Fixes compatibility with emscripten 1.39.5+ .
Most input callbacks now require a target and no longer support NULL
defaults.
This commit changes all required null targets to the expected default in
the binding phase.
Since for canvas-related callbacks there is no default, the "#canvas"
selector is used instead.
Additionally, since canvasX and canvasY event properties are no longer
supported, event positions are computed from "clientX" and "clientY" and
the "#canvas" bounding client rect.
It was removed as noted in the changelog:
https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/blob/1.39.5/ChangeLog.md#v1395-12202019
> Removed `timestamp` field from mouse, wheel, devicemotion and
> deviceorientation events. The presence of a `timestamp` on these
> events was slightly arbitrary, and populating this field caused
> a small profileable overhead that all users might not care about.
> It is easy to get a timestamp of an event by calling
> `emscripten_get_now()` or `emscripten_performance_now()` inside
> the event handler function of any event.
Fixes#34648.
Regression from #34040, apparently making this a const reference
introduces issues (not sure why, but previous code worked fine).
Fixes#34691.
Co-authored-by: dankan1890 <mewuidev2@gmail.com>
* Recently supported macOS shortcuts are added
* Makes it clear than `set_text` won't trigger `text_changed`
* `minimum_spaces` is the number of space characters that can be shown
without scrolling
Fixes as issue where a subclass calls a base class method that tries to access a constant from the script.
The original code went through every ower class, and for each owner, went through its inheritance tree.
This seems like the wrong order, the modified code goes to each base class, and for each base class goes through the owner tree.
This is more in line with what the parser does, as the current impelemtation allows an access that the parser does not support.
This change should not negatively affect existing code due to the way the parser works
Added guards to all C# script interface calls to attach the current thread
for the current scope if the thread is not already attached.
This is far from ideal, as attaching the thread is not cheap and all managed
thread local storage is lost when we detach the thread at the end of the calls.
However, it's the best we can do for now to avoid crashing
when an unattached thread tries to interact with C# code.