WordPress/wp-includes/html-api/class-wp-html-processor.php

2315 lines
74 KiB
PHP
Raw Normal View History

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 09:43:25 -04:00
<?php
/**
* HTML API: WP_HTML_Processor class
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage HTML-API
* @since 6.4.0
*/
/**
* Core class used to safely parse and modify an HTML document.
*
* The HTML Processor class properly parses and modifies HTML5 documents.
*
* It supports a subset of the HTML5 specification, and when it encounters
* unsupported markup, it aborts early to avoid unintentionally breaking
* the document. The HTML Processor should never break an HTML document.
*
* While the `WP_HTML_Tag_Processor` is a valuable tool for modifying
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* attributes on individual HTML tags, the HTML Processor is more capable
* and useful for the following operations:
*
* - Querying based on nested HTML structure.
*
* Eventually the HTML Processor will also support:
* - Wrapping a tag in surrounding HTML.
* - Unwrapping a tag by removing its parent.
* - Inserting and removing nodes.
* - Reading and changing inner content.
* - Navigating up or around HTML structure.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* ## Usage
*
* Use of this class requires three steps:
*
* 1. Call a static creator method with your input HTML document.
* 2. Find the location in the document you are looking for.
* 3. Request changes to the document at that location.
*
* Example:
*
* $processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( $html );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* if ( $processor->next_tag( array( 'breadcrumbs' => array( 'DIV', 'FIGURE', 'IMG' ) ) ) ) {
* $processor->add_class( 'responsive-image' );
* }
*
* #### Breadcrumbs
*
* Breadcrumbs represent the stack of open elements from the root
* of the document or fragment down to the currently-matched node,
* if one is currently selected. Call WP_HTML_Processor::get_breadcrumbs()
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* to inspect the breadcrumbs for a matched tag.
*
* Breadcrumbs can specify nested HTML structure and are equivalent
* to a CSS selector comprising tag names separated by the child
* combinator, such as "DIV > FIGURE > IMG".
*
* Since all elements find themselves inside a full HTML document
* when parsed, the return value from `get_breadcrumbs()` will always
* contain any implicit outermost elements. For example, when parsing
* with `create_fragment()` in the `BODY` context (the default), any
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* tag in the given HTML document will contain `array( 'HTML', 'BODY', … )`
* in its breadcrumbs.
*
* Despite containing the implied outermost elements in their breadcrumbs,
* tags may be found with the shortest-matching breadcrumb query. That is,
* `array( 'IMG' )` matches all IMG elements and `array( 'P', 'IMG' )`
* matches all IMG elements directly inside a P element. To ensure that no
* partial matches erroneously match it's possible to specify in a query
* the full breadcrumb match all the way down from the root HTML element.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* Example:
*
* $html = '<figure><img><figcaption>A <em>lovely</em> day outside</figcaption></figure>';
* // ----- Matches here.
* $processor->next_tag( array( 'breadcrumbs' => array( 'FIGURE', 'IMG' ) ) );
*
* $html = '<figure><img><figcaption>A <em>lovely</em> day outside</figcaption></figure>';
* // ---- Matches here.
* $processor->next_tag( array( 'breadcrumbs' => array( 'FIGURE', 'FIGCAPTION', 'EM' ) ) );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* $html = '<div><img></div><img>';
* // ----- Matches here, because IMG must be a direct child of the implicit BODY.
* $processor->next_tag( array( 'breadcrumbs' => array( 'BODY', 'IMG' ) ) );
*
* ## HTML Support
*
* This class implements a small part of the HTML5 specification.
* It's designed to operate within its support and abort early whenever
* encountering circumstances it can't properly handle. This is
* the principle way in which this class remains as simple as possible
* without cutting corners and breaking compliance.
*
* ### Supported elements
*
* If any unsupported element appears in the HTML input the HTML Processor
* will abort early and stop all processing. This draconian measure ensures
* that the HTML Processor won't break any HTML it doesn't fully understand.
