This is in line with the refactor I already did on Fizz earlier and
brings Fiber up to a similar structure.
We end up with a lot of extra checks due the extra abstractions we use
to check the various properties. This uses a flatter and more inline
model which makes it easier to see what each property does. The tradeoff
is that a change might need changes in more places.
The general structure is that there's a switch for tag first, then a
switch for each attribute special case, then a switch for the value. So
it's easy to follow where each scenario will end up and there shouldn't
be any unnecessary code executed along the way.
My goal is to eventually get rid of the meta-programming in DOMProperty
and CSSProperty but I'm leaving that in for now - in line with Fizz.
My next step is moving around things a bit in the diff/commit phases.
This is the first step to more refactors for perf and size, but also
because I'm adding more special cases so I need to have a flatter
structure that I can reason about for those special cases.
This setting is an incremental path to the next Flow version enforcing
type annotations on most functions (except some inline callbacks).
Used
```
node_modules/.bin/flow codemod annotate-functions-and-classes --write .
```
to add a majority of the types with some hand cleanup when for large
inferred objects that should just be `Fiber` or weird constructs
including `any`.
Suppressed the remaining issues.
Builds on #25918
* Facebook -> Meta in copyright
rg --files | xargs sed -i 's#Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates.#Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.#g'
* Manual tweaks
The existential type `*` was deprecated and a codemod provided to replace it. Ran that and did some manual fixups:
```sh
node_modules/.bin/flow codemod replace-existentials --write .
```
ghstack-source-id: 4c98b8db6a
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25416
This lets us share it with react-server-dom-webpack while still having a
dependency on react-dom. It also makes somewhat sense from a bundling
perspective since react-dom is an external to itself.