/** * Copyright 2015 CANAL+ Group * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ import addClassName from "../../../../compat/add_class_name"; import log from "../../../../log"; import { REGXP_LENGTH } from "../regexps"; /** * @param {HTMLElement} element * @param {string} lineHeight */ export default function applyLineHeight(element: HTMLElement, lineHeight: string): void { const trimmedLineHeight = lineHeight.trim(); const splittedLineHeight = trimmedLineHeight.split(" "); if (trimmedLineHeight === "auto") { return; } const firstLineHeight = REGXP_LENGTH.exec(splittedLineHeight[0]); if (firstLineHeight === null) { return; } if ( firstLineHeight[2] === "px" || // TODO: For now, we disable the percentage unit as its rules are complex to // implement in our current logic: // A percentage `lineHeight` depends on the `fontSize` computed at that point, // yet a lineHeight applies to a `p` in TTML and `fontSize` applies to a `span` // (below `p`) and our translation applies that same level of style: CSS `lineHeight` // is set on the element defining it, but `fontSize` is set at the end on each cue. // // Thus we cannot easily just rely on CSS' similar behavior for percentage // `lineHeight`s because the `fontSize` might not be known at that point by // the CSS (yet it might be for TTML). Work-around tricks are not straightforward // either (e.g. we cannot just repeat the `fontSize` at both places because // the potential percentage values in which they are expressed could coumpound). // Seeing other players, it also seems poorly supported, so for now I think // we can just ignore those. In a perfect world, it should be implemented // though! // firstLineHeight[2] === "%" || firstLineHeight[2] === "em" ) { element.style.lineHeight = firstLineHeight[1] + firstLineHeight[2]; } else if (firstLineHeight[2] === "c") { addClassName(element, "proportional-style"); element.setAttribute("data-proportional-line-height", firstLineHeight[1]); } else { log.warn("ttml", "unhandled lineHeight unit", { unit: firstLineHeight[2] }); } }