Chrome 112 & Safari 16.4 introduce two changes:
* `:has()` is non-forgiving
* `CSS.supports( "selector(...)" )` parses everything in a non-forgiving way
We no longer care about the latter but the former means the `cssHas` support
test now passes.
Closes gh-5226
This regressed in gh-3656 as the added logic to include scroll gutters
in `.innerWidth()` / `.innerHeight()` didn't take negative margins into
account. This broke handling of negative margins in
`.offsetHeight( true )` and `.offsetWidth( true )`. To fix it, calculate
margin delta separately and only add it after the scroll gutter
adjustment logic.
Fixes gh-3982
Closes gh-5234
Ref gh-3656
(cherry picked from commit bce13b72c1)
Previously, when `leverageNative` handled async events, there was
a case where an empty placeholder object was set as a result.
Covering both such an object and `false` required a `length` check.
However, this is not necessary since gh-5223 and the check was
already simplified in other places; this one was missed.
Closes gh-5236
Ref gh-5223
(cherry picked from commit dfe212d5a1)
There was a comment claiming that there are two implementations
of `safeActiveElement`. However, the one in `event.js` got removed
in gh-5224, even before the comment was added.
This commit removes this obsolete comment.
Closes gh-5237
Ref gh-5224
In IE 9 accessing `document.activeElement` may throw; see
https://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/13393. We've already guarded
against this in event code but not in selector.
Closes gh-5229
In `leverageNative`, instead of calling `event.stopImmediatePropagation()`
which would abort both native & jQuery handlers, set the wrapper's
`isImmediatePropagationStopped` property to a function returning `true`.
Since for each element + type pair jQuery attaches only one native handler,
there is also only one wrapper jQuery event so this achieves the goal:
on the target element jQuery handlers don't fire but native ones do.
Unfortunately, this workaround doesn't work for handlers on ancestors
- since the native event is re-wrapped by a jQuery one on each level of
the propagation, the only way to stop it for jQuery was to stop it for
everyone via native `stopPropagation()`. This is not a problem for
`focus`/`blur` which don't bubble, but it does also stop `click` on
checkboxes and radios. We accept this limitation.
Fixes gh-5015
Closes gh-5228
(cherry picked from commit 6ad3651dbf)
In IE (all versions), `focus` & `blur` handlers are fired asynchronously
but `focusin` & `focusout` are run synchronously. In other browsers, all
those handlers are fired synchronously. Asynchronous behavior of these
handlers in IE caused issues for IE (gh-4856, gh-4859).
We now simulate `focus` via `focusin` & `blur` via `focusout` in IE to avoid
these issues. This also let us simplify some tests.
This commit also simplifies `leverageNative` - with IE now using `focusin`
to simulate `focus` and `focusout` to simulate `blur`, we don't have to deal
with async events in `leverageNative`. This also fixes broken `focus` triggers
after first triggering it on a hidden element - previously, `leverageNative`
assumed that the native `focus` handler not firing after calling the native
`focus` method meant it would be handled later, asynchronously, which
was not the case (gh-4950).
To preserve relative `focusin`/`focus` & `focusout`/`blur` event order
guaranteed on the 3.x branch, attach a single handler for both events in IE.
A side effect of this is that to reduce size the `event/focusin` module
no longer exists and it's impossible to disable the `focusin` patch
in modern browsers via the jQuery custom build system.
Fixes gh-4856
Fixes gh-4859
Fixes gh-4950
Ref gh-5223
Closes gh-5224
Co-authored-by: Richard Gibson <richard.gibson@gmail.com>
Rename `jQuery.Deferred.getStackHook` to `jQuery.Deferred.getErrorHook`
to indicate passing an error instance is usually a better choice - it
works with source maps while a raw stack generally does not.
In jQuery `3.7.0`, we'll keep both names, marking the old one as
deprecated. In jQuery `4.0.0` we'll just keep the new one. This
change implements the `3.7.0` version; PR gh-5211 implements
the `4.0.0` one.
Fixes gh-5201
Closes gh-5212
Ref gh-5211
`CSS.supports( "selector(...)" )` has different semantics than selectors passed
to `querySelectorAll`. Apart from the fact that the former returns `false` for
unrecognized selectors and the latter throws, `qSA` is more forgiving and
accepts some invalid selectors, auto-correcting them where needed - for
example, mismatched brackers are auto-closed. This behavior difference is
breaking for many users.
To add to that, a recent CSSWG resolution made `:is()` & `:where()` the only
pseudos with forgiving parsing; browsers are in the process of making `:has()`
parsing unforgiving.
Taking all that into account, we go back to our previous try-catch approach
without relying on `CSS.supports( "selector(...)" )`. The only difference
is we detect forgiving parsing in `:has()` and mark the selector as buggy.
