When closing a document in the viewer, e.g. by running `PDFViewerApplication.close()` in the console, the `AltTextManager.#finish` method currently throws *unless* the `altText` dialog is actually open.
Similar to e.g. the PasswordPrompt, we should thus only attempt to close the `altText` dialog when it's open.
It's a part of the UX specifications. There's a drawing issue in Firefox
(see bug https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/1853288) but setting the
background-clip property to content-box seems to be a good workaround.
The goal is to always have something which is focusable to let the user select
it with the keyboard.
It fixes the mentioned bug because, the annotation layer will now have a container
to attach the canvas for annotations having their own canvas.
`.grab-to-pan-grab:active` is `#viewerContainer` when the mouse is
pressed down. It is supposed to have a `cursor: grabbing` appearance
immediately on mousedown,
`.grab-to-pan-grabbing` is the overlay that is supposed to cover
everything, and also has the `cursor: grabbing` appearance. The "cover
everything" result is achieved through `position:fixed`, `inset:0`, etc.
The block with these CSS properties for "cover everything" is currently
shared by `.grab-to-pan-grab:active` and `.grab-to-pan-grabbing`, but
only "cursor" need to be shared. The original JS and CSS code at
https://github.com/Rob--W/grab-to-pan.js shows that these were supposed
to be associated with the overlay only.
The PR that added this to PDF.js also shows that the "cover everything"
CSS properties were supposed to be limited to the overlay only:
https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/pull/4209#discussion-diff-9285917
But the final version of the PR mistakenly merged them together.
This patch rectifies that mistake.
Using `removeNullCharacters` on the URL should be completely redundant, given the kind of data that we're passing to the `addLinkAttributes` helper function. Note that whenever we're handling a URL, originating in the worker-thread, in the viewer that helper function is always being used.
Furthermore, on the worker-thread all URLs are parsed with the `createValidAbsoluteUrl` helper function, which uses `new URL()` to ensure that a valid URL is obtained. Note that the `URL` constructor will either throw, or in some cases just ignore them, when encountering `\u0000`-characters during parsing.
Hence it should be *impossible* for a valid URL to contain `\u0000`-characters and we can thus simplify the viewer-code a tiny bit. The use of `removeNullCharacters` is most likely a left-over from back when `new URL()` wasn't generally available in browsers.
Testing the `tagged_stamp.pdf` document locally in the viewer, I noticed that e.g. the /Alt entry for the StampAnnotation contains "Secondary text for stamp\u0000".
Elsewhere in the viewer we're skipping null-chars and it's easy enough to do that in the `StructTreeLayerBuilder` class as well. (Note that we generally let the API itself return the data as-is.)
This fixes invalid type references (either due to invalid paths for the
import or missing imports) in the JS doc, as well as some missing or
invalid parameter names for @param annotations.
The main stamp button will be used to just enter in a add/edit image mode:
- the user can add a new image in using the new button.
- the user can edit an image in resizing, moving it.
In image mode, when the user clicks outside on the page but not on an editor,
then all the selected editors will be unselected.
After the `src/core/`-changes in PR 16779 the `PDFDocumentProxy.getJSActions` method should no longer be able to return *empty* entries, which means that we can simplify the "JavaScript support is not enabled"-warning in the viewer.
Furthermore, improve the auto-printing hack used when scripting is disabled.
There are 2 rotation we've to deal with: the viewer one and the editor one.
The previous implementation was a bit complex and having to deal with these
rotation would have potentially increase it.
So this patch aims to simplify the implementation and deal with all the possible
cases.
The main idea is to transform the mouse deltas according to the rotations and then
apply the resizing in the page coordinates system.
When resizing an editor we're currently using unidirectional cursors, please refer to https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/cursor
Given that editors can (generally) be resized to become either smaller or larger, it seems overall more appropriate to use bidirectional cursors to make this clearer to the user.
Note that as mentioned in the MDN article some environments, which seems to apply to e.g. Windows 11, doesn't differentiate between the two cursor formats and simply use bidirectional ones unconditionally.
One additional benefit of these changes is that the relevant CSS rules become slightly more compact.
This method is very old, however with the exception of the auto-print hack (when scripting is disabled) in the viewer it's never actually been used.
Most likely the idea with `PDFDocumentProxy.getJavaScript` was that it'd be useful if scripting support was added, however it turned out that it was a bit too simplistic and instead a number of new methods were added for the scripting use-cases.
Without this patch the password dialog is pretty difficult to use in the GeckoView-viewer, because of a number of missing CSS variables.
