Attempting to descend into a string or number would cause a JS error,
because we would attempt to create prop[arguments[i]] as an empty object
(which is ignored), then try to descend into it (which blows up because
it's undefined, even though we've just set it). Guard against this by
explicitly checking for non-object-ness.
Change-Id: Ie65550baaae0ab88476c9a1ff40cc136090740a0
* Adjust the range in the annotation synchronizer, otherwise we emit
events for the wrong node
* Expanded test suite to the point where it was able to catch the bug
caused by not adjusting annotated ranges
* Removed selection.length === 0 check, no longer needed because
selectNodes() now throws an exception in this case
* Added a FIXME comment about duplicate update events that occur when
length adjustments are combined with something else
* Add a few more comments
Change-Id: I84f0368b1d7b601ed0766806607152dc97f34603
* Lift node assignment out of the if/else
* Flip the condition so we detect text-only replacements rather than
non-text-only replacements
* Additionally assert that there is exactly one selected node, and that
it is a text node
Change-Id: Iaaddf532f06709e860ac44457470e6d8bfcb6dd9
* Store the applied state in the Transaction
* Store the Transaction in the TransactionProcessor (previously, only
its operations were stored)
* Have commit() and rollback() throw exceptions when passed transactions
with the wrong applied state
* Add tests for this behavior
Change-Id: I27b7a96fdf4d3555d78f64c05a03702ea560c802
The data array is now taken by reference, and the caller must perform
any copying required.
Changed tests to make a deep copy of shared data sets (mostly
ve.dm.example) before passing them to ve.dm.Document().
Change-Id: Iedc64f9fd9cd689640de9a19379cf5f3db94a2bb
There's no use case for keeping a deep copy of the 'internal' property
in the node tree, and it was breaking some of my new tests concerning
change markers. We could keep internal data in the node tree if we
wanted to, but to be correct we'd have to synchronize every time we
changed it, which is a pain.
Change-Id: I024de1ff8b6b6154da82c103c4bb21db8ff2ec14
Based on https://github.com/ccampbell/mousetrap.
Cleaned up to fit our coding standards, pass JSHint, and assume
jQuery's fixes where possible (e.g. no need for an addEvent
utility, no need for filling e.target, e.which, etc. cross-browser
which jQuery.Event already does).
Initially all were local functions in the constructor, but to
allow some customisations in subclasses moved various methods
to the prototype instead and marked with @private.
Really, only .register() must be called from the outside. The rest
assumes normalisation etc. or might break things if called
incorrectly.
Change-Id: Ic69a3c70759052094aefbeab623d885f8b118e14
This was only causing data bloat and also errors because htmlTagName and htmlAttributes are only set if the annotation was constructed from an HTML element
Change-Id: I3d36bca6cd0194e1a4456bb51156117f70b96b13
This is the outer range of the parent of the node, if known. We'll need
this for change marking: when resizing a text node, for instance, we
need to mark its containing parent. This way we get the containing
parent's element's offset for free (selectNodes already tracks it in
currentFrame) rather than having to compute it with another traversal.
Change-Id: Ia335d8080ea9d414ab9f89b943e2ea0cd11d7df3
Some tests were using the wrong node in the expected data, but because
only the summaries were compared, this would succeeed as long as the
type and length were equal (and paragraphs of length 1 are quite common
in our test data). Fixed equalNodeSelection() to compare each node by
reference as well as comparing the summaries. If one of the equality
tests fails, the summaries will still be displayed as expected/actual
data (even though they might be equal), and the message will have
"(reference equality for selection[3].node)" appended to it.
This change broke the tests because a few test cases had bad data, fixed
those in this commit as well.
Change-Id: Iab420cf29d47f7368c8a9ce79f6309efae75685c
For <p>1<br/>2</p>, selectNodes([2,2]) correctly returned the end of the
first text node, but selectNodes([4,4]) returned index 2 in the
paragraph (i.e. between the break node and the second text node). The
correct behavior is to return the start of the second text node, i.e.
the mirror image of the behavior for [2,2].
Fixed this by applying the startBetween/endBetween logic only if the
relevant adjacent node is wrapped (or if it's missing). In the code,
this is expressed as !(adjacent node present && adjacent node wrapped).
Change-Id: Ie3b7fdf1de38ee253a798a7a73bc89734f4ca4fa
The HTML "1<br/>2" was being converted to a linmod that looked like
"<p>1</p><br></br><p>2</p>". This commit fixes the wrapping logic such
that the result is "<p>1<br></br>2</p>" instead. In general, inline
nodes (content nodes) should not interrupt the wrapping, but block nodes
should.
This creates a problem for alien nodes: normally, we determine whether an
alien node is a block alien or an inline alien based on context, but if
we're in wrapping mode we're unsure of the context. We can't tell the
difference between "1<tt>Foo</tt>2" (should be wrapped as one, because
tt is inline) and "1<figure></figure>2" (1 and 2 should be wrapped
separately, because figure is block) using context alone, so in these
cases (and ONLY in these cases) we look up whether the HTML tag in
question is an inline tag or a block tag and use that to decide.
Change-Id: I75e7f3da387dd401d9b93e09a21751951eccbb83