The PR also updates `playwright-webkit` so that we test against a version
of WebKit that already has non-forgiving `:has()`.
Fixes gh-5194
Closes gh-5207
Ref gh-5206
Ref gh-5098
Ref gh-5107
Ref w3c/csswg-drafts#7676
jQuery 3.6.2 started using `CSS.supports( "selector(SELECTOR)" )` before using
`querySelectorAll` on the selector. This was to solve gh-5098 - some selectors,
like `:has()`, now had their parameters parsed in a forgiving way, meaning
that `:has(:fakepseudo)` no longer throws but just returns 0 results, breaking
that jQuery mechanism.
A recent spec change made `CSS.supports( "selector(SELECTOR)" )` always use
non-forgiving parsing, allowing us to use this API for what we've used
`try-catch` before.
To solve the issue on the spec side for older jQuery versions, `:has()`
parameters are no longer using forgiving parsing in the latest spec update
but our new mechanism is more future-proof anyway.
However, the jQuery implementation has a bug - in
`CSS.supports( "selector(SELECTOR)" )`, `SELECTOR` needs to be
a `<complex-selector>` and not a `<complex-selector-list>`. Which means that
selector lists now skip `qSA` and go to the jQuery custom traversal:
```js
CSS.supports("selector(div:valid, span)"); // false
CSS.supports("selector(div:valid)"); // true
CSS.supports("selector(span)"); // true
```
To solve this, this commit wraps the selector list passed to
`CSS.supports( "selector(:is(SELECTOR))" )` with `:is`, making it a single
selector again.
See:
* https://w3c.github.io/csswg-drafts/css-conditional-4/#at-supports-ext
* https://w3c.github.io/csswg-drafts/selectors-4/#typedef-complex-selector
* https://w3c.github.io/csswg-drafts/selectors-4/#typedef-complex-selector-list
Fixes gh-5177
Closes gh-5178
Ref w3c/csswg-drafts#7280
(cherry picked from commit 09d988b774)
Some APIs, like `.prevAll()`, return elements in the reversed order, causing
confusing behavior when used with wrapping methods (see gh-5149 for more info)
To provide an easy workaround, this commit implements a chainable `uniqueSort`
method on jQuery objects, an equivalent of `jQuery.uniqueSort`.
Fixes gh-5166
Closes gh-5168
(cherry picked from commit 5266f23cf4)
This commit removes Sizzle from jQuery, inlining its code & removing obsolete
workarounds where applicable.
The Sizzle AUTHORS.txt file has been merged with the jQuery one - people are
sorted by their first contributions to either of the two repositories.
The main `selector` module can be disabled in favor of `selector-native`
via:
grunt custom:-selector
For backwards compatibility, the legacy `sizzle` alias is also supported (it
will be dropped in jQuery `4.0.0`):
grunt custom:-selector
Sizzle tests have been ported to jQuery ones. Ones that are not compatible
with the `selector-native` module are disabled if the regular selector module
is excluded.
Backwards compatibility is still kept for all `Sizzle` utils - they continue to be
available under `jQuery.find` - but the primary implementation is now attached
directly to jQuery.
Some selector utils shared by `selector` & `selector-native` have been
extracted & deduplicated. `jQuery.text` and `jQuery.isXMLDoc` have been
moved to the `core` module.
The commit reduces the gzipped jQuery size by 851 bytes compared to the
`3.x-stable` branch.
Closes gh-5113
Ref gh-4395
Ref gh-4406
The `<template/>` element `contents` property is a document fragment that may
have a `null` `documentElement`. In Safari 16 this happens in more cases due
to recent spec changes - in particular, even if that document fragment is
explicitly adopted into an outer document. We're testing both of those cases
now.
The crash used to happen in `jQuery.contains` which is an alias for
`Sizzle.contains` in jQuery 3.x.
The Sizzle fix is at jquery/sizzle#490, released in Sizzle `2.3.8`. This
version of Sizzle is included in the parent commit.
A fix similar to the one from gh-5158 has also been applied here to the
`selector-native` version.
Fixes gh-5147
Closes gh-5159
Ref jquery/sizzle#490
Ref gh-5158
The spec requires that CSS variable values are trimmed. In browsers that do
this - mainly, Safari, but also Firefox if the value only has leading
whitespace - we currently return undefined; in other browsers, we return
an empty string as the logic to fall back to undefined happens before
trimming.
This commit adds another explicit callback to `undefined` to have it consistent
across browsers.
Also, more explicit comments about behaviors we need to work around in various
browsers have been added.
Closes gh-5120
Ref gh-5106
(cherry picked from commit 7eb0019640)
Regex imp implementation takes `O(N^2)` time to trim the string when
multiple adjacent spaces were present.
