On 02/21/2014 12:01 AM, Honza Bambas wrote:
On 2/20/2014 10:25 PM, Neil wrote:
Well, that was confusing.
The old contract ID was @mozilla.org/network/cache-service;1
The new contract ID is @mozilla.org/netwerk/cache-storage-service;1
Turns out that there are two differences, not one.
Yes,
JoeS wrote:
I tried hacking the following into the tail end of msvc11.bat file in
mozilla-build:
Try setting MOZ_MAXWINSDK=70100
Alternatively, try installing the SDK 7.1 compilers and use the
msvc10.bat file. (You can still use the VS debugger.)
--
Warning: May contain traces of nuts.
Hi,
On 2014/02/12 23:22, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
On 2/12/14 4:46 AM, Masayuki Nakano wrote:
I'm not sure which is the best name for the classes. E.g., DOMWheelEvent
vs. PointerEvent.
I believe in this case PointerEvent is correct, because
Hi, there were similar two keyCode constants, one was VK_RETURN
(DOM_VK_RETURN/NS_VK_RETURN), the other was VK_ENTER
(DOM_VK_ENTER/NS_VK_ENTER).
These were making a lot of developers confused and event handlers
duplicated.
Now, VK_ENTER has gone. See bug 969247 for the detail.
Masayuki Nakano wrote:
nsDOMEvent will be just Event.
Well, only if you're using the mozilla::dom namespace.
And also the header file name will be Event.h.
Won't it be mozilla/dom/Event.h ?
--
Warning: May contain traces of nuts.
___
On 2014/02/21 20:21, Neil wrote:
And also the header file name will be Event.h.
Won't it be mozilla/dom/Event.h ?
Oh, good point.
http://mxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/source/dom/events/moz.build#38
38 EXPORTS.mozilla.dom += [
39 'EventTarget.h',
40 'PointerEvent.h',
41
On 2/21/14 6:07 AM, Masayuki Nakano wrote:
nsDOMEvent will be just Event.
Just like Element is just Element as long as you're in DOM code, yes.
This is a good thing, imo.
Of course in code not in the mozilla::dom namespace, you get
mozilla::dom::Event or dom::Event, which seems fine to me.
On 02/21/2014 01:38 PM, Nicholas Nethercote wrote:
Greetings,
We now live in a memory-constrained world. By we, I mean anyone
working on Mozilla platform code. When desktop Firefox was our only
product, this wasn't especially true -- bad leaks and the like were a
problem, sure, but ordinary
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