It has been tested with Voice Over (mac) and with NVDA (windows).
When an added stamp annotation is focused, the screen reader will announce
that it's a figure containing a graphic with the added alt-text.
It was recently brought to my attention that using partial or generated localization ids is bad for maintainability, hence this patch goes through the code-base and replaces any such occurrences.
This l10n-string is being re-defined once for every editor, i.e. currently four times, which seems unnecessary.
To avoid having to check if this l10n-string exists first, we can utilize rest parameters to move it into the `AnnotationEditor._l10nPromise` Map-definition instead.
Currently we manually localize and update the DOM-elements of the editor-resizers, and it seems nicer to utilize Fluent for that task.
This can be achieved by updating the l10n-strings to directly target the `aria-label` and then just setting the `data-l10n-id` on the DOM-elements.
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.
We have a number of base-classes that are only intended to be extended, but never to be used directly. To help enforce this during development these base-class constructors will check for direct usage, however that code is obviously not needed in the actual builds.
*Note:* This patch reduces the size of the `gulp mozcentral` output by `~2.7` kilo-bytes, which isn't a lot but still cannot hurt.
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.
Instead of sending to the main thread an array of Objects for a list of points (or quadpoints),
we'll send just a basic float buffer.
It should slightly improve performances (especially when cloning the data) and use slightly less memory.
The code was added in order to guess if an editor has been moved but
it's simpler to just set a variable when it's dragged or moved with
the keyboard. This way we remove a bit of asynchronicity.