*
* The following list specifies the HTML tags that _are_ supported:
*
* - Containers: ADDRESS, BLOCKQUOTE, DETAILS, DIALOG, DIV, FOOTER, HEADER, MAIN, MENU, SPAN, SUMMARY.
* - Custom elements: All custom elements are supported. :)
* - Form elements: BUTTON, DATALIST, FIELDSET, INPUT, LABEL, LEGEND, METER, PROGRESS, SEARCH.
* - Formatting elements: B, BIG, CODE, EM, FONT, I, PRE, SMALL, STRIKE, STRONG, TT, U, WBR.
* - Heading elements: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, HGROUP.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* - Links: A.
* - Lists: DD, DL, DT, LI, OL, UL.
* - Media elements: AUDIO, CANVAS, EMBED, FIGCAPTION, FIGURE, IMG, MAP, PICTURE, SOURCE, TRACK, VIDEO.
* - Paragraph: BR, P.
* - Phrasing elements: ABBR, AREA, BDI, BDO, CITE, DATA, DEL, DFN, INS, MARK, OUTPUT, Q, SAMP, SUB, SUP, TIME, VAR.
* - Sectioning elements: ARTICLE, ASIDE, HR, NAV, SECTION.
* - Templating elements: SLOT.
* - Text decoration: RUBY.
* - Deprecated elements: ACRONYM, BLINK, CENTER, DIR, ISINDEX, KEYGEN, LISTING, MULTICOL, NEXTID, PARAM, SPACER.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* ### Supported markup
*
* Some kinds of non-normative HTML involve reconstruction of formatting elements and
* re-parenting of mis-nested elements. For example, a DIV tag found inside a TABLE
* may in fact belong _before_ the table in the DOM. If the HTML Processor encounters
* such a case it will stop processing.
*
* The following list specifies HTML markup that _is_ supported:
*
* - Markup involving only those tags listed above.
* - Fully-balanced and non-overlapping tags.
* - HTML with unexpected tag closers.
* - Some unbalanced or overlapping tags.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* - P tags after unclosed P tags.
* - BUTTON tags after unclosed BUTTON tags.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* - A tags after unclosed A tags that don't involve any active formatting elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Tag_Processor
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/
*/
class WP_HTML_Processor extends WP_HTML_Tag_Processor {
/**
* The maximum number of bookmarks allowed to exist at any given time.
*
* HTML processing requires more bookmarks than basic tag processing,
* so this class constant from the Tag Processor is overwritten.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var int
*/
const MAX_BOOKMARKS = 100;
/**
* Holds the working state of the parser, including the stack of
* open elements and the stack of active formatting elements.
*
* Initialized in the constructor.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var WP_HTML_Processor_State
*/
private $state = null;
/**
* Used to create unique bookmark names.
*
* This class sets a bookmark for every tag in the HTML document that it encounters.
* The bookmark name is auto-generated and increments, starting with `1`. These are
* internal bookmarks and are automatically released when the referring WP_HTML_Token
* goes out of scope and is garbage-collected.
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Processor::$release_internal_bookmark_on_destruct
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @var int
*/
private $bookmark_counter = 0;
/**
* Stores an explanation for why something failed, if it did.
*
* @see self::get_last_error
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var string|null
*/
private $last_error = null;
/**
* Releases a bookmark when PHP garbage-collects its wrapping WP_HTML_Token instance.
*
* This function is created inside the class constructor so that it can be passed to
* the stack of open elements and the stack of active formatting elements without
* exposing it as a public method on the class.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var closure
*/
private $release_internal_bookmark_on_destruct = null;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
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 15:47:15 -04:00
/**
* Stores stack events which arise during parsing of the
* HTML document, which will then supply the "match" events.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @var WP_HTML_Stack_Event[]
*/
private $element_queue = array();
/**
* Current stack event, if set, representing a matched token.
*
* Because the parser may internally point to a place further along in a document
* than the nodes which have already been processed (some "virtual" nodes may have
* appeared while scanning the HTML document), this will point at the "current" node
* being processed. It comes from the front of the element queue.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @var ?WP_HTML_Stack_Event
*/
private $current_element = null;
/**
* Context node if created as a fragment parser.