The new expression require that the "whitespace run" starts from
a non-whitespace to avoid `O(N^2)` behavior when the engine would
try matching `\s+$` at each space position.
Closes gh-5068
This change makes jQuery skip falsy values in `addClass( array )`
& `removeClass( array )` instead of stopping iteration when the first falsy
value is detected. This makes code like:
```js
elem.addClass( [ "a", "", "b" ] );
```
add both the `a` & `b` classes.
The code was also optimized for size a bit so it doesn't increase the
minified gzipped size.
Fixes gh-4998
Closes gh-5003
(partially cherry picked from commit a338b407f2)
This is a version of gh-4993 for the `3.x-stable` branch.
The GitHub UI treats `#NUMBER` as referring to its own issues which is confusing
when in jQuery source it's usually referring to the old deprecated Trac instance
at https://bugs.jquery.com. This change replaces all such Trac references with
`trac-NUMBER`.
A few of the references came with the Sizzle integration and referred to the
Sizzle GitHub bug tracker. Those have been replaced with full links instead.
A new entry describing issue reference conventions has been added to README.
Closes gh-4994
Ref gh-4993
Ref 5d5ea01511
Neither of the removed links is crucial; one of them refers to a site that has
since started being malicious; while the Web Archive links remain safe, some
scanners warn about such links. Removing them is the safest thing to do.
Fixes gh-4981
Closes gh-4991
(cherry picked from commit e24f2dcf3f)
CSS does not acknowledge carriage return or form feed characters
as whitespace but it does replace them with whitespace, making it
acceptable to use `rtrim`.
Closes gh-4956
(cherry picked from commit 655c0ed5e2)
The spec has recently changed and CSS Custom Properties values are trimmed now.
This change makes jQuery polyfill that new behavior for all browsers.
Ref w3c/csswg-drafts#774
Fixes gh-4926
Closes gh-4930
(partially cherry picked from commit efadfe991a)
When evaluating scripts, jQuery strips out the possible wrapping HTML comment
and a CDATA section. However, all supported browsers are already doing that
when loading JS via appending a script tag to the DOM which is how we've been
doing `jQuery.globalEval` since jQuery 3.0.0. jQuery logic was imperfect, e.g.
it just stripped the `<!--` and `-->` markers, respectively at the beginning or
the end of the script contents. However, browsers are also stripping everything
following those markers in the same line, treating them as single-line comments
delimiters; this is now also mandated by ECMAScript 2015 in Annex B. Instead
of fixing the jQuery logic, just let the browser do its thing.
We still need to strip CDATA sections for backwards compatibility. This
shouldn't be needed as in XML documents they're already not visible when
inspecting element contents and in HTML documents they have no meaning but
we're preserving that logic for backwards compatibility. This will be removed
completely in 4.0.
Fixes gh-4904
Closes gh-4905
Ref gh-4906
The `_default` function in the special event settings for focus/blur has
always returned `true` since gh-4813 as the event was already being fired
from `leverageNative`. However, that only works if there's an active handler
on that element; this made a quick consecutive call:
```js
elem.on( "focus", function() {} ).off( "focus" );
```
make subsequent `.trigger( "focus" )` calls to not do any triggering.
The solution, already used in a similar `_default` method for the `click` event,
is to check for the `dataPriv` entry on the element for the focus event
(similarly for blur).
Fixes gh-4867
Closes gh-4885
(cherry picked from commit e539bac79e)
Firefox incorrectly (or perhaps correctly) includes table borders in computed
dimensions, but they are the only one. Workaround this by testing for it and
falling back to offset properties
Fixes gh-4529
Closes gh-4807
If during a focus handler another focus event is triggered:
```js
elem1.on( "focus", function() {
elem2.trigger( "focus" );
} );
```
due to their synchronous nature everywhere outside of IE the hack added in
gh-4279 to leverage native events causes the native `.focus()` method to be
called last for the initial element, making it steal the focus back. Since
the native method is already being called in `leverageNative`, we can skip that
final call.
This aligns with changes to the `_default` method for the `click` event that
were added when `leverageNative` was introduced there.
A side effect of this change is that now `focusin` will only propagate to the
document for the last focused element. This is a change in behavior but it also
aligns us better with how this works with native methods.
Fixes gh-4382
Closes gh-4813
Ref gh-4279
(cherry picked from commit dbcffb396c)
In Chrome, if an element having a `focusout` handler is blurred by
clicking outside of it, it invokes the handler synchronously. If
that handler calls `.remove()` on the element, the data is cleared,
leaving private data undefined. We're reading a property from that
data so we need to guard against this.
