By loading only the fonts actually used on a page, we can often avoid
making a lot of unnecessary requests and style invalidations.
This change makes initial loading of apple.com much faster.
Fixes https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/20747
A key press, which is an ASCII control character will no longer cause
TableView to begin editing.
This fixes an issue in Spreadsheet where navigating to a cell then
pressing escape would cause a that cell's text to be set to a
non-printable value. Pressing escape after navigating to a cell
now has no effect.
Bash eats the backslash in this format (similarly for W\ORD etc.).
Dr.POSIX doesn't specify this anywhere, but it's used all over the
place, so let's support it.
This will effectively allow us to use C++ code as an input for the
compiler. This would be useful for testing, since otherwise we would
have had to specify tests as a spec-like XML, which is not exactly the
most developer-friendly experience.
SipHash is highly HashDoS-resistent, initialized with a random seed at
startup (i.e. non-deterministic) and usable for security-critical use
cases with large enough parameters. We just use it because it's
reasonably secure with parameters 1-3 while having excellent properties
and not being significantly slower than before.
This subtraction is necessary to ensure that the section has the correct
address. Also, without this change, the Kernel ELF binary would explode
in size. This was forgotten in a0dd6ec6b1.
The information the user is most interested in is usually in the center,
so we should start loading tiles from the center and move outwards.
Since tiles are loaded in draw order, simply drawing them in this order
achieves the desired effect. The current center-outwards loading
algorithm is a basic spiral algorithm, but others may be evaluated
later.
- Convert to FlatPtr instead of doing pointer arithmetic on a too-large
pointer type in find_min_and_max_block_addresses(). This makes the
range more accurate.
- Untag possible cell pointers in add_possible_value() before doing the
rejection. Otherwise we end up rejecting most pointers since the tags
sit in the highest bits!
This fixes a crash when running the Speedometer benchmark.
Just using Vector::resize() meant that we allocated exact capacity
instead of leaving padding at the end. This patch adds a call to
grow_capacity() before resize(), which ensures that we grow with the
usual extra padding.
The bots complain that `forward()` could be either from libc++'s
include/c++/v1/__utility/forward.h or from AK/StdLibExtras.h.
I don't see this locally, but Ladybird also defined AK_DONT_REPLACE_STD,
so let's see if this does the trick.
Use `Meta/serenity.sh build lagom MacPDF` to build, and either of
`open Build/lagom/bin/MacPDF.app` or
`Build/lagom/bin/MacPDF.app/Contents/MacOS/MacPDF` to run.
Xcode used to insert a bunch of things to Info.plist. Now it can
no longer do that, so manually put them there
1. main.m is now main.mm
2. MainMenu.xib is now no longer in a Base.lproj subfolder
3. Remove SerenityPDF.entitlements since it won't be used in our CMake
build
xib changes:
* Add a "Go" toplevel submenu
* Put a "Go to Page..." menu item in it
* Add showGoToPageDialog: to first responder
* Bind action of new menu item to that
The dialog is just a janky NSAlert for now.
This is a bit janky for several reasons:
* `initialize` is now no longer called on a bg thread
* sheet UI is janky both visually and from an implementation PoV
But hey, it works for now.