*
* @var ?WP_HTML_Token
*/
private $context_node = null;
/**
* Whether the parser has yet processed the context node,
* if created as a fragment parser.
*
* The context node will be initially pushed onto the stack of open elements,
* but when created as a fragment parser, this context element (and the implicit
* HTML document node above it) should not be exposed as a matched token or node.
*
* This boolean indicates whether the processor should skip over the current
* node in its initial search for the first node created from the input HTML.
*
* @var bool
*/
private $has_seen_context_node = 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 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* Public Interface Functions
*/
/**
* Creates an HTML processor in the fragment parsing mode.
*
* Use this for cases where you are processing chunks of HTML that
* will be found within a bigger HTML document, such as rendered
* block output that exists within a post, `the_content` inside a
* rendered site layout.
*
* Fragment parsing occurs within a context, which is an HTML element
* that the document will eventually be placed in. It becomes important
* when special elements have different rules than others, such as inside
* a TEXTAREA or a TITLE tag where things that look like tags are text,
* or inside a SCRIPT tag where things that look like HTML syntax are JS.
*
* The context value should be a representation of the tag into which the
* HTML is found. For most cases this will be the body element. The HTML
* form is provided because a context element may have attributes that
* impact the parse, such as with a SCRIPT tag and its `type` attribute.
*
* ## Current HTML Support
*
* - The only supported context is `<body>`, which is the default value.
* - The only supported document encoding is `UTF-8`, which is the default value.
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.6.0 Returns `static` instead of `self` so it can create subclass instances.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @param string $html Input HTML fragment to process.
* @param string $context Context element for the fragment, must be default of `<body>`.
* @param string $encoding Text encoding of the document; must be default of 'UTF-8'.
* @return static|null The created processor if successful, otherwise null.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*/
public static function create_fragment( $html, $context = '<body>', $encoding = 'UTF-8' ) {
if ( '<body>' !== $context || 'UTF-8' !== $encoding ) {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return null;
}
$processor = new static( $html, self::CONSTRUCTOR_UNLOCK_CODE );
$processor->state->context_node = array( 'BODY', array() );
$processor->state->insertion_mode = WP_HTML_Processor_State::INSERTION_MODE_IN_BODY;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
// @todo Create "fake" bookmarks for non-existent but implied nodes.
$processor->bookmarks['root-node'] = new WP_HTML_Span( 0, 0 );
$processor->bookmarks['context-node'] = new WP_HTML_Span( 0, 0 );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$processor->state->stack_of_open_elements->push(
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 09:43:25 -04:00
new WP_HTML_Token(
'root-node',
'HTML',
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$context_node = new WP_HTML_Token(
'context-node',
$processor->state->context_node[0],
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 09:43:25 -04:00
);
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$processor->state->stack_of_open_elements->push( $context_node );
$processor->context_node = $context_node;
return $processor;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
/**
* Constructor.
*
* Do not use this method. Use the static creator methods instead.
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @access private
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment()
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @param string $html HTML to process.
* @param string|null $use_the_static_create_methods_instead This constructor should not be called manually.
*/
public function __construct( $html, $use_the_static_create_methods_instead = null ) {
parent::__construct( $html );
if ( self::CONSTRUCTOR_UNLOCK_CODE !== $use_the_static_create_methods_instead ) {
_doing_it_wrong(
__METHOD__,
sprintf(
/* translators: %s: WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment(). */
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 09:43:25 -04:00
__( 'Call %s to create an HTML Processor instead of calling the constructor directly.' ),
'<code>WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment()</code>'
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 09:43:25 -04:00
),
'6.4.0'
);
}
$this->state = new WP_HTML_Processor_State();
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->set_push_handler(
function ( WP_HTML_Token $token ) {
$this->element_queue[] = new WP_HTML_Stack_Event( $token, WP_HTML_Stack_Event::PUSH );
}
);
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->set_pop_handler(
function ( WP_HTML_Token $token ) {
$this->element_queue[] = new WP_HTML_Stack_Event( $token, WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP );
}
);
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 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* Create this wrapper so that it's possible to pass
* a private method into WP_HTML_Token classes without
* exposing it to any public API.
