mediawiki-skins-Vector/resources/skins.vector.es6/tableOfContents.js

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/** @module TableOfContents */
const SECTION_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-list-item';
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
const ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-list-item-active';
const EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-list-item-expanded';
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
const PARENT_SECTION_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-level-1';
const LINK_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-link';
const TOGGLE_CLASS = 'sidebar-toc-toggle';
const TOC_COLLAPSED_CLASS = 'vector-toc-collapsed';
/**
* @callback onHeadingClick
* @param {string} id The id of the clicked list item.
*/
/**
* @callback onToggleClick
* @param {string} id The id of the list item corresponding to the arrow.
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* @typedef {Object} TableOfContentsProps
* @property {HTMLElement} container The container element for the table of contents.
* @property {onHeadingClick} onHeadingClick Called when an arrow is clicked.
* @property {onToggleClick} onToggleClick Called when a list item is clicked.
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* Initializes the sidebar's Table of Contents.
*
* @param {TableOfContentsProps} props
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
* @return {TableOfContents}
*/
module.exports = function tableOfContents( props ) {
let /** @type {HTMLElement | undefined} */ activeTopSection;
let /** @type {HTMLElement | undefined} */ activeSubSection;
let /** @type {Array<HTMLElement>} */ expandedSections;
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* @typedef {Object} activeSectionIds
* @property {string|undefined} parent - The active top level section ID
* @property {string|undefined} child - The active subsection ID
*/
/**
* Get the ids of the active sections.
*
* @return {activeSectionIds}
*/
function getActiveSectionIds() {
return {
parent: ( activeTopSection ) ? activeTopSection.id : undefined,
child: ( activeSubSection ) ? activeSubSection.id : undefined
};
}
/**
* Does the user prefer reduced motion?
*
* @return {boolean}
*/
const prefersReducedMotion = () => {
return window.matchMedia( '(prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)' ).matches;
};
/**
* Sets an `ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS` on the element with an id that matches `id`.
* If the element is not a top level heading (e.g. element with the
* `PARENT_SECTION_CLASS`), the top level heading will also have the
* `ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS`;
*
* @param {string} id The id of the element to be activated in the Table of Contents.
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
*/
function activateSection( id ) {
const selectedTocSection = document.getElementById( id );
const {
parent: previousActiveTopId,
child: previousActiveSubSectionId
} = getActiveSectionIds();
if (
!selectedTocSection ||
( previousActiveTopId === id ) ||
( previousActiveSubSectionId === id )
) {
return;
}
const topSection = /** @type {HTMLElement} */ ( selectedTocSection.closest( `.${PARENT_SECTION_CLASS}` ) );
if ( selectedTocSection === topSection ) {
activeTopSection = topSection;
activeTopSection.classList.add( ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS );
} else {
activeTopSection = topSection;
activeSubSection = selectedTocSection;
activeTopSection.classList.add( ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS );
activeSubSection.classList.add( ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS );
}
}
/**
* Removes the `ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS` from all ToC sections.
*
*/
function deactivateSections() {
if ( activeSubSection ) {
activeSubSection.classList.remove( ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS );
activeSubSection = undefined;
}
if ( activeTopSection ) {
activeTopSection.classList.remove( ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS );
activeTopSection = undefined;
}
}
/**
* Scroll active section into view if necessary
*
* @param {string} id The id of the element to be scrolled to in the Table of Contents.