*Please note:* This patch makes no effort at actually styling the dialog to better suite the overall look of the GeckoView-viewer, but focuses solely on making it actually usable (since password protected PDF documents are somewhat rare).
If the current PDF document is closed while the password dialog is open, e.g. manually by calling `PDFViewerApplication.close()` from the console, the password dialog wouldn't be closed as intended.
*Please note:* This could only affect the GENERIC viewer, although it's very unlikely to ever happen, since that's the only one that supports opening more than one PDF document.
*Please note:* This situation should never happen in practice, but it nonetheless cannot hurt to fix this.
If the `PasswordPrompt.open` method would ever be called synchronously back-to-back *and* if opening of the dialog fails the first time, then the second invocation would remain pending indefinitely since we just clear out the capability.
Given that the `useOnlyCssZoom` option is essentially just a special-case of the `maxCanvasPixels` functionality, we can combine the two options in order to simplify the overall implementation.
Note that the `useOnlyCssZoom` functionality was only ever used, by default, in the PDF Viewer for the B2G/FirefoxOS project (which was abandoned years ago).
This is quite old code, however the error-handling no longer seems necessary for a couple of reasons:
- The `PDFViewerApplication.open` method is asynchronous, which means that it cannot throw a "raw" `Error` and the try-catch is not needed in that case.
- None of the other affected methods should throw, and if they do that'd rather indicate an *implementation* error in the code.
- Finally, and most importantly, with the `PDFViewerApplication.run` method now being asynchronous an (unlikely) `Error` thrown within it will lead to a rejected `Promise` and not affect execution of other code.
We can use modern JavaScript features, in this case optional chaining, to (ever so slightly) simplify how `ViewHistory` errors are handled.
Also, use arrow functions when handling a few other (very rare) errors during loading since that's a tiny bit shorter.
Given that the `debugger` is loaded as a module we can use "top level await" in development mode to access the necessary API-functionality, which removes the need to manually pass in the required properties.
- it'll improve the way to resize images: diagonally (in keeping ratio between dimensions)
or horizontally/vertically.
- the resizer was almost invisible in HCM.
- make a resize undoable/redoable.
In order to reproduce the original issue:
- switch to freetext mode
- add a text somewhere
- double click outside and add some text
- repeat the previous step several times
no text is selected during the edition.
*Please note:* This only removes the preference itself, however both the viewer-option and the actual implementation is still available.
The `useOnlyCssZoom` functionality was only ever used, by default, in the PDF Viewer for the B2G/FirefoxOS project (which was abandoned years ago). Given that CSS-only zooming can easily make the document look blurry even at low zoom levels, this functionality was only intended for low-powered mobile devices.
Hence it seems reasonable to remove the `useOnlyCssZoom` preference now, since neither the default viewer nor the GeckoView-specific viewer uses this functionality.
By leveraging import maps we can get rid of *most* of the remaining `require`-calls in the `src/display/`-folder, since we should strive to use modern `import`-statements wherever possible.
The only remaining cases are Node.js-specific dependencies, since those seem very difficult to convert unless we start producing a bundle *specifically* for Node.js environments.
Localization of this button broke in PR 16340, which I assume was completely accidental, since the download-button now tries to access a l10n-id that was removed some time ago (see PR 15617).
Note how loading even the development viewer, i.e. http://localhost:8888/web/viewer-geckoview.html#locale=en-US, currently logs l10n-warnings on the `master` branch.
Having a `require` in this file has never made sense in e.g. the Firefox PDF Viewer and shouldn't really be necessary.
Possibly the idea was to facilitate some kind of third-party bundling, however the *built* `pdf.js` file has always exposed the API-contents globally.
Currently this class contains a few "special" code-paths for the COMPONENTS build-target, which normally wouldn't be a problem. However, in this particular case that means accessing code that we don't want to include unconditionally in all builds.
This is currently implemented using build-time `require`-calls which we nowadays want to avoid, and we should strive to remove all such cases from the code-base. (Generally speaking `import` is the future, and build-tools may not always play well with a mix of both formats.)
We can easily improve things here by using sub-classing for the COMPONENTS build-target, and then use the ability to re-name when exporting (to avoid breaking existing code).
There's no good reason for getting this option multiple times in the same method. Also, we can slightly re-factor how the `editorStampButton` is made visible.
This regressed in PR 16659, when the signature of the `PDFViewer.annotationEditorMode`-setter was changed, and it currently leads to an Error being thrown when exiting PresentationMode.
