The last usage of it was in `Player`, which anyway should operate
only on newly created objects that don't have any virtual properties
nor watchers. So it is safe to replace with `define_value`, that
also cannot fail.
`__proto__` seems to behave much like a regular data property. So
simply remove the `prototype` field of `ScriptObject` in favor of
storing the prototype in the general properties hash map.
This also incurred a large number of ancillary changes, as it turns out nearly every native object is currently pulling a prototype and sticking it into an object. Right now, I have it instead pulling the constructor out of the prototype, but a future PR will also remove `system_prototypes` as well.
Other ancillary changes include:
* `Domain` now supports partial initialization to avoid an order-of-events issue. Accessing domain memory on a partially-initialized `Domain` will panic.
* `Domain` construction requires a full `activation` now, except for `global_scope` which needs to be initialized later with valid domain memory before user code runs.
* Pretty much every native object constructor now takes a proto/constr pair
* Trait lookup was rewritten to handle this. It's still buggy - seven tests don't work
* `TObject.construct` now actually does the full object construction dance. This allows `ClassObject` to implement the ES4 object construction pathway directly while `FunctionObject` maintains ES3 compatibility.
This is a tentative commit; there are still seven failing tests that I need to fix.
When reading an SWF, search for FileAttributes and
SetBackgroundColor and return this along with the header data
because it's useful (in particular, the AS3 flag).
Move `MovieClip::is_swf` flag to `DisplayObject::is_root`, and use
this flag to handle the behavior of `DisplayObject.root` crawling
upwards until it hits a top-most loaded SWF/Bitmap.
Simplify `root` and `stage` so that they don't have to consider
buttons. Instead, do some trickery to ensure the button's states
see the proper values of `parent`, `root`, and `stage` during
construction.
Add `RufflePlayer.metadata` that exposes the SWF header fields to
JavaScript.
Add `RufflePlayer.readyState` and fire a `loadedmetadata` event
once the metadata is available, mimicking the HTML5 media APIs.