/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */ /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ /* struct containing the output from nsIFrame::Reflow */ #ifndef nsHTMLReflowMetrics_h___ #define nsHTMLReflowMetrics_h___ #include "nsRect.h" #include "nsBoundingMetrics.h" #include "WritingModes.h" //---------------------------------------------------------------------- struct nsHTMLReflowState; // Option flags #define NS_REFLOW_CALC_BOUNDING_METRICS 0x0001 /** * When we store overflow areas as an array of scrollable and visual * overflow, we use these indices. * * eOverflowType_LENGTH is needed (for gcc 4.5.*, at least) to ensure * that 2 is a valid value of nsOverflowType for use in * NS_FOR_FRAME_OVERFLOW_TYPES. */ enum nsOverflowType { eVisualOverflow, eScrollableOverflow, eOverflowType_LENGTH }; #define NS_FOR_FRAME_OVERFLOW_TYPES(var_) \ for (nsOverflowType var_ = nsOverflowType(0); var_ < 2; \ var_ = nsOverflowType(var_ + 1)) struct nsOverflowAreas { private: nsRect mRects[2]; public: nsRect& Overflow(size_t aIndex) { NS_ASSERTION(aIndex < 2, "index out of range"); return mRects[aIndex]; } const nsRect& Overflow(size_t aIndex) const { NS_ASSERTION(aIndex < 2, "index out of range"); return mRects[aIndex]; } nsRect& VisualOverflow() { return mRects[eVisualOverflow]; } const nsRect& VisualOverflow() const { return mRects[eVisualOverflow]; } nsRect& ScrollableOverflow() { return mRects[eScrollableOverflow]; } const nsRect& ScrollableOverflow() const { return mRects[eScrollableOverflow]; } nsOverflowAreas() { // default-initializes to zero due to nsRect's default constructor } nsOverflowAreas(const nsRect& aVisualOverflow, const nsRect& aScrollableOverflow) { mRects[eVisualOverflow] = aVisualOverflow; mRects[eScrollableOverflow] = aScrollableOverflow; } nsOverflowAreas(const nsOverflowAreas& aOther) { *this = aOther; } nsOverflowAreas& operator=(const nsOverflowAreas& aOther) { mRects[0] = aOther.mRects[0]; mRects[1] = aOther.mRects[1]; return *this; } bool operator==(const nsOverflowAreas& aOther) const { // Scrollable overflow is a point-set rectangle and visual overflow // is a pixel-set rectangle. return VisualOverflow().IsEqualInterior(aOther.VisualOverflow()) && ScrollableOverflow().IsEqualEdges(aOther.ScrollableOverflow()); } bool operator!=(const nsOverflowAreas& aOther) const { return !(*this == aOther); } nsOverflowAreas operator+(const nsPoint& aPoint) const { nsOverflowAreas result(*this); result += aPoint; return result; } nsOverflowAreas& operator+=(const nsPoint& aPoint) { mRects[0] += aPoint; mRects[1] += aPoint; return *this; } void Clear() { mRects[0].SetRect(0, 0, 0, 0); mRects[1].SetRect(0, 0, 0, 0); } // Mutates |this| by unioning both overflow areas with |aOther|. void UnionWith(const nsOverflowAreas& aOther); // Mutates |this| by unioning both overflow areas with |aRect|. void UnionAllWith(const nsRect& aRect); // Mutates |this| by setting both overflow areas to |aRect|. void SetAllTo(const nsRect& aRect); }; /** * An nsCollapsingMargin represents a vertical collapsing margin between * blocks as described in section 8.3.1 of CSS2, * . * * All adjacent vertical margins collapse, and the resulting margin is * the sum of the largest positive margin included and the smallest (most * negative) negative margin included. */ struct nsCollapsingMargin { private: nscoord mMostPos; // the largest positive margin included nscoord mMostNeg; // the smallest negative margin included public: nsCollapsingMargin() : mMostPos(0), mMostNeg(0) { } nsCollapsingMargin(const nsCollapsingMargin& aOther) : mMostPos(aOther.mMostPos), mMostNeg(aOther.mMostNeg) { } bool operator==(const nsCollapsingMargin& aOther) { return mMostPos == aOther.mMostPos && mMostNeg == aOther.mMostNeg; } bool operator!=(const nsCollapsingMargin& aOther) { return !(*this == aOther); } nsCollapsingMargin& operator=(const nsCollapsingMargin& aOther) { mMostPos = aOther.mMostPos; mMostNeg = aOther.mMostNeg; return *this; } void Include(nscoord aCoord) { if (aCoord > mMostPos) mMostPos = aCoord; else if (aCoord < mMostNeg) mMostNeg = aCoord; } void Include(const nsCollapsingMargin& aOther) { if (aOther.mMostPos > mMostPos) mMostPos = aOther.mMostPos; if (aOther.mMostNeg < mMostNeg) mMostNeg = aOther.mMostNeg; } void Zero() { mMostPos = 0; mMostNeg = 0; } bool IsZero() const { return (mMostPos == 0) && (mMostNeg == 0); } nscoord get() const { return mMostPos + mMostNeg; } }; /** * Reflow metrics used to return the frame's desired size and alignment * information. * * @see #Reflow() */ class nsHTMLReflowMetrics { public: // XXXldb Should |aFlags| generally be passed from parent to child? // Some places do it, and some don't. |aFlags| should perhaps go away // entirely. // XXX width/height/ascent