`PDFViewerApplication` reads from `location.hash` to initialize
`initialBookmark`. But when extensions/chromium/pdfHandler.js prepares
the redirect URL, the reference fragment is encoded instead of bare.
`rewriteUrlClosure` in `chromecom.js` is responsible for decoding the
URL, but that currently runs too late.
To fix this, update `initialBookmark` after rewriting the URL.
This was not a problem in the past because `rewriteUrlClosure` in
`chromecom.js` executed before the initialization of `initialBookmark`.
These options are completely unused in the PDF.js viewer, and given that the last update of the `GrabToPan`-code from upstream was in 2016 it shouldn't hurt to remove them.
This is something that I completely overlooked during review of PR 16593, since the idea is (obviously) that the viewer-components should be usable as-is without the user needing to manually pass in any *additional* parameters.
To support this we can very easily expose the current `FilterFactory`-instance on the `PDFPageProxy`-class[1], and if needed initialize the highlight-filters when initializing the page (again limited to the viewer-components).
- Modify the text and background colors in popup to fit a11y requirements
- Add a backdrop filter on clickable areas in using a svg filter mapping
canvas colors to Highlight and HighlightText ones.
It occurred to me that we can actually run this unit-test in Node.js environments by making use of the preprocessor to stub out the browser globals there.
Until now we've not actually had *any* tests that ensure that the *official* PDF.js-viewer API exposes the intended functionality, which means that things can easily break accidentally.
*Please note:* This unit-test cannot (easily) be run in Node.js-environments, since the `external/webL10n/l10n.js` file contains various browser-specific functionality.
- Change (most) fields/methods into private ones, since that's now supported.
- Tweak the constructor-parameters, and simplify the sandbox initialization w.r.t. the viewer components.
- Remove some unused function/method parameters.
- Slightly simplify the "updatefromsandbox"-handler by using local variables and inverting some conditions.
Rather than sprinkling pre-processor statements throughout the viewer-code, simply "disable" the relevant `PDFViewer` setters instead.
Also, given that the GeckoView-specific viewer doesn't have a sidebar we don't actually need to explicitly ignore a `pageMode` during loading.
This helper function was added almost two years ago, in PR 13696, and it still has only a single call-site. Furthermore, with the changes made in PR 16572 it also cannot hurt to reduce the size of the `web/l10n_utils.js` file slightly.
Note how the [`ChromeActions.getPreferences` method](https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/4e8f62a231e71dc53eb50b6d74afca21d6b254e9/toolkit/components/pdfjs/content/PdfStreamConverter.sys.mjs#497-530) returns the preferences as a string, which we then have to convert back into an Object in the viewer.
Back when that code was originally written it wasn't possible to send Objects from the platform-code, however that's no longer the case and we should be able to (eventually) remove this unnecessary string-parsing now.
*Please note that in order to prevent breakage we'll need to land these changes in stages:*
- Land this patch in mozilla-central, as part of regular the PDF.js updates.
- Change the return type in the `ChromeActions.getPreferences` method, in a mozilla-central patch.
- Remove the string-handling from the `FirefoxPreferences._readFromStorage` method.
Please note that we've never had any functionality in the viewer itself that *set* preferences, and we've thus only ever read them.
For the GENERIC viewer it obviously makes sense for the user to be able to modify preferences, e.g. via the console, but that doesn't really apply to the *built-in* Firefox PDF Viewer since preferences are already accessible via `about:config` there. Hence it does seems somewhat strange to expose, a limited part of, the Firefox preference system in this way when we're not even using it.
Note that the unused preference setting-code also include a fair amount of *additional* validation on the platform-side, such as limiting any possible preference changes to the `pdfjs.`-branch and also an explicit white-list of preference names[1], to make sure that this is safe; please see:
- https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/4e8f62a231e71dc53eb50b6d74afca21d6b254e9/toolkit/components/pdfjs/content/PdfStreamConverter.sys.mjs#458-495
- https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/4e8f62a231e71dc53eb50b6d74afca21d6b254e9/toolkit/modules/AsyncPrefs.sys.mjs#21-48
Assuming that this patch lands, I'll follow-up with a mozilla-central patch to remove the code mentioned above.
---
[1] This hard-coded list contains preferences that no longer exist, and also at least one (fairly obvious) typo.
This method was added only for consistency with the `register`-method, however it's never actually been used. To avoid including dead code in the builds, let's just remove the `unregister`-method for now.
*Please note:* If this method ever becomes useful, it'll be trivial to revert this commit.
With the changes in PR 16552 we can now move general translation into the `AnnotationLayer` itself, which should improve things ever so slightly in third-party implementations where the default viewer isn't used.
