WordPress/wp-includes/html-api/class-wp-html-open-elements...

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HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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<?php
/**
* HTML API: WP_HTML_Open_Elements class
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage HTML-API
* @since 6.4.0
*/
/**
* Core class used by the HTML processor during HTML parsing
* for managing the stack of open elements.
*
* This class is designed for internal use by the HTML processor.
*
* > Initially, the stack of open elements is empty. The stack grows
* > downwards; the topmost node on the stack is the first one added
* > to the stack, and the bottommost node of the stack is the most
* > recently added node in the stack (notwithstanding when the stack
* > is manipulated in a random access fashion as part of the handling
* > for misnested tags).
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @access private
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#stack-of-open-elements
* @see WP_HTML_Processor
*/
class WP_HTML_Open_Elements {
/**
* Holds the stack of open element references.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var WP_HTML_Token[]
*/
public $stack = array();
/**
* Whether a P element is in button scope currently.
*
* This class optimizes scope lookup by pre-calculating
* this value when elements are added and removed to the
* stack of open elements which might change its value.
* This avoids frequent iteration over the stack.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var bool
*/
private $has_p_in_button_scope = false;
HTML API: Report real and virtual nodes in the HTML Processor. HTML is a kind of short-hand for a DOM structure. This means that there are many cases in HTML where an element's opening tag or closing tag is missing (or both). This is because many of the parsing rules imply creating elements in the DOM which may not exist in the text of the HTML. The HTML Processor, being the higher-level counterpart to the Tag Processor, is already aware of these nodes, but since it's inception has not paused on them when scanning through a document. Instead, these are visible when pausing on a child of such an element, but otherwise not seen. In this patch the HTML Processor starts exposing those implicitly-created nodes, including opening tags, and closing tags, that aren't foudn in the text content of the HTML input document. Previously, the sequence of matched tokens when scanning with `WP_HTML_Processor::next_token()` would depend on how the HTML document was written, but with this patch, all semantically equal HTML documents will parse and scan in the same exact manner, presenting an idealized or "perfect" view of the document the same way as would occur when traversing a DOM in a browser. Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/6348 Discussed in https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/61348 Props audrasjb, dmsnell, gziolo, jonsurrell. Fixes #61348. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@58304 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@57761 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2024-06-03 21:47:15 +02:00
/**
* A function that will be called when an item is popped off the stack of open elements.
*
* The function will be called with the popped item as its argument.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @var Closure
*/
private $pop_handler = null;
/**
* A function that will be called when an item is pushed onto the stack of open elements.
*
* The function will be called with the pushed item as its argument.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @var Closure
*/
private $push_handler = null;
/**
* Sets a pop handler that will be called when an item is popped off the stack of
* open elements.
*
* The function will be called with the pushed item as its argument.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @param Closure $handler The handler function.
*/
public function set_pop_handler( Closure $handler ) {
$this->pop_handler = $handler;
}
/**
* Sets a push handler that will be called when an item is pushed onto the stack of
* open elements.
*
* The function will be called with the pushed item as its argument.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @param Closure $handler The handler function.
*/
public function set_push_handler( Closure $handler ) {
$this->push_handler = $handler;
}
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
/**
* Reports if a specific node is in the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $token Look for this node in the stack.
* @return bool Whether the referenced node is in the stack of open elements.
*/
public function contains_node( $token ) {
foreach ( $this->walk_up() as $item ) {
if ( $token->bookmark_name === $item->bookmark_name ) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
/**
* Returns how many nodes are currently in the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @return int How many node are in the stack of open elements.
*/
public function count() {
return count( $this->stack );
}
/**
* Returns the node at the end of the stack of open elements,
* if one exists. If the stack is empty, returns null.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @return WP_HTML_Token|null Last node in the stack of open elements, if one exists, otherwise null.
*/
public function current_node() {
$current_node = end( $this->stack );
return $current_node ? $current_node : null;
}
/**
* Returns whether an element is in a specific scope.
*
* ## HTML Support
*
* This function skips checking for the termination list because there
* are no supported elements which appear in the termination list.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-the-specific-scope
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag check.
* @param string[] $termination_list List of elements that terminate the search.
* @return bool Whether the element was found in a specific scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_specific_scope( $tag_name, $termination_list ) {
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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foreach ( $this->walk_up() as $node ) {
if ( $node->node_name === $tag_name ) {
return true;
}
if (
'(internal: H1 through H6 - do not use)' === $tag_name &&
in_array( $node->node_name, array( 'H1', 'H2', 'H3', 'H4', 'H5', 'H6' ), true )
) {
return true;
}
switch ( $node->node_name ) {
case 'HTML':
return false;
}
if ( in_array( $node->node_name, $termination_list, true ) ) {
return false;
}
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
return false;
}
/**
* Returns whether a particular element is in scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-scope
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag to check.
