*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.