*This is something that I completely overlooked during review of PR 16552, despite leaving a l10n-related comment.*
The new l10n-handling of PopupAnnotations assume that the `AnnotationLayer` is always initialized with a l10n-instance, which might not actually be the case in third-party implementations where the default viewer isn't used.
To work-around that we'll now bundle, and fallback on, the existing `NullL10n`-implementation in GENERIC builds of the PDF.js library. This will only result in a slight file-size increase for the *built* `pdf.js` file, again limited to GENERIC builds, since the `web/l10n_utils.js` file has no dependencies.
Also, tweaks a couple of TESTING pre-processor checks to *only* include that code when running the reference tests.
- it'll help to be able to move popups on screen to let the user read the text
- popups won't inherit some properties from their parent:
- the popup can be misrendered if for example the parent has a clip-path property.
- add an outline to the popup when the parent is focused.
- hide a popup when it's clicked.
While it's slightly difficult to trigger in practice, unless the `defaultZoomDelay`-value is increased, it's currently possible to generate thumbnails from *partially* rendered pages when doing *temporary* CSS-only zooming.
We shouldn't dispatch a "pagerendered"-event when doing *temporary* CSS-only zooming, but simply wait until the actual rendering is done.
While I don't believe that this regression has caused any actual bugs, dispatching *duplicate* events is nonetheless inconsistent and should be fixed.
Given that this functionality is only relevant in third-party use-cases, for example the viewer-components, we can avoid needlessly including it in e.g. the MOZCENTRAL build.
This patch does two things:
- Moves the updating of thumbnails into `web/app.js`, via a new `PDFSidebar` callback-function, to avoid having to include otherwise unnecessary parameters when initializing a `PDFSidebar`-instance.
- Only attempt to generate thumbnail-images from pages that are *cached* in the viewer. Note that only pages that exist in the `PDFPageViewBuffer`-instance can be rendered, hence it's not actually meaningful to check every single page when updating the thumbnails.
For large documents, with thousands of pages, this should be a tiny bit more efficient when e.g. opening the sidebar since we no longer need to check pages that we know have not been rendered.
The way that the cleanup was implemented in PR 12613 has always bothered me slightly, since the `isPageCached`-method that I introduced there always felt quite out-of-place in the `IPDFLinkService`-implementations.
By introducing a new "thumbnailrendered" event, similar to the existing "pagerendered" one, we're able to move the cleanup handling into the `PDFViewer`-class instead.
The way that this was implemented in PR 10217 has always bothered me slightly, since the `isPageVisible`-method that I introduced there always felt quite out-of-place in the `IPDFLinkService`-implementations.
Hence this is instead replaced by a callback-function in `PDFFindController`, to handle the page-visibility checks. Note that since the `PDFViewer`-constructor always sets this callback-function, e.g. the viewer-component examples still work as-is.
- 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.
Looking at the behaviour in Adobe Reader it doesn't appear that attachments are sorted alphabetically, hence it doesn't seem necessary for us to do so either in the viewer.
An additional benefit of *not* sorting the attachments is that any "actual" attachments are now always placed at the top of the list in the sidebar, and if any `FileAttachment`-annotations exist in the document they will now be appended at the end.
After PR 12563 we're now free to use optional chaining in the worker-thread as well. (This patch also fixes one previously "missed" case in the `web/` folder.)
For the MOZCENTRAL build-target this patch reduces the total bundle-size by `1.6` kilobytes.
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).
After the previous patch we now have only *a single* `PRODUCTION` occurrence in the entire code-base, more specifically in the `web/viewer.html` file.
This special build-target can be replaced with any condition that always evaluate to `false`, such as e.g. a comment.
*Please note:* This patch might be considered too hacky, hence I completely understand if it's rejected.
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.
To make this functionality work out-of-the-box in custom implementations, see e.g. the "viewer components" examples, it'd be slightly easier if we dynamically create/insert the "hiddenCopyElement" in the `PDFViewer` constructor.
Given that the "copy all text" feature still appears to work just as before with this patch, hopefully I'm not overlooking any reason why doing this would be a bad idea.
I was playing with the new "copy all text" feature, and stumbled upon one document where the copied text was truncated; see http://mirrors.ctan.org/info/lshort/english/lshort.pdf
The problem turns out to be that on [page 83](https://ftp.acc.umu.se/mirror/CTAN/info/lshort/english/lshort.pdf#page=83) the textLayer contains `\u0000` and apparently copying just stops when a null char is encountered.
