https://x.com/_chenglou/status/2037713766205608234, https://xcancel.com/_chenglou/status/2037713766205608234
Demos: https://chenglou.me/pretext/, https://somnai-dreams.github.io/pretext-demos/
simonw5 minutes ago
This thing is very impressive.
The problem it solves is efficiently calculating the width/height of some text on a web page, without actually rendering that text to the page first (very expensive).
It does that by pre-calculating the width/height of individual segments - think words - and caching those. Then it implements the full algorithm for how browsers construct text strings by line-wrapping those segments using custom code.
This is absurdly hard because of the many different types of wrapping and characters (emoji, Chinese, etc) that need to be taken into account - plus the fact that different browsers (in particular Safari) have slight differences in their rendering algorithms.
It tests the resulting library against real browsers using a wide variety of long text documents, see https://github.com/chenglou/pretext/tree/main/corpora and https://github.com/chenglou/pretext/blob/main/pages/accuracy...
lewisjoe13 minutes ago
Quick overview of pretext: if you want to layout text on the web, you have to use canvas.measureText API and implement line-breaking / segmentation / RTL yourself.
Pretext makes this easier. Just pass the text and text properties (font, color, size, etc) into a pure JS API and it layouts the content into given viewport dimension.
Earlier you'll have to either use measureText or ship harbuzz to browser somehow. I guess pretext is not a technical breakthrough, just the right things assembled to make layouting as a pure JS API.
I have one question though: how is this different from Skia-wasm / Canvaskit? Skia already has sophisticated API to layout multiline text and it also is a pure algorithmic API.
lewisjoe11 minutes ago
If the author is right, this is going to be huge for GUI web frameworks and for future rich text editors.
madeofpalk7 minutes ago
> how is this different from Skia-wasm
It’s not wasm?
rpastuszak16 minutes ago
Love this. I especially liked shape based reflow example.
This is something I've been thinking for ages and would love to add to Ensō (enso.sonnet.io), purely because it would allow me to apply better caret transitions between the lines of text.
(I'm not gonna do that because I'm trying to keep it simple, but it's a strong temptation)
Now a CSS tangent: regarding the accordion example from the site (https://chenglou.me/pretext/accordion), this can be solved with pure CSS (and then perhaps a JS fallback) using the `interpolate-size` property.
https://www.joshwcomeau.com/snippets/html/interpolate-size/
Regarding the text bubbles problem (https://chenglou.me/pretext/bubbles), you can use `text-wrap: balance | pretty` to achieve the same result.
(`balance` IIRC evens out the # of lines)
dalmo320 minutes ago
This is awesome! I had this problem when building a datagrid where cells would dynamically render textarea. IIRC I ended up doing a simple canvas measurement, but I had all the text and font properties static, and even then it was hellish to get it right.
gastonmorixe34 minutes ago
Has someone ever found a good solution for long / infinite lists / grids virtualization not breaking browsers native text search?
Maybe for this we need a new web "Search" API instead of JS. Not sure it can be done otherwise without browser's help.
rattrayan hour ago
Some details on how it works from a code comment:
Problem: DOM-based text measurement (getBoundingClientRect, offsetHeight) forces synchronous layout reflow. When components independently measure text, each measurement triggers a reflow of the entire document. This creates read/write interleaving that can cost 30ms+ per frame for 500 text blocks.
Solution: two-phase measurement centered around canvas measureText.
prepare(text, font) — segments text via Intl.Segmenter, measures each word via canvas, caches widths, and does one cached DOM calibration read per font when emoji correction is needed. Call once when text first appears.
layout(prepared, maxWidth, lineHeight) — walks cached word widths with pure arithmetic to count lines and compute height. Call on every resize. ~0.0002ms per text.
mgaunardan hour ago
What about hyphenization?
simonw12 minutes ago
That's in there too: https://github.com/chenglou/pretext/blob/53a065b8a345fc29831...
rattrayan hour ago
Regardless of the subject matter, the tweets announcing this are a masterclass in demoing why an architectural/platform improvement can be impactful.