*/
function scrollToActiveSection( id ) {
const section = document.getElementById( id );
if ( !section ) {
return;
}
// Get currently visible active link
let link = section.firstElementChild;
// @ts-ignore
if ( link && !link.offsetParent ) {
// If active link is a hidden subsection, use active parent link
const { parent: activeTopId } = getActiveSectionIds();
const parentSection = document.getElementById( activeTopId || '' );
if ( parentSection ) {
link = parentSection.firstElementChild;
} else {
link = null;
}
}
const isContainerScrollable = props.container.scrollHeight > props.container.clientHeight;
if ( link && isContainerScrollable ) {
const containerRect = props.container.getBoundingClientRect();
const linkRect = link.getBoundingClientRect();
// Pixels above or below the TOC where we start scrolling the active section into view
const hiddenThreshold = 100;
const midpoint = ( containerRect.bottom - containerRect.top ) / 2;
const linkHiddenTopValue = containerRect.top - linkRect.top;
// Because the bottom of the TOC can extend below the viewport,
// min() is used to find the value where the active section first becomes hidden
const linkHiddenBottomValue = linkRect.bottom -
Math.min( containerRect.bottom, window.innerHeight );
// Respect 'prefers-reduced-motion' user preference
const scrollBehavior = prefersReducedMotion() ? 'smooth' : undefined;
// Manually increment and decrement TOC scroll rather than using scrollToView
// in order to account for threshold
if ( linkHiddenTopValue + hiddenThreshold > 0 ) {
props.container.scrollTo( {
top: props.container.scrollTop - linkHiddenTopValue - midpoint,
behavior: scrollBehavior
} );
}
if ( linkHiddenBottomValue + hiddenThreshold > 0 ) {
props.container.scrollTo( {
top: props.container.scrollTop + linkHiddenBottomValue + midpoint,
behavior: scrollBehavior
} );
}
}
}
/**
* Adds the `EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS` CSS class name
* to a top level heading in the ToC.
*
* @param {string} id
*/
function expandSection( id ) {
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
const tocSection = document.getElementById( id );
if ( !tocSection ) {
return;
}
const parentSection = /** @type {HTMLElement} */ ( tocSection.closest( `.${PARENT_SECTION_CLASS}` ) );
const toggle = tocSection.querySelector( `.${TOGGLE_CLASS}` );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
if ( parentSection && toggle && expandedSections.indexOf( parentSection ) < 0 ) {
toggle.setAttribute( 'aria-expanded', 'true' );
parentSection.classList.add( EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS );
expandedSections.push( parentSection );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
}
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* Get the IDs of expanded sections.
*
* @return {Array<string>}
*/
function getExpandedSectionIds() {
return expandedSections.map( ( s ) => s.id );
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
*
* @param {string} id
*/
function changeActiveSection( id ) {
const { parent: activeParentId, child: activeChildId } = getActiveSectionIds();
if ( id === activeParentId && id === activeChildId ) {
return;
} else {
deactivateSections();
activateSection( id );
scrollToActiveSection( id );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
}
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* @param {string} id
* @return {boolean}
*/
function isTopLevelSection( id ) {
const section = document.getElementById( id );
return !!section && section.classList.contains( PARENT_SECTION_CLASS );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
}
/**
* Removes all `EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS` CSS class names
* from the top level sections in the ToC.
*
* @param {Array<string>} [selectedIds]
*/
function collapseSections( selectedIds ) {
const sectionIdsToCollapse = selectedIds || getExpandedSectionIds();
expandedSections = expandedSections.filter( function ( section ) {
const isSelected = sectionIdsToCollapse.indexOf( section.id ) > -1;
const toggle = isSelected ? section.getElementsByClassName( TOGGLE_CLASS ) : undefined;
if ( isSelected && toggle && toggle.length > 0 ) {
toggle[ 0 ].setAttribute( 'aria-expanded', 'false' );
section.classList.remove( EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS );
return false;
}
return true;
} );
}
/**
* @param {string} id
*/
function toggleExpandSection( id ) {
const expandedSectionIds = getExpandedSectionIds();
const indexOfExpandedSectionId = expandedSectionIds.indexOf( id );
if ( isTopLevelSection( id ) ) {
if ( indexOfExpandedSectionId >= 0 ) {
collapseSections( [ id ] );
} else {
expandSection( id );
}
}
}
/**
* Set aria-expanded attribute for all toggle buttons.
