With ResetForm-action support added in PR 14083, there's a regression in the `issue12716` test-case. More specifically the border around the "Clear Form"-link is now rendered *twice*, once in the canvas via the appearance-stream and once in the annotationLayer via the border-data.
This looks slightly weird, and was most likely not intended, which is why this patch suggests that we ignore the border in the annotationLayer when an appearance-stream exists.
Apparently Node.js has added *global* `URL.createObjectURL` support, but not done the same thing for `Blob`. Hence we also need to check for the availability of `Blob` in the `createObjectURL` helper function, and it's probably a good idea to also update `examples/node/pdf2svg.js` to work-around this until these changes reach an official PDF.js release.
Trying to render these Annotation-types, when the borderWidth is `0`, causes a "hairline" border to appear. If these Annotations included an appearance stream, as they are supposed to, this wouldn't have happened and the simplest solution here seem to be to just ignore these particular Annotations.
- PR #13257 fixed a lot of issues but not all and this patch aims to fix almost all remaining issues.
- the idea in this new patch is to compare position of new glyph with the last position where a glyph has been drawn;
- no space are "drawn": it just moves the cursor but they aren't added in the chunk;
- so this way a space followed by a cursor move can be treated as only one space: it helps to merge all spaces into one.
- to make difference between real spaces and tracking ones, we used a factor of the space width (from the font)
- it was a pretty good idea in general but it fails with some fonts where space was too big:
- in Poppler, they're using a factor of the font size: this is an excellent idea (<= 0.1 * fontSize implies tracking space).
*Please note:* This is a tentative patch, since I don't have the necessary a11y-software to actually test it.
To avoid having to add a new API-method just for a single string, I figured that adding the new property to the existing `documentInfo`-data (accessed via `PDFDocumentProxy.getMetadata` in the API) will hopefully be deemed acceptable.
In these cases there's no good reason, in my opinion, to duplicate the `shadow`-lines since that unnecessarily increases the risk of simple typos (see the previous patch).
With this typo the shadowing doesn't actually work, which causes these checks to be unnecessarily repeated. In this particular case it didn't have a significant performance impact, however we should definately fix this nonetheless.
Looking at the code, I do have to agree with the point made in issue 12731 about it being unexpected/unhelpful that the `PDFFindController.executeCommand`-method isn't directly usable with the "find"-event.
The reason for it being this way is, as so often, for historical reasons: The `executeCommand`-method was added (just) prior to the introduction of the `EventBus` in the viewer.
Obviously we cannot simply change the existing `PDFFindController.executeCommand`-method, since that'd be a breaking change in code which has existed for over five years.
Initially I figured that we could simply add a new method in `PDFFindController` that'd accept the state from the "find"-event, however after thinking about this and looking through the use-cases in the default viewer I settled on a slightly different approach: Let the `PDFFindController` just listen for the "find"-event (on the `EventBus`-instance) directly instead, which also removes one level of (unneeded) indirection during searching in the default viewer.
For GENERIC builds of the PDF.js library, the old `PDFFindController.executeCommand`-method is still available with a deprecation warning.
Many years ago now there were some `Promise` implementations that had issues resolving with an *implicitly* `undefined` value. That should no longer be the case, and we've not been using the `Promise.resolve(undefined)` format for a long time, hence this patch fixes the few remaining cases.
Having recently worked with this code, in PR 14096 (and indirectly in PR 14112), I happened to notice a pre-existing issue with spreadModes at higher zoom levels.
The `PDFRenderingQueue` code was written back when the viewer only supported "normal" vertical scrolling, and some edge-cases related to spreadModes are thus not perfectly supported. Depending on the zoom level, it's possible that there are "holes" in the currently visible page layout, and those pages will not be pre-rendered as you'd expect.
*Steps to reproduce:*
0. Open the viewer, e.g. https://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html
1. Enable vertical scrolling.
2. Enable the ODD spreadMode.
3. Scroll down, such that both pages 1 and 3 are visible.
4. Zoom-in until *only* page 1 and 3 are visible.
5. Open the devtools and, using the DOM Inspector, notice how page 2 is *not* being pre-rendered despite all surrounding pages being rendered.
If a PDF included an embedded TrueType font whose preferred character
map (cmap) was in "format 2", the code would select that character map
and then refuse to read it because of an unsupported format, thus
causing the characters not to be rendered. This commit implements
support for format 2 as described at the link below.
https://developer.apple.com/fonts/TrueType-Reference-Manual/RM06/Chap6cmap.html