Fixes gh-4417
Closes gh-4799
(cherry picked from commit 5c2d08704e)
All supported browsers implement this property by themselves. The shim was only
needed for IE <9.
Fixes gh-3235
Closes gh-4765
Ref gh-4755
(cherry picked from commit 1a5fff4c16)
Issue gh-4379 was meant to be a bug fix but the JSONP case is a bit special:
under the hood it's a script but it simulates JSON responses in an environment
without a CORS setup and sending JSON payloads on error responses is quite
typical there.
This commit makes JSONP error responses still execute the payload. The regular
script error responses continue to be skipped.
Fixes gh-4771
Closes gh-4773
(cherry picked from commit a1e619b03a)
The way warning against number values in `.css()` setters was done in
jquery/jquery-migrate#337 and later refined in jquery/jquery-migrate#348
there's no need to send px-ed strings for `top` & `left` as they already
don't get the "px" suffix.
This reverts commit 57038faebc.
Closes gh-4753
Ref jquery/jquery-migrate/pull/337
Ref jquery/jquery-migrate/pull/348
1. Correct code indentations based on jQuery Style Guide
(contribute.jquery.org/style-guide/js/#spacing).
2. Add rules to "src/.eslintrc.json" to enable "enforcing consistent
indentation", with minimal changes to the current code.
Closes gh-4672
(cherry picked from 3d62d57049)
The change in gh-4603 made the object returned by `elem.data()`
a prototype-less object. That's a desired change to support keys
colliding with `Object.prototype` properties but it's also a breaking
change so it has to wait for jQuery 4.0.0.
A 3.x-only test was added to avoid breaking it in the future on this
branch.
Fixes gh-4665
Ref gh-4603
Closes gh-4666
The script transport used to evaluate fetched script sources which is
undesirable for unsuccessful HTTP responses. This is different to other data
types where such a convention was fine (e.g. in case of JSON).
(cherry picked from 50871a5a85)
Fixes gh-4250
Fixes gh-4655
Closes gh-4379
This fixes the issue of "%20" in POST data being replaced with "+"
even for requests with content-type different from
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded", e.g. for "application/json".
Fixes gh-4119
Closes gh-4650
(cherry picked from 7fb90a6bea)
Co-authored-by: Richard Gibson <richard.gibson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Michał Gołębiowski-Owczarek <m.goleb@gmail.com>
The `doc` variable in:
https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/3.4.1/src/event/focusin.js#L30
matched `document` for `document` & `window` for `window`, creating two
separate wrapper event handlers & calling handlers twice if at least one
`focusout` or `focusin` handler was attached on *both* `window` & `document`,
or on `window` & another regular node.
Also, fix the "focusin from an iframe" test to actually verify the behavior
from commit 1cecf64e5a - the commit that
introduced the regression - to make sure we don't regress on either front.
Fixes gh-4652
Closes gh-4656
Make sure events & data keys matching Object.prototype properties work.
A separate fix for such events on cloned elements was added as well.
Fixes gh-3256
Closes gh-4603
(cherry picked from commit 9d76c0b163)
Node.js code is written more & more commonly in ES6+ so it doesn't make sense
to enable it there. There are many violations in test code so it's disabled
there as well.
Closes gh-4615
(cherry picked from commit 4a7fc8544e)
This commit aligns the `3.x-stable` branch with `master` in two aspects:
1. It migrates the nonce module to return an object instead of a primitive
variable. This had to be changed on `master` as in ES modules you export
live read-only bindings to variables, meaning you can't increment the nonce
directly. Also, the way it was done so far was working differently in AMD & the
single built file - in the built file one nonce variable was declared, accessed
and incremented. In AMD mode separate instances were create for each module
that depend on the nonce module, creating unintended nonce clashes.
2. Whether the `noGlobal` parameter was set to `true` is now checked using the
typeof operator to align with `master`.
Closes gh-4612
Ref gh-4541
Ref d0ce00cdfa
1. Support passing custom document to jQuery.globalEval; the script will be
invoked in the context of this document.
2. Fire external scripts appended to iframe contents in that iframe context;
this was already supported & tested for inline scripts but not for external
ones.
Fixes gh-4518
Closes gh-4601
(cherry picked from commit 4592595b47)
This commit fixes unit tests for the following builds:
1. The no-deprecated build: `custom:-deprecated`
2. The current slim build: `custom:-ajax,-effects`
3. The 4.0 (#4553) slim build: `custom:-ajax,-callbacks,-deferred,-effects`
It also adds separate Travis jobs for the no-deprecated & slim builds.
Apart from that, add intuitive names to Travis jobs. Otherwise it's hard to see
at a glance that a particular job is running on Firefox ESR, for example.
Ref gh-4577
Ref gh-4596
Closes gh-4600