*/
$this->release_internal_bookmark_on_destruct = function ( $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 09:43:25 -04:00
parent::release_bookmark( $name );
};
}
/**
* Returns the last error, if any.
*
* Various situations lead to parsing failure but this class will
* return `false` in all those cases. To determine why something
* failed it's possible to request the last error. This can be
* helpful to know to distinguish whether a given tag couldn't
* be found or if content in the document caused the processor
* to give up and abort processing.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* Example
*
* $processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<template><strong><button><em><p><em>' );
* false === $processor->next_tag();
* WP_HTML_Processor::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED === $processor->get_last_error();
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED
* @see self::ERROR_EXCEEDED_MAX_BOOKMARKS
*
* @return string|null The last error, if one exists, otherwise null.
*/
public function get_last_error() {
return $this->last_error;
}
/**
* Finds the next tag matching the $query.
*
* @todo Support matching the class name and 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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
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 15:47:15 -04:00
* @since 6.6.0 Visits all tokens, including virtual ones.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @throws Exception When unable to allocate a bookmark for the next token in the input HTML document.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @param array|string|null $query {
* Optional. Which tag name to find, having which class, etc. Default is to find any tag.
*
* @type string|null $tag_name Which tag to find, or `null` for "any tag."
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 15:47:15 -04:00
* @type string $tag_closers 'visit' to pause at tag closers, 'skip' or unset to only visit openers.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @type int|null $match_offset Find the Nth tag matching all search criteria.
* 1 for "first" tag, 3 for "third," etc.
* Defaults to first tag.
* @type string|null $class_name Tag must contain this whole class name to match.
* @type string[] $breadcrumbs DOM sub-path at which element is found, e.g. `array( 'FIGURE', 'IMG' )`.
* May also contain the wildcard `*` which matches a single element, e.g. `array( 'SECTION', '*' )`.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* }
* @return bool Whether a tag was matched.
*/
public function next_tag( $query = null ) {
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$visit_closers = isset( $query['tag_closers'] ) && 'visit' === $query['tag_closers'];
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 09:43:25 -04:00
if ( null === $query ) {
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 15:47:15 -04:00
while ( $this->next_token() ) {
if ( '#tag' !== $this->get_token_type() ) {
continue;
}
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 15:47:15 -04:00
if ( ! $this::is_tag_closer() || $visit_closers ) {
return 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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
if ( is_string( $query ) ) {
$query = array( 'breadcrumbs' => array( $query ) );
}
if ( ! is_array( $query ) ) {
_doing_it_wrong(
__METHOD__,
__( 'Please pass a query array to this function.' ),
'6.4.0'
);
return false;
}
$needs_class = ( isset( $query['class_name'] ) && is_string( $query['class_name'] ) )
? $query['class_name']
: null;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
if ( ! ( array_key_exists( 'breadcrumbs', $query ) && is_array( $query['breadcrumbs'] ) ) ) {
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 15:47:15 -04:00
while ( $this->next_token() ) {
if ( '#tag' !== $this->get_token_type() ) {
continue;
}
if ( isset( $needs_class ) && ! $this->has_class( $needs_class ) ) {
continue;
}
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 15:47:15 -04:00
if ( ! parent::is_tag_closer() || $visit_closers ) {
return 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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
$breadcrumbs = $query['breadcrumbs'];
$match_offset = isset( $query['match_offset'] ) ? (int) $query['match_offset'] : 1;
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 15:47:15 -04:00
while ( $match_offset > 0 && $this->next_token() ) {
if ( '#tag' !== $this->get_token_type() || $this->is_tag_closer() ) {
continue;
}
if ( isset( $needs_class ) && ! $this->has_class( $needs_class ) ) {
continue;
}
if ( $this->matches_breadcrumbs( $breadcrumbs ) && 0 === --$match_offset ) {
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
}
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
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 09:43:25 -04:00
HTML API: Scan all syntax tokens in a document, read modifiable text. Since its introduction in WordPress 6.2 the HTML Tag Processor has provided a way to scan through all of the HTML tags in a document and then read and modify their attributes. In order to reliably do this, it also needed to be aware of other kinds of HTML syntax, but it didn't expose those syntax tokens to consumers of the API. In this patch the Tag Processor introduces a new scanning method and a few helper methods to read information about or from each token. Most significantly, this introduces the ability to read `#text` nodes in the document. What's new in the Tag Processor? ================================ - `next_token()` visits every distinct syntax token in a document. - `get_token_type()` indicates what kind of token it is. - `get_token_name()` returns something akin to `DOMNode.nodeName`. - `get_modifiable_text()` returns the text associated with a token. - `get_comment_type()` indicates why a token represents an HTML comment. Example usage. ============== {{{ <?php function strip_all_tags( $html ) { $text_content = ''; $processor = new WP_HTML_Tag_Processor( $html ); while ( $processor->next_token() ) { if ( '#text' !== $processor->get_token_type() ) { continue; } $text_content .= $processor->get_modifiable_text(); } return $text_content; } }}} What changes in the Tag Processor? ================================== Previously, the Tag Processor would scan the opening and closing tag of every HTML element separately. Now, however, there are special tags which it only visits once, as if those elements were void tags without a closer. These are special tags because their content contains no other HTML or markup, only non-HTML content. - SCRIPT elements contain raw text which is isolated from the rest of the HTML document and fed separately into a JavaScript engine. There are complicated rules to avoid escaping the script context in the HTML. The contents are left verbatim, and character references are not decoded. - TEXTARA and TITLE elements contain plain text which is decoded before display, e.g. transforming `&amp;` into `&`. Any markup which resembles tags is treated as verbatim text and not a tag. - IFRAME, NOEMBED, NOFRAMES, STYLE, and XMP elements are similar to the textarea and title elements, but no character references are decoded. For example, `&amp;` inside a STYLE element is passed to the CSS engine as the literal string `&amp;` and _not_ as `&`. Because it's important not treat this inner content separately from the elements containing it, the Tag Processor combines them when scanning into a single match and makes their content available as modifiable text (see below). This means that the Tag Processor will no longer visit a closing tag for any of these elements unless that tag is unexpected. {{{ <title>There is only a single token in this line</title> <title>There are two tokens in this line></title></title> </title><title>There are still two tokens in this line></title> }}} What are tokens? ================ The term "token" here is a parsing term, which means a primitive unit in HTML. There are only a few kinds of tokens in HTML: - a tag has a name, attributes, and a closing or self-closing flag. - a text node, or `#text` node contains plain text which is displayed in a browser and which is decoded before display. - a DOCTYPE declaration indicates how to parse the document. - a comment is hidden from the display on a page but present in the HTML. There are a few more kinds of tokens that the HTML Tag Processor will recognize, some of which don't exist as concepts in HTML. These mostly comprise XML syntax elements that aren't part of HTML (such as CDATA and processing instructions) and invalid HTML syntax that transforms into comments. What is a funky comment? ======================== This patch treats a specific kind of invalid comment in a special way. A closing tag with an invalid name is considered a "funky comment." In the browser these become HTML comments just like any other, but their syntax is convenient for representing a variety of bits of information in a well-defined way and which cannot be nested or recursive, given the parsing rules handling this invalid syntax. - `</1>` - `</%avatar_url>` - `</{"wp_bit": {"type": "post-author"}}>` - `</[post-author]>` - `</__( 'Save Post' );>` All of these examples become HTML comments in the browser. The content inside the funky content is easily parsable, whereby the only rule is that it starts at the `<` and continues until the nearest `>`. There can be no funky comment inside another, because that would imply having a `>` inside of one, which would actually terminate the first one. What is modifiable text? ======================== Modifiable text is similar to the `innerText` property of a DOM node. It represents the span of text for a given token which may be modified without changing the structure of the HTML document or the token. There is currently no mechanism to change the modifiable text, but this is planned to arrive in a later patch. Tags ==== Most tags have no modifiable text because they have child nodes where text nodes are found. Only the special tags mentioned above have modifiable text. {{{ <div class="post">Another day in HTML</div> └─ tag ──────────┘└─ text node ─────┘└────┴─ tag }}} {{{ <title>Is <img> &gt; <image>?</title> │ └ modifiable text ───┘ │ "Is <img> > <image>?" └─ tag ─────────────────────────────┘ }}} Text nodes ========== Text nodes are entirely modifiable text. {{{ This HTML document has no tags. └─ modifiable text ───────────┘ }}} Comments ======== The modifiable text inside a comment is the portion of the comment that doesn't form its syntax. This applies for a number of invalid comments. {{{ <!-- this is inside a comment --> │ └─ modifiable text ──────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────┘ }}} {{{ <!--> This invalid comment has no modifiable text. }}} {{{ <? this is an invalid comment --> │ └─ modifiable text ────────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────┘ }}} {{{ <[CDATA[this is an invalid comment]]> │ └─ modifiable text ───────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────────┘ }}} Other token types also have modifiable text. Consult the code or tests for further information. Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/5683 Discussed in https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/60170 Follows [57575] Props bernhard-reiter, dlh, dmsnell, jonsurrell, zieladam Fixes #60170 Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@57348 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56854 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2024-01-24 18:37:16 -05:00
/**
* Ensures internal accounting is maintained for HTML semantic rules while
* the underlying Tag Processor class is seeking to a bookmark.
*
* This doesn't currently have a way to represent non-tags and doesn't process
* semantic rules for text nodes. For access to the raw tokens consider using
* WP_HTML_Tag_Processor instead.
*
* @since 6.5.0 Added for internal support; do not use.
*
* @access private
*
* @return bool
*/
public function next_token() {
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$this->current_element = null;
if ( isset( $this->last_error ) ) {
return false;
}
if ( 0 === count( $this->element_queue ) && ! $this->step() ) {
while ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop() ) {
continue;
}
}
$this->current_element = array_shift( $this->element_queue );
while ( isset( $this->context_node ) && ! $this->has_seen_context_node ) {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
if ( $this->context_node === $this->current_element->token && WP_HTML_Stack_Event::PUSH === $this->current_element->operation ) {
$this->has_seen_context_node = true;
return $this->next_token();
}
}
$this->current_element = array_shift( $this->element_queue );
}
if ( ! isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
return $this->next_token();
}
if ( isset( $this->context_node ) && WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation && $this->context_node === $this->current_element->token ) {
$this->element_queue = array();
$this->current_element = null;
return false;
}
// Avoid sending close events for elements which don't expect a closing.
if (
WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation &&
! static::expects_closer( $this->current_element->token->node_name )
) {
return $this->next_token();
}
return true;
}
/**
* Indicates if the current tag token is a tag closer.
*
* Example:
*
* $p = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<div></div>' );
* $p->next_tag( array( 'tag_name' => 'div', 'tag_closers' => 'visit' ) );
* $p->is_tag_closer() === false;
*
* $p->next_tag( array( 'tag_name' => 'div', 'tag_closers' => 'visit' ) );
* $p->is_tag_closer() === true;
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for HTML Processor.
*
* @return bool Whether the current tag is a tag closer.
