RFR: JDK-8308659: Use CSS scroll-margin instead of flexbox layout in API documentation

Jonathan Gibbons jjg at openjdk.org
Thu Oct 5 18:15:54 UTC 2023


On Thu, 28 Sep 2023 19:50:21 GMT, Hannes Wallnöfer <hannesw at openjdk.org> wrote:

> A few years ago we switched to [Flexbox Layout](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/Flexbox) to implement the sticky header in the API docs generated by `javadoc`. This solved the problem of anchor link targets [not being positioned correctly](https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8223378), but it also introduced a few new ones:
> 
>  - It required a workaround to get browser history to work (JDK-8249133, JDK-8250779, 8286832)
>  - It changed certain aspects of scrolling behavior in the browser (JDK-8301080)
>  - It changed the way some CSS properties are interpreted (JDK-8315800)
> 
> The reason for most of these problems is that the layout paradigm used by Flexbox is very different from traditional layout of HTML pages. The `scroll-margin-*` CSS properties introduced by the [CSS Scroll Snap Module](https://www.w3.org/TR/css-scroll-snap-1/) provide a simpler and less intrusive way to implement link target offsets in combination with sticky elements implemented using [`position: sticky`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/position). However, although it is implemented [in all supported browsers](https://caniuse.com/?search=scroll-margin), it comes with its own challanges and quirks, which are explained below.
> 
> The first problem to overcome was that `position: sticky` is more fragile on mobile browsers than Flexbox. If some part of the page content overflows the allotted horizontal space, the whole page can be zoomed out to view the whole content. This causes the header to become unsticky and the link target offsets to become erroneous. It was therefore necessary to make sure page content never overflows its allotted horizontal space, either by adding line break opportunities, or by making all or part of the page horizontally scrollable when its content overflows. Line break opportunities are difficult to add especially in  preformatted code, so I opted for making the parts of the page most likely containing long lines of code scrollable. 
> 
> The next problem was that enabling horizontal scrolling on an element or one of its containing elements breaks the `scroll-margin-top` property in Chrome due to a browser quirk (both desktop and mobile versions). This means that the scrolling must occur in a child element rather than the sections or other elements serving as link targets. 
> 
> When enabling horizontal scrolling on the contents of sections containing user-provided content, another problem is that it disables [Margin Collapse](https://www.joshwc...

Marked as reviewed by jjg (Reviewer).

src/jdk.javadoc/share/classes/jdk/javadoc/internal/doclets/formats/html/MethodWriter.java line 114:

> 112:                 buildMethodComments(div);
> 113:                 buildTagInfo(div);
> 114:                 methodContent.add(div);

Purely as a matter of style, I like the style of building "bottom up", so first build all those items into a `ContentBuilder`, then make a `div` with `HtmlTree.DIV(HtmlStyle.horizontalScroll, contentBuilder)`  then add the `div` into the `methodContent`, as on line 114.

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PR Review: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/15969#pullrequestreview-1660450541
PR Review Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/15969#discussion_r1347807876


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