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.
We obviously don't want to re-introduce any `require` usage in e.g. the viewer, since we should strive to only use native `import` statements wherever possible.[1]
Hopefully exposing e.g. the library globally in more cases won't break anything, however it's somewhat difficult for me to imagine all the ways in which third-party users may be accessing the PDF.js library. (Given the lack of a runnable test-case in the issue, I also cannot guarantee that this is enough to fully address the problem.)
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[1] Ideally we should probably not rely on e.g. `pdfjsLib` being globally available in the *built* viewer, and rather always `import` the library instead.
Unfortunately this would require larger (possibly breaking) changes in the builds that we provide, however note that Firefox only recently got support for `import` in workers and that Webpack still only have *experimental* support for outputting "proper" modules.
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).