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#### Is this adding or improving a _feature_ or fixing a _bug_? Improvement. #### What's the new behavior? This changes the normalization logic to be operations (and `key`) based, instead of the current logic which is more haphazard, and which has bugs that lead to non-normalized documents in certain cases. #### How does this change work? Now, every time a change method is called, after it applies its operations, those operations will be normalized. Based on each operation we can know exactly which nodes are "dirty" and need to be re-validated. This change also makes it easy for the `withoutNormalizing` (previously `withoutNormalization`) helper to be much more performant, and only normalize the "dirty" nodes instead of being forced to handle the entire document. To accommodate this new behavior, the old "operation flags" have been removed, replaced with a set of more consistent helpers: - `withoutNormalizing` - `withoutSaving` - `withoutMerging` All of them take functions that will be run with the desired behavior in scope, similar to how Immutable.js's own `withMutations` works. Previously this was done with a more complex set of flags, which could be set and unset in a confusing number of different ways, and it was generally not very well thought out. Hopefully this cleans it up, and makes it more approachable for people. We also automatically use the `withoutNormalizing` helper function for all of the changes that occur as part of schema `normalize` functions. Previously people had to use `{ normalize: false }` everywhere in those functions which was error-prone. With this new architecture, you sure almost never need to think about normalization. Except for cases where you explicitly want to move through an interim state that is invalid according to Slate's default schema or your own custom schema. In which case you'd use `withoutNormalizing` to allow the invalid interim state to be moved through. #### Have you checked that...? * [x] The new code matches the existing patterns and styles. * [x] The tests pass with `yarn test`. * [x] The linter passes with `yarn lint`. (Fix errors with `yarn prettier`.) * [x] The relevant examples still work. (Run examples with `yarn watch`.) #### Does this fix any issues or need any specific reviewers? Fixes: #1363 Fixes: #2134 Fixes: #2135 Fixes: #2136 Fixes: #1579 Fixes: #2132 Fixes: #1657