tries to *briefly* outline the various cases in which we ignore the `pageColors`-option in a comment.
*This patch can be tested, in the viewer, using the `annotation-fileattachment.pdf` document from the test-suite.*
Note how the `FileSpec`-implementation already uses `stringToPDFString` during the filename lookup, see cfac6fa511/src/core/file_spec.js (L70)
Hence there's no reason to repeat that again in the `FileAttachmentAnnotationElement`-constructor, and we can thus simplify the "fileattachmentannotation"-event handling a little bit.