When a drawing was moved with arrow keys and then printed or saved, the drawing wasn't moved finally.
So the fix is just about calling onTranslated once the translation is done.
Steps to reproduce this in `master`:
1. Open https://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html
2. Use the "Open"-button (in the secondaryToolbar), or drag-and-drop, to load another PDF document.
3. Enable the highlight-editor.
4. Try to pick a new colour.
Note how it's no longer possible to change the default highlight-colour.
The reason for this is that we're only initializing the viewer-toolbar `ColorPicker` *once*, which doesn't work since every PDF document gets its own `AnnotationEditorUIManager`-instance. To address this we simply need to re-initialize the viewer-toolbar `ColorPicker`, and note that this patch won't affect the Firefox PDF Viewer.
It fixes#19239.
When the canvas isn't existing the editor has no image: it's fine because the editor is invisible.
Once it's made visible, the canvas is set when the annotation layer has been rendered.
When a user deletes any number of annotations, they are notified of the action
by a popup message with an undo button. Besides that, this change reuses the
existing messageBar CSS class from the new alt-text dialog as much as possible.
This patch makes a clear separation between the way to draw and the editing stuff.
It adds a class DrawEditor which should be extended in order to create new drawing tools.
As an example, the ink tool has been rewritten in order to use it.
The purpose of these changes is to make it more difficult to accidentally include logging statements, used during development and debugging, when submitting patches for review.
For (almost) all code residing in the `src/` folder we should use our existing helper functions to ensure that all logging can be controlled via the `verbosity` API-option.
For the `test/unit/` respectively `test/integration/` folders we shouldn't need any "normal" logging, but it should be OK to print the *occasional* warning/error message.
Please find additional details about the ESLint rule at https://eslint.org/docs/latest/rules/no-console
It fixes#18849.
When such an annotation is deleted, we make sure that there are some data
to restore.
The version of this patch was making undoing a svg deletion buggy, so it's fixed now and
an integration test has been added for this case.
In PR #18574 setting `window.uiManager` was moved into the `src` folder
to avoid intermittent integration test failures because at the time we
lacked a way to register event listeners early (before PDF.js loads).
However, in PR #18617 this functionality got introduced, so we can now
use the new way of setting up the event bus in the tests to move this
back to the `test` folder again and to reduce the amount of test-only
code in the main codebase as discussed in PR #18574.
Partially reverts e037c5711d3d2413669e9b6c275986adf24a295b.
The problem seems to be caused by the browser trying to "restore" editing input-elements, in the various toolbars, to their previous values when the tab is re-opened.
Hence the simplest solution appears to be to move the event handling into the editor-code, which is also less code overall, since the listener thus won't be registered early enough for the problem to appear.
There's a fair number of event listeners in the editor-code that we're currently removing "manually", by keeping references to their event handler functions.
This was necessary since we have a "global" `AbortController` that applies to all event listeners used in the editor-code, however it's now possible to combine multiple `AbortSignal`s; please see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal/any_static
Since this functionality is [fairly new](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal/any_static#browser_compatibility) the viewer will check that `AbortSignal.any()` is available before enabling the editing-functionality.
(It should hopefully be fairly straightforward, famous last words, for users to implement a polyfill to allow editing in older browsers.)
Finally, this patch also adds checks and test-only asserts to ensure that we don't add duplicate event listeners in various editor-code.
Given that we're removing event listeners with `AbortSignal` it's no longer necessary to keep a reference to a few of the event handler functions in order to remove them.
Hence we can simply inline the relevant `bind`-calls instead, which reduces the code-size a tiny bit.
This patch adds a new entry in the secondary menu in order to open a dialog to let the user:
- disables the alt-text generation thanks to a ML model;
- deletes the alt-text model downloaded in Firefox;
- disabled the new alt-text flow.
For the Firefox pdf viewer, we want to use AI to guess an alt-text when adding an image to a pdf.
For now the telemtry stuff is not implemented and will come soon.
In order to test it locally:
- set enableAltText, enableFakeMLManager and enableUpdatedAddImage to true.
or in Firefox:
- set browser.ml.enable, pdfjs.enableAltText and pdfjs.enableUpdatedAddImage to true.
Switching to an editing mode can be asynchronous (e.g. if an editable annotation exists on a
visible page), so we must add a new editor only when the page rendering is done.
When the mouse was hovering an existing highlight, all the text in the page
was selected.
So when the user is selecting some text or drawing a free highlight, the mouse
is disabled for the existing editors.
The original bug was because the parent was null when trying to show
an highlight annotation which led to an exception.
That led me to think about having some null/non-null parent when removing
an editor: it's a mess especially if a destroyed parent is still attached
to an editor. Consequently, this patch always sets the parent to null when
deleting the editor.