Objective:
Make it possible for inspectors to inspect nodes or annotations, rather
than only annotations. Meanwhile, also make it possible for dialogs to
edit an annotation.
Strategy:
Switch from using type patterns to associate inspectors with annotations
to using arrays of classes, similar to how dialogs already work.
Introduce a view registry which provides lookups for relationships
between models and views. This is more centralized and less repetitive
than implement matching functions for both annotations and nodes in both
the dialog and inspector factories.
Changes:
*.php
* Added links to new file
ve.AnnotationAction.js
* Removed unused parameter to filter annotations using a string or regexp
ve.dm.AnnotationSet.js
* Switched from property/value arguments to callbacks
ve.ui.*(Dialog|Inspector).js
* Replaced type patterns with class lists
* Added class to view registry
ve.ui.*Tool.js, ve.ui.Context.js
* Updated model/view relationship lookup
ve.ui.*Factory.js
* Removed overly-specific lookup functions
ve.ui.Inspector.js
* Removed typePattern property
* Updated model/view relationship lookup
ve.ui.ViewRegistry.js
* New class!
* Migrated node and annotation lookup functions from factories
Change-Id: Ic2bbcf072fdd87e5ce8a03fe1ae3e6d8d50e2593
* changes:
ve.init.mw.ViewPageTarget: Put the Edit source link in the visible tab area
ve.init.mw.ViewPageTarget: Switch tabLayout from 'add' to 'replace'
So. It turns out that the design of SurfaceFragment is a little -
shall we say - wonky.
One of the best things about ve.dm.SurfaceFragment is its magical
ability to retain the intention of its range, even as transactions
are being processed. This ability is granted by each fragment
listening to the surface's change event, and responding by using
translateRange for each transaction that gets processed. Surface
fragments also have these clever methods that allow you to get a
fragment based on another, which makes adjusting the range easy to do
inline without having to manually store multiple fragments or
modifying the original.
This sounded good, and we seemed to all be convinced it was well
designed. But if you add a console.log( 'hello' ); to the first line
of ve.dm.SurfaceFragment.prototype.onTransact, and then start using
the bold tool on various selections of text, you will find that there
may indeed be a flaw. What you will probably realize is that the
number of times that particular line of code is being called is
disturbingly large, and increases each time you do just about anything
in the editor. What's going on? How did we get here? Read on…
It turns out that fragments are immortal. We create them, they listen
to the surface's transact event, we are done with them, but the
surface keeps on emitting events to the now long forgotten about
fragments. They continue to build up over time, never go out of scope,
and bloat the hell out of our program.
The same ended up being true of toolbars - and each time the context
menu fired up a new one the old one was left in limbo, still
responding to events, still taking up memory, but not being visible to
the user.
All of this immortality was causing strange and difficult to track
down problems. This patch fixes this by introducing a destroy method.
This method unbinds events, allowing the object to finally fall out of
scope and die - and more importantly stop receiving notifications of
changes.
This is a hack, but Ed will no doubt get this situation sorted out
properly by making fragments lazy-evaluate their selections by only
storing an identifier of the most recent transaction they were based
on, see bug 47343.
Change-Id: I18bb986001a44732a7871b9d79dc3015eedfb168
Before, it took an array of objects and translated those to indexes
using the store. Literally every caller outside of the test suite got
an array of indexes from the linear model, translated those to objects,
then passed them into the AnnotationSet constructor which translated
them right back to indexes.
The previous behavior was kind of ridiculous on its face, but the
reason we found it is because Inez was investigating the performance
degradation when bolding a line and found that half of it was due
to the hundreds of ve.getHash() calls caused by this behavior.
Change-Id: I38df8ae9f6392849dacf477ea2f804283c964417
Subbu said that cloning of attributes like data-parsoid or typeof would
cause problems for Parsoid.
Also remove the attributes object if it becomes empty, and do the same
for the internal object.
Bug: 47297
Change-Id: I428becf95c70d0ed8af5b0c408e3966dc47fd8c3
Gabriel noticed whitespace diffs in the problem reports. These were
caused by browsers' .innerHTML being broken on <pre>s. We compensate
for this in the converter, but not when generating originalHtml.
However, a variable called originalHtml really shouldn't be generated,
it should just literally be the original, unprocessed HTML. This
does mean it includes the doctype, <html> and <head> which aren't
included in editedHtml (that one's just the contents of the <body>), but
that's much easier to deal with on Parsoid's end than random newline
diffs all over the place.
Change-Id: I8e66cb79887f49f84114ab6b4d0e0d24aea744b6
Context-sensitive nodes are HTML elements like <caption> that can only
appear in certain contexts (<table> in this case). This means that
serializing them by throwing them in a <div> and calling .innerHTML
fails, because the browser knows a <caption> can't be in a <div> and
unwraps it. jQuery's .html() function is clever though and knows to wrap
<caption> in a <table> (and has similar rules for other elements).
