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[css-contain-4] Define a range syntax for style container queries #8376
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For syntax, we can just adopt the MQ operators. I think it makes sense to require these properties to be registered as Or, crazy idea here, given this is fairly limited and these types can be detected syntactically, what if we don't require registration at all? Would that be possible? Is there any ambiguity I'm missing? |
I assume that includes the full range syntax, so one could write @container style(1em < padding < 3em) { … } Correct? Sebastian |
There is indeed no ambiguity when limited to comparisons of this type - there's no keywords or similar that can be interpreted differently on context, just plain numbers and dimensions. And math functions, which is the only thing that makes me slightly concerned, just due to the potential complexity. But I suspect it's fine. |
Another complexity: is it allowed to mention multiple properties? |
I'd suggest not, at first. |
That syntax doesn't make sense to me. I'd say we should stick to the syntax defined for media queries. So that could be expressed as Sebastian |
Yeah, agreed that we should stick to the MQ syntax for now - either a property compared to a literal, or a property sandwiched between two literal comparisons. |
I marked this for contain-4, but not sure if it needs to be deferred from l3? It doesn't seem like a big lift on the spec side, but may be a larger consideration for implementors? |
I just mentioned this in the older thread, but this would be a very useful feature. And +1 to the MQ range syntax as a mechanism to query values by. |
We would need to limit (and define the limitations) of the syntax options for range queries? I.e. Valid:
Invalid:
|
Yes, it would be all the numeric types. Not colors, tho. |
@lilles raised a question this morning about how to resolve |
Percents aren't comparable to lengths in contexts where they don't resolve against a length, so they'd just be false, I suppose? That is, (Do we want to try and do syntax validation on known properties? Or should we just consider them the same way, where doing a nonsensical comparison like |
I think it would be ok to do without parse-time syntax validation - but I would probably expect |
We don't use unknown for "this doesn't make sense", we use it for "this conceivably has a true/false answer, but we happen to not know what it is; a future browser might, tho". So nonsense comparisons are simply false, not unknown. And in a custom property, %s do not resolve against anything, so they're incomparable with any other types, just as much as lengths and angles are incomparable. |
Are we going with the idea that registration isn't required, but the custom property side is interpreted according to the type of the literal side? |
Right; registration doesn't add anything to the equation in this case. If we see I mean, maybe registration lets you fast-path a false for nonsensical comparisons, but that's it. Tho hm, do we ever want to allow something like |
Great, just wanted to clarify that so we know what to implement.
It could work without as well? We just try to parse a numeric thing on both sides, and check if they're compatible. |
Yeah true. |
Does this logic seem like something we could add to css-contain-3, or would need to be deferred to L4? |
This also seems to have implications for the non-range syntax, yeah? Like, we'd want (I think this is fine, fwiw.) |
Should we consider making EDIT: It seems risky to always interpret things as Having multiple behaviors for the same operator also feels shaky. It would be better if |
I like the consistency, and since authors have both options, they can opt into either behavior. |
The css-contain-3 spec provides a 'style container feature', allowing authors to query the computed value of a given property on the container. However, that query is currently limited to the declaration syntax, which provides a simple equality comparison:
As discussed in #7068, there are also use-cases for range comparisons on container properties:
For custom properties, this might require a defined syntax using
@property
? Or would we want a way to define the value type on the query itself? Thoughts?The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: