Previously, entering a geo shape and adding a bunch of newlines wouldn't
correctly update the shape's height. This fixes that.
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug fix
### Test Plan
1. Create a geo shape
2. Enter text editing mode
3. Spam the enter key
4. See that the shape grows appropriately
5. Exit editing and check that the trailing newlines have been deleted.
- [ ] Unit Tests
- [x] End to end tests
---------
Co-authored-by: huppy-bot[bot] <128400622+huppy-bot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Steve Ruiz <steveruizok@gmail.com>
We got things sliggghhhtly wrong in #1980. That diff was attempting to
fix a bug where the text measurement element would refuse to go above
the viewport size in safari. This was most obvious in the case where
there was no fixed width on a text shape, and that diff fixed that case,
but it was also happening when a fixed width text shape was wider than
viewport - which wasn't covered by that fix. It turned out that that fix
also introduced a bug where shapes would no longer grow along the y-axis
- in part because the relationship between `width`, `maxWidth`, and
`minWidth` is very confusing.
The one-liner fix is to just use `max-content` instead of `fit-content`
- that way, the div ignores the size of its container. But I also
cleared up the API for text measurement to remove the `width` property
entirely in favour of `maxWidth`. I think this makes things much clearer
and as far as I can tell doesn't affect anything.
Closes#1998
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug fix
### Test Plan
1. Create an arrow & geo shape with labels, plus a note and text shape
2. Try to break text measurement - overflow the bounds, make very wide
text, experiment with fixed/auto-size text, etc.
Co-authored-by: Alex Alex@dytry.ch
closes [#1978](https://github.com/tldraw/tldraw/issues/1978)
Text was wrapping on Safari because the measure text div was rendered
differently on different browsers. Interestingly, when forcing the
text-measure div to be visible and on-screen in Chrome, the same
text-wrapping behaviour was apparent. By setting white-space to 'pre'
when width hasn't been set by the user, we can ensure that only line
breaks the user has inputted are rendered by default on all browsers.
### Change Type
- [x] `patch` — Bug fix
- [ ] `minor` — New feature
- [ ] `major` — Breaking change
- [ ] `dependencies` — Changes to package dependencies[^1]
- [ ] `documentation` — Changes to the documentation only[^2]
- [ ] `tests` — Changes to any test code only[^2]
- [ ] `internal` — Any other changes that don't affect the published
package[^2]
- [ ] I don't know
[^1]: publishes a `patch` release, for devDependencies use `internal`
[^2]: will not publish a new version
### Test Plan
1. On Safari
2. Make a new text shape and start typing
3. At a certain point the text starts to wrap without the width having
been set
### Release Notes
- Fix text wrapping differently on Safari and Chrome/Firefox
Before/After
<image width="350"
src="https://github.com/tldraw/tldraw/assets/98838967/320171b4-61e0-4a41-b8d3-830bd90bea65">
<image width="350"
src="https://github.com/tldraw/tldraw/assets/98838967/b42d7156-0ce9-4894-9692-9338dc931b79">
This PR renames `App`, `app` and all appy names to `Editor`, `editor`,
and editorry names.
### Change Type
- [x] `major` — Breaking Change
### Release Notes
- Rename `App` to `Editor` and many other things that reference `app` to
`editor`.
This PR replaces our webdriver end to end tests with playwright tests.
It:
- replaces our webdriver workflow with a new e2e workflow based on
playwright
- removes the webdriver project
- adds e2e tests to our examples app
- replaces all `data-wd` attributes with `data-testid`
### Coverage
Most of the tests from our previous e2e tests are reproduced here,
though there are some related to our gestures that will need to be done
in a different way—or not at all. I've also added a handful of new
tests, too.
### Where are they
The tests are now part of our examples app rather than being in its own
different app. This should help us test our different examples too. As
far as I can tell there are no downsides here in terms of the regular
developer experience, though they might complicate any CodeSandbox
projects that are hooked into the examples app.
### Change Type
- [x] `tests` — Changes to any testing-related code only (will not
publish a new version)