Before this change, we accessed the browser URL in the following ways:
- "chrome://browser/content/browser.xul"
- "chrome://browser/content/" (which redirects to chrome://browser/content/browser.xul)
- Services.prefs.getCharPref("browser.chromeURL") which returns "chrome://browser/content/"
- getBrowserURL() from utilityOverlay.js
MozReview-Commit-ID: I5vtRke1x9t
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c525350a1954740873e85b045cbb14a8b43aa89d
This lets us use Services.xulStore instead of requiring
Cc["@mozilla.org/xul/xulstore;1"].getService(Ci.nsIXULStore);
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2eXifCPhlGs
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c65b9395cc192d05d1a348cfbf92f7f59d41dc8f
This patch was autogenerated by my decomponents.py
It covers almost every file with the extension js, jsm, html, py,
xhtml, or xul.
It removes blank lines after removed lines, when the removed lines are
preceded by either blank lines or the start of a new block. The "start
of a new block" is defined fairly hackily: either the line starts with
//, ends with */, ends with {, <![CDATA[, """ or '''. The first two
cover comments, the third one covers JS, the fourth covers JS embedded
in XUL, and the final two cover JS embedded in Python. This also
applies if the removed line was the first line of the file.
It covers the pattern matching cases like "var {classes: Cc,
interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu, results: Cr} = Components;". It'll remove
the entire thing if they are all either Ci, Cr, Cc or Cu, or it will
remove the appropriate ones and leave the residue behind. If there's
only one behind, then it will turn it into a normal, non-pattern
matching variable definition. (For instance, "const { classes: Cc,
Constructor: CC, interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu } = Components" becomes
"const CC = Components.Constructor".)
MozReview-Commit-ID: DeSHcClQ7cG
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d9c41878036c1ef7766ef5e91a7005025bc1d72b
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
extra : intermediate-source : 34c999fa006bffe8705cf50c54708aa21a962e62
extra : histedit_source : b2be2c5e5d226e6c347312456a6ae339c1e634b0
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c004a023389f1f6bf3d2f3efe93c13d423b23ccd
I'm adding a helper function mozILocaleService::GetRequestedLocale to simplify
most of the callsites that are looking for the first of the requested locales.
In most cases, I'm just matching the behavior of the code with reusing
LocaleService API instead of direct manipulation on the prefs.
That includes how I handle error case scenarios.
In case of sdk/l10n/locale.js I am reusing LocaleService heuristics over
the custom one from the file since the ones in LocaleService are just
more correct and unified accross the whole platform.
In case of FallbackEncoding I have to turn it into a nsIObserver to listen
to intl:requested-locales-changed.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7rOr2CovLK
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 883a91b249b6953b7872bfb9a8851e8be7257c7b
I'm adding a helper function mozILocaleService::GetRequestedLocale to simplify
most of the callsites that are looking for the first of the requested locales.
In most cases, I'm just matching the behavior of the code with reusing
LocaleService API instead of direct manipulation on the prefs.
That includes how I handle error case scenarios.
In case of sdk/l10n/locale.js I am reusing LocaleService heuristics over
the custom one from the file since the ones in LocaleService are just
more correct and unified accross the whole platform.
In case of FallbackEncoding I have to turn it into a nsIObserver to listen
to intl:requested-locales-changed.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7rOr2CovLK
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2f166cf1746f389a035f7cf557edcadeacb10fa0