are OUT parameters and so they shouldn't // have to be initialized, but there are some bad frame classes that // aren't properly setting them when returning from Reflow()... explicit nsHTMLReflowMetrics(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode, uint32_t aFlags = 0) : mISize(0) , mBSize(0) , mBlockStartAscent(ASK_FOR_BASELINE) , mFlags(aFlags) , mWritingMode(aWritingMode) {} explicit nsHTMLReflowMetrics(const nsHTMLReflowState& aState, uint32_t aFlags = 0); // ISize and BSize are logical-coordinate dimensions: // ISize is the size in the writing mode's inline direction (which equates to // width in horizontal writing modes, height in vertical ones), and BSize is // the size in the block-progression direction. nscoord ISize(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode) const { CHECK_WRITING_MODE(aWritingMode); return mISize; } nscoord BSize(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode) const { CHECK_WRITING_MODE(aWritingMode); return mBSize; } mozilla::LogicalSize Size(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode) const { CHECK_WRITING_MODE(aWritingMode); return mozilla::LogicalSize(aWritingMode, mISize, mBSize); } nscoord& ISize(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode) { CHECK_WRITING_MODE(aWritingMode); return mISize; } nscoord& BSize(mozilla::WritingMode aWritingMode) { CHECK_WRITING_MODE(aWritingMode); return mBSize; } // Set inline and block size from a LogicalSize, converting to our // writing mode as necessary. void SetSize(mozilla::WritingMode aWM, mozilla::LogicalSize aSize) { mozilla::LogicalSize convertedSize = aSize.ConvertTo(mWritingMode, aWM); mBSize = convertedSize.BSize(mWritingMode); mISize = convertedSize.ISize(mWritingMode); } // Set both inline and block size to zero -- no need for a writing mode! void ClearSize() { mISize = mBSize = 0; } // Width and Height are physical dimensions, independent of writing mode. // Accessing these is slightly more expensive than accessing the logical // dimensions (once vertical writing mode support is enabled); as far as // possible, client code should work purely with logical dimensions. nscoord Width() const { return mWritingMode.IsVertical() ? mBSize : mISize; } nscoord Height() const { return mWritingMode.IsVertical() ? mISize : mBSize; } // It's only meaningful to consider "ascent" on the block-start side of the // frame, so no need to pass a writing mode argument nscoord BlockStartAscent() const { return mBlockStartAscent; } nscoord& Width() { return mWritingMode.IsVertical() ? mBSize : mISize; } nscoord& Height() { return mWritingMode.IsVertical() ? mISize : mBSize; } void SetBlockStartAscent(nscoord aAscent) { mBlockStartAscent = aAscent; } enum { ASK_FOR_BASELINE = nscoord_MAX }; // Metrics that _exactly_ enclose the text to allow precise MathML placements. // If the NS_REFLOW_CALC_BOUNDING_METRICS flag is set, then the caller is // requesting that you also compute additional details about your inner // bounding box and italic correction. For example, the bounding box of // msup is the smallest rectangle that _exactly_ encloses both the text // of the base and the text of the superscript. nsBoundingMetrics mBoundingMetrics; // [OUT] // Carried out block-end margin values. This is the collapsed // (generational) block-end margin value. nsCollapsingMargin mCarriedOutBEndMargin; // For frames that have content that overflow their content area // (HasOverflowAreas() is true) these rectangles represent the total // area of the frame including visible overflow, i.e., don't include // overflowing content that is hidden. The rects are in the local // coordinate space of the frame, and should be at least as big as the // desired size. If there is no content that overflows, then the // overflow area is identical to the desired size and should be {0, 0, // width, height}. nsOverflowAreas mOverflowAreas; nsRect& VisualOverflow() { return mOverflowAreas.VisualOverflow(); } const nsRect& VisualOverflow() const { return mOverflowAreas.VisualOverflow(); } nsRect& ScrollableOverflow() { return mOverflowAreas.ScrollableOverflow(); } const nsRect& ScrollableOverflow() const { return mOverflowAreas.ScrollableOverflow(); } // Set all of mOverflowAreas to (0, 0, width, height). void SetOverflowAreasToDesiredBounds(); // Union all of mOverflowAreas with (0, 0, width, height). void UnionOverflowAreasWithDesiredBounds(); mozilla::WritingMode GetWritingMode() const { return mWritingMode; } private: nscoord mISize, mBSize; // [OUT] desired width and height (border-box) nscoord mBlockStartAscent; // [OUT] baseline (in Block direction), or ASK_FOR_BASELINE public: uint32_t mFlags; private: mozilla::WritingMode mWritingMode; }; #endif /* nsHTMLReflowMetrics_h___ */