* feat(reader): open image gallery & table zoom on single tap
In reflowable EPUBs, a single tap on an image or table now opens the same
viewer a long-press opens, so the image gallery / table zoom is reachable by
both gestures. Fixed-layout books (PDF/comics/manga) keep tap-to-turn, and
long-press is unchanged everywhere.
Reuses the existing iframe-long-press -> handleImagePress/handleTablePress
flow via a new shared detectMediaTarget() helper (also adopted by the
long-press path so the two entry points can't drift). handleClick now takes
an isFixedLayout flag; the tap branch sits after the link/footnote/drag/
long-hold/Word-Wise guards so linked images still follow links and a
long-hold or double-tap won't double-trigger.
Context: #4584 (single taps stop registering after picture zoom on some
WebView builds) - this adds a second, independent way into the viewer rather
than fixing that root cause.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* refactor(reader): rename iframe-long-press message to iframe-open-media
The message is now posted for both a long-press (any book) and a single tap on
an image/table (reflowable books), so the long-press-specific name was
misleading. Rename the message type to `iframe-open-media` and the consumer
hook `useLongPressEvent` -> `useOpenMediaEvent`. The long-press detector
(`addLongPressListeners`/`handleLongPress`) keeps its name since it still
detects a long-press specifically.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(reader): Word Wise — inline native-language vocabulary hints
Kindle-style Word Wise: a short native-language gloss renders above difficult words
as you read (always-on ruby), gated by a CEFR vocabulary-level slider (A1–C2);
tapping a glossed word opens the existing dictionary.
- Pipeline: CEFR→frequency-rank difficulty, inflection-aware gloss index, pure
offset-aware planner (EN regex + jieba for CJK).
- Rendering: <ruby cfi-skip>…<rt cfi-inert> injected per occurrence — CFI-transparent
(verified), so highlights/bookmarks/progress are unaffected; kept out of TTS word
offsets and find-in-book.
- Delivery: gloss packs are version-controlled in data/wordwise/, mirrored to R2, and
downloaded on demand into local storage (sha-verified, single-flight) when enabled.
- Settings: a Word Wise sub-page under Settings → Language (enable, level, hint
language, per-pack download/manage, auto-download toggle).
- Build tooling: scripts/build-wordwise-data.mjs (ECDICT / CC-CEDICT+HSK / WikDict +
FrequencyWords, with lemmatization) and scripts/sync-wordwise-r2.mjs.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* data(wordwise): bundled gloss packs + manifest + attribution
13 frequency-trimmed gloss packs (en↔中文 + es/fr/de/pt/it/ru↔en, ~19 MB) generated
by build-wordwise-data.mjs from ECDICT (MIT), CC-CEDICT + HSK, and WikDict +
FrequencyWords (CC-BY-SA). Source of truth, mirrored to the CDN via `pnpm wordwise:sync`.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
On the web, double-clicking a word and then dragging to extend the
native selection also turned the page. The first click's deferred
single-click timer fires 250ms later while the second click's button is
still held during the drag, so it posts iframe-single-click and flips
the page. A plain double-click escapes this because its fast second
click updates lastClickTime in time.
Track the mouse-button state in iframeEventHandlers and suppress the
deferred single click while the button is held (a drag is in progress).
A normal single click is unaffected: its button is already released by
the time the deferred timer fires.
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The smooth-wheel feature (#3974, closing #3966) intercepts mouse-wheel
events in scroll mode: it makes the wheel listener non-passive,
preventDefault()s the native scroll, and replays the delta through a
main-thread rAF animation against the renderer container.
That regressed normal mouse scrolling on Windows (#4130): fast wheel
bursts were discarded entirely, and the JS replay is structurally worse
than native scrolling -- a non-passive wheel listener forces every wheel
event (mouse and trackpad) off the compositor thread, and the
postMessage hop plus main-thread animation add latency and jank that
native compositor scrolling does not have.
High-resolution scrolling (e.g. Logitech MX Master, the mouse in #3966)
needs no special API: the OS/driver just delivers regular wheel events
with smaller, more frequent deltas, and the browser scrolls them
natively. #3966's own report ("smooth scrolling works with all
applications apart from yours") points at the interception, not a
missing capability. Restore native wheel scrolling in scroll mode.
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The browser delivers one large quantised delta per wheel notch, which
Chromium scrolls without interpolation — producing the jerky one-step
motion reported on Windows. Detect mouse-wheel-shaped events inside
the iframe (line-mode, or single-axis with |deltaY| ≥ 50), suppress
the native scroll, and replay the delta as an rAF exponential lerp on
the renderer's container. Trackpad / high-resolution input is left to
native scrolling so its momentum and 2-axis behaviour are preserved.
* Make dialogs responsive for mobile devices
* Support mouse backward/forward buttons
* Use back icon to close layer 2 components on mobile devices
Currently layer 2 components are: 1. sidebar 2. notebook 3. dialogs
They are all fullscreen on mobile devices.
* Add translations