To fix this we can simply use an existing helper function, and with this patch we're able to successfully copy all the text in that document.
*Please note:* This patch only extends the `PDFFindController` implementation itself to support this functionality, however it's *purposely* not exposed in the default viewer.
This replaces the previous `phraseSearch`-parameter, and a `query`-string will now always be interpreted as a phrase-search.
To enable searching for individual words, the `query`-parameter must instead consist of an Array of strings. This way it's now also possible to combine phrase/word searches, with a `query`-parameter looking something like `["Lorem ipsum", "foo", "bar"]` which will search for the phrase "Lorem ipsum" *and* the words "foo" respectively "bar".
By getting the width/height of the first page initially, we can slightly reduce the amount of code needed both in the `hasEqualPageSizes`-check and when building the print-styles.
For the moment there is no real consensus on how we should download a pdf on Android.
Hence we keep this solution for the moment but behind a pref (which will be true on
nightly only).
Currently we repeat the same code in lots of places, to update the "toggled" class and "aria-checked" attribute, when various toolbar buttons are clicked.
For the MOZCENTRAL build-target this patch reduces the size of the *built* `web/viewer.js` file by just over `1.2` kilo-bytes.
Currently `float: inline-start/inline-end` is only supported in Firefox, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/float#browser_compatibility, and in order to support other browsers we're thus forced to jump through some hoops.
This leads to slightly less nice code in the *built-in* Firefox PDF Viewer, and this patch attempts to improve the current situation:
- Use Stylelint to forbid direct use of `float: inline-start/inline-end` in the CSS files, to prevent future bugs in the general PDF.js viewer.
- Do a build-time replacement, only in MOZCENTRAL builds, to replace the CSS-variables with raw `float: inline-start/inline-end` instances.
This effectively implements some of the changes from https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D170496, but using our existing "direction aware" CSS-variable to limit the amount of code changes needed.
With the changes in PR 16153 we're no longer setting a `<base href>` in the Firefox PDF Viewer, hence it shouldn't be necessary to keep setting a `baseUrl` in the `PDFLinkService`-class.
Given that the original document URL is now kept, the browser itself will handle relative URLs and we can thus slightly reduce the amount of string parsing required when handling various links in the viewer.
Currently if you e.g. enable the `useOnlyCssZoom` option rendering may no longer finish as intended. To reproduce:
- Enable the `useOnlyCssZoom` option.
- Load https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/files/1522715/wuppertal_2012.pdf (in the development viewer).
- When rendering starts, *immediately* change the zoom-level.
In this case the document will never finish rendering, since the `postponeDrawing`-functionality will (here incorrectly) abort rendering and with CSS-only zooming rendering is only expected to happen once per page.
To fix this we'll simply ignore any `drawingDelay` when CSS-only zooming is used (regardless if it's triggered via the option or the zoom-level being very large).
Currently the `zoomLayer` isn't rotated correctly in all cases. To reproduce:
- Load https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/files/1522715/wuppertal_2012.pdf
- Let the document render.
- Rotate the document *four* times, such that the original rotation is restored.
The easiest solution, as far as I can tell, is that we always set the `transform` just as we did (for years) prior to the changes in PR 15812.
- Reduce a little bit of duplication by enforcing the max/min scale-values once, at the end, in the `increaseScale`/`decreaseScale` methods.
- Convert the "private" `PDFViewer` scale-related methods into actually private ones, now that JavaScript supports that.
Given that the viewer always set the `dir`-attribute, to either LTR or RTL, we should be able to use this logical CSS property to (very slightly) reduce the size of the CSS; please see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/inset-block
The signatures of these methods were changed in PR 15886, which has now been included in a couple of releases, hence it should hopefully be OK to remove the fallback code-paths now.
Also, the methods are updated slightly to be explicit about what options are supported and we'll no longer pass along any arbitrary options to the "private" methods.
Some of these pre-processor statements are *many* years old, and could thus do with some clean-up. Note that the pre-processor originally didn't support else-if statements, and by using those the code becomes a bit less verbose.
The idea is to apply an overall filter on each page: the main advantage
is to have some filtered images which could help to make them visible for
some users.
The tag <base> is used to resolve relative URIs within the document.
Newly added SVG filters use a relative URI which then use the URI in base
but this one mismatches with the document URI and consequently filters are
not found in the Firefox viewer.
So this patch just removes <base> and replace few relative URLs by absolute
ones.
In order to help to identify a link, we add a border around it with the LinkText color.
And backdrop colors are inverted when the mouse pointer hovers them, this way it should
help to identify the link where the pointer is.