* @return bool Whether given element is in scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_scope( $tag_name ) {
return $this->has_element_in_specific_scope(
$tag_name,
array(
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
/*
* Because it's not currently possible to encounter
* one of the termination elements, they don't need
* to be listed here. If they were, they would be
* unreachable and only waste CPU cycles while
* scanning through HTML.
*/
)
);
}
/**
* Returns whether a particular element is in list item scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.5.0 Implemented: no longer throws on every invocation.
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-list-item-scope
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag to check.
* @return bool Whether given element is in scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_list_item_scope( $tag_name ) {
return $this->has_element_in_specific_scope(
$tag_name,
array(
// There are more elements that belong here which aren't currently supported.
'OL',
'UL',
)
);
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
/**
* Returns whether a particular element is in button scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-button-scope
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag to check.
* @return bool Whether given element is in scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_button_scope( $tag_name ) {
return $this->has_element_in_specific_scope( $tag_name, array( 'BUTTON' ) );
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
/**
* Returns whether a particular element is in table scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-table-scope
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception Always until this function is implemented.
*
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag to check.
* @return bool Whether given element is in scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_table_scope( $tag_name ) {
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot process elements depending on table scope.' );
return false; // The linter requires this unreachable code until the function is implemented and can return.
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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}
/**
* Returns whether a particular element is in select scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-select-scope
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception Always until this function is implemented.
*
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag to check.
* @return bool Whether given element is in scope.
*/
public function has_element_in_select_scope( $tag_name ) {
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot process elements depending on select scope.' );
return false; // The linter requires this unreachable code until the function is implemented and can return.
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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}
/**
* Returns whether a P is in BUTTON scope.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#has-an-element-in-button-scope
*
* @return bool Whether a P is in BUTTON scope.
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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*/
public function has_p_in_button_scope() {
return $this->has_p_in_button_scope;
}
/**
* Pops a node off of the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#stack-of-open-elements
*
* @return bool Whether a node was popped off of the stack.
*/
public function pop() {
$item = array_pop( $this->stack );
if ( null === $item ) {
return false;
}
$this->after_element_pop( $item );
return true;
}
/**
* Pops nodes off of the stack of open elements until one with the given tag name has been popped.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Open_Elements::pop
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of tag that needs to be popped off of the stack of open elements.
* @return bool Whether a tag of the given name was found and popped off of the stack of open elements.
*/
public function pop_until( $tag_name ) {
foreach ( $this->walk_up() as $item ) {
$this->pop();
if (
'(internal: H1 through H6 - do not use)' === $tag_name &&
in_array( $item->node_name, array( 'H1', 'H2', 'H3', 'H4', 'H5', 'H6' ), true )
) {
return true;
}
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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if ( $tag_name === $item->node_name ) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
/**
* Pushes a node onto the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#stack-of-open-elements
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $stack_item Item to add onto stack.
*/
public function push( $stack_item ) {
$this->stack[] = $stack_item;
$this->after_element_push( $stack_item );
}
/**
* Removes a specific node from the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $token The node to remove from the stack of open elements.
* @return bool Whether the node was found and removed from the stack of open elements.
*/
public function remove_node( $token ) {
foreach ( $this->walk_up() as $position_from_end => $item ) {
if ( $token->bookmark_name !== $item->bookmark_name ) {
continue;
}
$position_from_start = $this->count() - $position_from_end - 1;
array_splice( $this->stack, $position_from_start, 1 );
$this->after_element_pop( $item );
return true;
}
return false;
}
/**
* Steps through the stack of open elements, starting with the top element
* (added first) and walking downwards to the one added last.
*
* This generator function is designed to be used inside a "foreach" loop.
*
* Example:
*
* $html = '<em><strong><a>We are here';
* foreach ( $stack->walk_down() as $node ) {
* echo "{$node->node_name} -> ";
* }
* > EM -> STRONG -> A ->
*
* To start with the most-recently added element and walk towards the top,
* see WP_HTML_Open_Elements::walk_up().
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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*
* @since 6.4.0
*/
public function walk_down() {
$count = count( $this->stack );
for ( $i = 0; $i < $count; $i++ ) {
yield $this->stack[ $i ];
}
}
/**
* Steps through the stack of open elements, starting with the bottom element
* (added last) and walking upwards to the one added first.
*
* This generator function is designed to be used inside a "foreach" loop.
*
* Example:
*
* $html = '<em><strong><a>We are here';
* foreach ( $stack->walk_up() as $node ) {
* echo "{$node->node_name} -> ";
* }
* > A -> STRONG -> EM ->
*
* To start with the first added element and walk towards the bottom,
* see WP_HTML_Open_Elements::walk_down().