So use jQuery's .html() rather than manual .innerHTML stuff.
Change-Id: Id7d3eff968b3a2ba345680772f7cc32e3dcdb529
In HTML like <td>Foo <b>Bar</b></td>, the space would be stripped and
registered as trailing whitespace in the <td>, so it wouldn't be visible
in the editor and would be inserted after the </b> on the way out.
Thanks to Subbu for reporting this. This case was kind of ridiculous and
we're lucky the JRuby article contained it. To trigger the bug, you had
to have:
* a table cell
* containing unwrapped content
* consisting of
** some text
** whitespace
** open annotation (bold in my example, link in Subbu's case)
** text
** close annotation
** and nothing else
Change-Id: I2b83f02764b311a32a50956d4c8930a9394e91a4
This was broken ever since the introduction of IndexValueStore, because
the call to getDataFromDom() wasn't updated, so it crashed with a "doc
is undefined" error. Fixing part of this by passing in a new IVStore.
The data that is transmitted over the wire still has indices with no way
to find out what the corresponding annotations are. It needs to be fully
expanded but there's no way to do this in DM quite yet.
Bug: 47319
Change-Id: I761523d22e51ac560e37ae991d01a6b84224ca40
This gets us some new functionality, mainly the ability to get a position
from a point on screen.
Changes:
* Updated core and position
* Removed unused modules
Change-Id: I2145fe549c975fdbbcd7dfcf144afb26509d0050
This helps with some differences between browsers, specifically Firefox,
where e.which would be "1" even if the mouse button was not pressed.
Change-Id: Ia88449c2bc84073d903dc702bb586127618d86f2
Apparently Parsoid has always required this, and we've never sent it,
yet somehow the code in production works. This may well be the cause
of some of the selser issues we saw after the deployment attempt in
January.
Made oldid a required parameter in the API module, and default it to 0.
When we get 0, we translate that to the empty string for Parsoid's
benefit. We also need to explicitly get wgCurRevisionId in
ViewPageTarget, and that's also 0 on new pages.
Change-Id: I3a55025246014cd74e15d6d5b6c4ede7b823e5df
The first run of getDomFromData() would preserve whitespace just fine,
but it blanked out the .veInternal.whitespace[1] element in certain
cases, contaminating the linear model and making the whitespace data
inconsistent. Subsequent runs of getDomFromData() would then refuse to
serialize that whitespace because the information about it was
inconsistent.
In getDomFromData(), we sometimes unset .veInternal.whitespace[1] (i.e.
set it to undefined) to prevent double processing. Because we're
potentially going to modify .veInternal, don't assign it by reference,
but copy the object.
Added tests asserting that the linear model is unchanged after calling
getDomFromData(), because that function should never modify
linear model data. This test failed in 4 cases (all whitespace-related)
before I added the copyObject() call.
Bug: 43543
Change-Id: Ic4c93510518163894201a693ab50331413715967
This makes the Edit tab point to the VisualEditor, and adds a
"Edit source" link to the p-cactions menu.
Bug: 46872
Change-Id: I559232f3d8e42df0d45311b65df8c30425b1a368
ve.dm.Transaction
* Replace operations are now built directly from the
linear model and automatically determine what metadata
replace information they need to include:
** retainMetadata
** replaceMetadata
** insertMetadata
ve.dm.Document
* Metadata array created empty and padded out after data parsing
as we are no longer using Document.spliceData to build it (a new
test checks for correct metadata length)
* spliceData replaced with getMetadataReplace, which instead returns
transactional steps of spliceData (retain, replace, insert)
ve.dm.MetaLinearData
* Add function for merging metadata items together. Only used
once in the code (Document.getMetadataReplace) but useful
for generating test data.
ve.dm.MetaList
* Replace operations with metadata need to calculate new offset
and indices directly, but can't be applied immediately lest they
put a metaItem out of place and affect findItem.
ve.dm.MetaItem
* Add methods to support queued moves as required by MetaList
Test files
* Updated to match new pushReplace API
* Remove any instances of Document.spliceData
* Extra check on sparse metadata array length
* Rewrite spliceData tests as getMetadataReplace tests
* Count expected cases in Transaction(Processor) tests
Bug: 46954
Change-Id: I4edad1c2dd37c723bff2792bab7d694ef17a86dc
Rather than attach a function to the window and trigger it from a script
tag in the document body, it's much simpler to just use the references
we already have to execute the code immediately and directly.
This also fixes issues in Firefox where reaching in and adding functions
to the window wasn't allowed.
Change-Id: If7a84edf6ae4549b19ce36a3477311c46dbadea7
Inez reported that unitalicizing from the toolbar was broken, because
the toolbar was somehow generating annotations that had .attributes={}
as opposed to .attributes=undefined. Turned out the cause was in the
default value for element in the ve.dm.Model constructor.
Change-Id: I64ea9ef56cd15d1131c1aa23484d7420c95a8225