gecko-dev/layout/doc/line-layout.html

104 строки
4.8 KiB
HTML
Исходник Обычный вид История

1999-05-13 21:47:41 +04:00
<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.5 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.0.36 i686) [Netscape]">
</head>
<body>
&nbsp;
<table CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 COLS=1 WIDTH="100%" BGCOLOR="#33CCFF" NOSAVE >
<tr>
<td><font size=+4>Line Layout</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Line layout is the process of placing inline frames horizontally (left
to right or right to left depending on the CSS direction property value).
An attempt is made to describe how it works.
<p>nsLineLayout is the class that provides <b>support</b> for line layout.
The container frames nsBlockFrame and nsInlineFrame use nsLineLayout to
perform line layout and span layout. Span layout is a subset of line layout
used for inline container classes - for example, the HTML "B" element).
Because of spans, nsLineLayout handles the nested nature of line layout.
<p>Line layout as a process contains the following steps:
<ol>
<li>
Initialize the nsLineLayout object (done in nsBlockFrame). This prepares
the line layout engine for reflow by initializing its internal data structures.<br>
<BR></li>
<li>
Reflowing of inline frames. The block code uses nsLineLayout's <b>ReflowFrame</b>
method to reflow each inline frame in a line. This continues until the
line runs out of room or the block runs out of frames. The block may be
reflowing a span (an instance of nsInlineFrame) which will recursively
use nsLineLayout for reflow and placement of the frames in the span.<br>
<br>
Note that the container frames (nsBlockFrame/nsInlineFrame)&nbsp;call nsLineLayout's
ReflowFrame method instead of having the line layout code process a list
of children. This is done so that the container frames can handle the issues
of "pushing" and "pulling"&nbsp;of frames across continuations. Because
block and inline maintain different data structures for their child lists,
and because we don't want to mandate a common base class, the line layout
code doesn't control the "outer loop"&nbsp;of frame reflow.<br>
<BR></li>
<li>
Finish line layout by vertically aligning the frames, horizontally aligning
the frames and relatively positioning the frames on the line.</li>
</ol>
nsLineLayout is also used by nsBlockFrame to construct text-run information;
this process is independent of normal line layout is pretty much a hack.
<p>When frames are reflowed they return a reflow status. During line layout,
there are several additions to the basic reflow status used by most frames:
<ul>
<li>
NS_FRAME_COMPLETE - this is a normal reflow status and indicates that the
frame is complete and doesn't need to be continued.</li>
<li>
NS_FRAME_NOT_COMPLETE - this is another normal reflow status and indicates
that the frame is not complete and will need a continuation frame created
for it (if it doesn't already have one).</li>
<li>
NS_INLINE_BREAK - some kind of break has been requested. Breaks types include
simple line breaks (like the BR tag in html sometime does) and more complex
breaks like page breaks, floater breaks, etc. Currently, we only support
line breaks, and floater clearing breaks. Breaks can occur before the frame
(NS_INLINE_IS_BREAK_BEFORE) or after the frame (NS_INLINE_IS_BREAK_AFTER)</li>
</ul>
The handling of the reflow status is done by the container frame <b>using</b>
nsLineLayout.
<br>&nbsp;
<table CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=0 COLS=1 WIDTH="100%" BGCOLOR="#33CCFF" NOSAVE >
<tr>
<td><font size=+3>Line Breaking</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Another aspect of nsLineLayout is that it supports line breaking. At
the highest level, line breaking consists of identifying where it is appropriate
to break a line that doesn't fit in the available horizontal space. At
a lower level, some frames are breakable (e.g. text) and some frames are
not (e.g. images).
<p>In order to break text properly, some out-of-band information is needed
by the text frame code (nsTextFrame). In particular, because a "word"&nbsp;(a
non-breakable unit of text) may span several frames (for example:&nbsp;<b>"&lt;B>H&lt;/B>ello
there"</b> is breakable after the <b>"o"</b>&nbsp;in ello but not after
the <b>"H"</b>), text-run information is used to allow the text frame to
find adjacent text and look at them to determine where the next breakable
point is. nsLineLayout supports this by keeping track of the text-runs
as well as both storing and interrogating "word" state.
<p>In addition, nsLineLayout assists in the compression/expansion of whitespace
for the CSS&nbsp;white-space property. Compression occurs when neighboring
whitespace either inside a single piece of text is compressed or when spaces
between abutting elements is collapsed. Expansion occurs in preformatted
text when tabs are found. nsLineLayout keeps track of a "column"&nbsp;which
is used to determine where the next tab "moves"&nbsp;to.
<br>&nbsp;
<br>&nbsp;
<br>&nbsp;
</body>
</html>