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.5.0 Accepts $above_this_node to start traversal above a given node, if it exists.
*
* @param ?WP_HTML_Token $above_this_node Start traversing above this node, if provided and if the node exists.
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
*/
public function walk_up( $above_this_node = null ) {
$has_found_node = null === $above_this_node;
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
for ( $i = count( $this->stack ) - 1; $i >= 0; $i-- ) {
$node = $this->stack[ $i ];
if ( ! $has_found_node ) {
$has_found_node = $node === $above_this_node;
continue;
}
yield $node;
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
}
/*
* Internal helpers.
*/
/**
* Updates internal flags after adding an element.
*
* Certain conditions (such as "has_p_in_button_scope") are maintained here as
* flags that are only modified when adding and removing elements. This allows
* the HTML Processor to quickly check for these conditions instead of iterating
* over the open stack elements upon each new tag it encounters. These flags,
* however, need to be maintained as items are added and removed from the stack.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $item Element that was added to the stack of open elements.
*/
public function after_element_push( $item ) {
/*
* When adding support for new elements, expand this switch to trap
* cases where the precalculated value needs to change.
*/
switch ( $item->node_name ) {
case 'BUTTON':
$this->has_p_in_button_scope = false;
break;
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
case 'P':
$this->has_p_in_button_scope = true;
break;
}
HTML API: Report real and virtual nodes in the HTML Processor. HTML is a kind of short-hand for a DOM structure. This means that there are many cases in HTML where an element's opening tag or closing tag is missing (or both). This is because many of the parsing rules imply creating elements in the DOM which may not exist in the text of the HTML. The HTML Processor, being the higher-level counterpart to the Tag Processor, is already aware of these nodes, but since it's inception has not paused on them when scanning through a document. Instead, these are visible when pausing on a child of such an element, but otherwise not seen. In this patch the HTML Processor starts exposing those implicitly-created nodes, including opening tags, and closing tags, that aren't foudn in the text content of the HTML input document. Previously, the sequence of matched tokens when scanning with `WP_HTML_Processor::next_token()` would depend on how the HTML document was written, but with this patch, all semantically equal HTML documents will parse and scan in the same exact manner, presenting an idealized or "perfect" view of the document the same way as would occur when traversing a DOM in a browser. Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/6348 Discussed in https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/61348 Props audrasjb, dmsnell, gziolo, jonsurrell. Fixes #61348. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@58304 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@57761 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2024-06-03 21:47:15 +02:00
if ( null !== $this->push_handler ) {
( $this->push_handler )( $item );
}
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
/**
* Updates internal flags after removing an element.
*
* Certain conditions (such as "has_p_in_button_scope") are maintained here as
* flags that are only modified when adding and removing elements. This allows
* the HTML Processor to quickly check for these conditions instead of iterating
* over the open stack elements upon each new tag it encounters. These flags,
* however, need to be maintained as items are added and removed from the stack.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $item Element that was removed from the stack of open elements.
*/
public function after_element_pop( $item ) {
/*
* When adding support for new elements, expand this switch to trap
* cases where the precalculated value needs to change.
*/
switch ( $item->node_name ) {
case 'BUTTON':
$this->has_p_in_button_scope = $this->has_element_in_button_scope( 'P' );
break;
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
case 'P':
$this->has_p_in_button_scope = $this->has_element_in_button_scope( 'P' );
break;
}
HTML API: Report real and virtual nodes in the HTML Processor. HTML is a kind of short-hand for a DOM structure. This means that there are many cases in HTML where an element's opening tag or closing tag is missing (or both). This is because many of the parsing rules imply creating elements in the DOM which may not exist in the text of the HTML. The HTML Processor, being the higher-level counterpart to the Tag Processor, is already aware of these nodes, but since it's inception has not paused on them when scanning through a document. Instead, these are visible when pausing on a child of such an element, but otherwise not seen. In this patch the HTML Processor starts exposing those implicitly-created nodes, including opening tags, and closing tags, that aren't foudn in the text content of the HTML input document. Previously, the sequence of matched tokens when scanning with `WP_HTML_Processor::next_token()` would depend on how the HTML document was written, but with this patch, all semantically equal HTML documents will parse and scan in the same exact manner, presenting an idealized or "perfect" view of the document the same way as would occur when traversing a DOM in a browser. Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/6348 Discussed in https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/61348 Props audrasjb, dmsnell, gziolo, jonsurrell. Fixes #61348. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@58304 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@57761 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2024-06-03 21:47:15 +02:00
if ( null !== $this->pop_handler ) {
( $this->pop_handler )( $item );
}
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 15:43:25 +02:00
}
}