## Problem
After the initial submit hardening, two issues remained: source code was
read in Lua and piped as stdin to the scraper (unnecessary roundtrip
since
the file exists on disk), and CF's `page.fill()` timed out on the hidden
`textarea[name="source"]` because CodeMirror owns the editor state.
## Solution
Pass the source file path as a CLI arg instead — AtCoder calls
`page.set_input_files(file_path)` directly, CF reads it with
`Path(file_path).read_text()`. Fix CF source injection via
`page.evaluate()`
into the CodeMirror instance. Extract `BROWSER_SUBMIT_NAV_TIMEOUT` as a
per-platform `defaultdict` (CF defaults to 2× nav timeout). Save the
buffer
with `vim.cmd.update()` before submitting.
Problem: the tolerance field for floating-point comparison was named
`epsilon`, which is an implementation detail, not the user-visible concept.
Solution: rename to `precision` in run.lua type annotations, internal
variables, and comparison logic.
Problem: output comparison used exact string equality after whitespace
normalisation, causing correct solutions to fail on problems where
floating-point answers are accepted within a tolerance (e.g. 1e-6).
Solution: add an optional ui.panel.epsilon config value. When set,
actual and expected output are compared token-by-token: numeric tokens
are compared with math.abs(a - b) <= epsilon, non-numeric tokens fall
back to exact string equality. Per-problem epsilon can also be stored
in the cache and takes precedence over the global default.
Problem: test cases were executed sequentially, each waiting for the
previous process to finish before starting the next. On problems with
many test cases this meant wall-clock run time scaled linearly.
Solution: fan out all test case processes simultaneously. A remaining
counter fires on_done once all callbacks have returned. on_each is
called per completion as before; callers that pass on_each ignore its
arguments so the index semantics change is non-breaking.