*/
function initializeExpandedStatus() {
const parentSections = props.container.querySelectorAll( `.${PARENT_SECTION_CLASS}` );
parentSections.forEach( ( section ) => {
const expanded = section.classList.contains( EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS );
const toggle = section.querySelector( `.${TOGGLE_CLASS}` );
if ( toggle ) {
toggle.setAttribute( 'aria-expanded', expanded.toString() );
}
} );
}
/**
* Bind event listener for clicking on show/hide Table of Contents links.
*/
function bindCollapseToggleListeners() {
const showHideTocElement = document.querySelectorAll( '#sidebar-toc-label button' );
showHideTocElement.forEach( function ( btn ) {
btn.addEventListener( 'click', () => {
document.body.classList.toggle( TOC_COLLAPSED_CLASS );
} );
} );
}
/**
* Bind event listeners for clicking on section headings and toggle buttons.
*/
function bindSubsectionToggleListeners() {
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
props.container.addEventListener( 'click', function ( e ) {
if (
!( e.target instanceof HTMLElement )
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
) {
return;
}
const tocSection =
/** @type {HTMLElement | null} */ ( e.target.closest( `.${SECTION_CLASS}` ) );
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
if ( tocSection && tocSection.id ) {
// In case section link contains HTML,
// test if click occurs on any child elements.
if ( e.target.closest( `.${LINK_CLASS}` ) ) {
props.onHeadingClick( tocSection.id );
}
// Toggle button does not contain child elements,
// so classList check will suffice.
if ( e.target.classList.contains( TOGGLE_CLASS ) ) {
props.onToggleClick( tocSection.id );
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
}
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
} );
}
/**
* Binds event listeners and sets the default state of the component.
*/
function initialize() {
// Sync component state to the default rendered state of the table of contents.
expandedSections = Array.from(
props.container.querySelectorAll( `.${EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS}` )
);
// Initialize toggle buttons aria-expanded attribute.
initializeExpandedStatus();
// Bind event listeners.
bindSubsectionToggleListeners();
bindCollapseToggleListeners();
// Hide TOC button on VE activation
mw.hook( 've.activationStart' ).add( () => {
const tocButton = document.getElementById( 'vector-toc-collapsed-button' );
if ( tocButton ) {
tocButton.style.display = 'none';
}
} );
}
initialize();
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
/**
* @typedef {Object} TableOfContents
* @property {changeActiveSection} changeActiveSection
* @property {expandSection} expandSection
* @property {toggleExpandSection} toggleExpandSection
* @property {string} ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS
* @property {string} EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS
* @property {string} LINK_CLASS
* @property {string} TOGGLE_CLASS
*/
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
return {
expandSection,
changeActiveSection,
toggleExpandSection,
ACTIVE_SECTION_CLASS,
EXPANDED_SECTION_CLASS,
LINK_CLASS,
TOGGLE_CLASS
Add sectionObserver and tableOfContents component JS to respond to intersection changes This commits sets up the Table of Contents to bold the active section when the section is scrolled. Unfortunately, because our content does not have actual sections but instead has a flat list of headings and paragraphs, we can't use IntersectionObserver in the conventional way as it is optimized to find intersections of elements that are *within* the viewport and the callback will not reliably fire during certain scenarios (e.g. with fast scrolling or when the headings are not currently within the viewport). Furthermore, iterating through a list of elements and calling `getBoundingClientRect()` can be expensive and can also cause significant forced synchronous layouts that block the main thread. The best compromise in terms of performance and function that I've found is to use a combination of a throttled scroll event listener and IntersectionObserver's ability to asyncronously find the boundingClientRect of all elements off the main thread when `.observe` is called which is the approach this patch takes. Although this is an unorthodox way to use IntersectionObserver, performance profiles recorded while holding the "down" arrow and scrolling for 10 seconds with a 6x CPU throttle are comparable between master and this patch: master: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930737 this patch: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/F34930738 Bug: T297614 Change-Id: I4077d86a1786cc1f4a7d85b20b7cf402960940e7
2022-01-21 20:15:34 +00:00
};
};