| <!DOCTYPE html> |
| <html> |
| <meta charset="utf-8"> |
| <title>CSS Basic User Interface Test: interacting with the ellipsis</title> |
| <link rel="author" title="Florian Rivoal" href="http://florian.rivoal.net/"> |
| <link rel="help" href="http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-ui/#text-overflow"> |
| <meta name="flags" content="ahem dom should"> |
| <meta name="assert" content="Pointer events on the ellipsis should be dispatched to the elided inline element if there's one, rather than directly to the block."> |
| <!-- This is tested indirectly, using elementFromPoint instead of actually triggering a pointer event, because: |
| * Actual pointer events can only be dispatched in an manual test, while elementFromPoint allows for an automated test |
| * These two methods are expected to give the same result |
| |
| This indirection and the slight risk of false positive or false negative it introduces |
| is preferable to a manual test which would hardly anyone would ever run. |
| --> |
| <script src="/resources/testharness.js"></script> |
| <script src="/resources/testharnessreport.js"></script> |
| <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/fonts/ahem.css" /> |
| <style> |
| #parent { |
| position: absolute; |
| top: 0; left: 0; |
| font: 50px/1 Ahem ; |
| overflow: hidden; |
| width: 3em; |
| text-overflow: ellipsis; |
| } |
| </style> |
| <div id=parent> <span id=target> </span></div> |
| <script> |
| setup({explicit_done: true}); |
| document.fonts.ready.then(()=> { |
| test( |
| function() { |
| var e = document.elementFromPoint(125,25); |
| assert_equals(e.id,"target", "the element targeted by a hit on the ellipsis is the elided inline."); |
| }, "Checks hit testing on the ellipsis"); |
| done(); |
| }); |
| </script> |