*/
public function is_tag_closer() {
return isset( $this->current_element )
? ( WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation )
: parent::is_tag_closer();
HTML API: Scan all syntax tokens in a document, read modifiable text. Since its introduction in WordPress 6.2 the HTML Tag Processor has provided a way to scan through all of the HTML tags in a document and then read and modify their attributes. In order to reliably do this, it also needed to be aware of other kinds of HTML syntax, but it didn't expose those syntax tokens to consumers of the API. In this patch the Tag Processor introduces a new scanning method and a few helper methods to read information about or from each token. Most significantly, this introduces the ability to read `#text` nodes in the document. What's new in the Tag Processor? ================================ - `next_token()` visits every distinct syntax token in a document. - `get_token_type()` indicates what kind of token it is. - `get_token_name()` returns something akin to `DOMNode.nodeName`. - `get_modifiable_text()` returns the text associated with a token. - `get_comment_type()` indicates why a token represents an HTML comment. Example usage. ============== {{{ <?php function strip_all_tags( $html ) { $text_content = ''; $processor = new WP_HTML_Tag_Processor( $html ); while ( $processor->next_token() ) { if ( '#text' !== $processor->get_token_type() ) { continue; } $text_content .= $processor->get_modifiable_text(); } return $text_content; } }}} What changes in the Tag Processor? ================================== Previously, the Tag Processor would scan the opening and closing tag of every HTML element separately. Now, however, there are special tags which it only visits once, as if those elements were void tags without a closer. These are special tags because their content contains no other HTML or markup, only non-HTML content. - SCRIPT elements contain raw text which is isolated from the rest of the HTML document and fed separately into a JavaScript engine. There are complicated rules to avoid escaping the script context in the HTML. The contents are left verbatim, and character references are not decoded. - TEXTARA and TITLE elements contain plain text which is decoded before display, e.g. transforming `&amp;` into `&`. Any markup which resembles tags is treated as verbatim text and not a tag. - IFRAME, NOEMBED, NOFRAMES, STYLE, and XMP elements are similar to the textarea and title elements, but no character references are decoded. For example, `&amp;` inside a STYLE element is passed to the CSS engine as the literal string `&amp;` and _not_ as `&`. Because it's important not treat this inner content separately from the elements containing it, the Tag Processor combines them when scanning into a single match and makes their content available as modifiable text (see below). This means that the Tag Processor will no longer visit a closing tag for any of these elements unless that tag is unexpected. {{{ <title>There is only a single token in this line</title> <title>There are two tokens in this line></title></title> </title><title>There are still two tokens in this line></title> }}} What are tokens? ================ The term "token" here is a parsing term, which means a primitive unit in HTML. There are only a few kinds of tokens in HTML: - a tag has a name, attributes, and a closing or self-closing flag. - a text node, or `#text` node contains plain text which is displayed in a browser and which is decoded before display. - a DOCTYPE declaration indicates how to parse the document. - a comment is hidden from the display on a page but present in the HTML. There are a few more kinds of tokens that the HTML Tag Processor will recognize, some of which don't exist as concepts in HTML. These mostly comprise XML syntax elements that aren't part of HTML (such as CDATA and processing instructions) and invalid HTML syntax that transforms into comments. What is a funky comment? ======================== This patch treats a specific kind of invalid comment in a special way. A closing tag with an invalid name is considered a "funky comment." In the browser these become HTML comments just like any other, but their syntax is convenient for representing a variety of bits of information in a well-defined way and which cannot be nested or recursive, given the parsing rules handling this invalid syntax. - `</1>` - `</%avatar_url>` - `</{"wp_bit": {"type": "post-author"}}>` - `</[post-author]>` - `</__( 'Save Post' );>` All of these examples become HTML comments in the browser. The content inside the funky content is easily parsable, whereby the only rule is that it starts at the `<` and continues until the nearest `>`. There can be no funky comment inside another, because that would imply having a `>` inside of one, which would actually terminate the first one. What is modifiable text? ======================== Modifiable text is similar to the `innerText` property of a DOM node. It represents the span of text for a given token which may be modified without changing the structure of the HTML document or the token. There is currently no mechanism to change the modifiable text, but this is planned to arrive in a later patch. Tags ==== Most tags have no modifiable text because they have child nodes where text nodes are found. Only the special tags mentioned above have modifiable text. {{{ <div class="post">Another day in HTML</div> └─ tag ──────────┘└─ text node ─────┘└────┴─ tag }}} {{{ <title>Is <img> &gt; <image>?</title> │ └ modifiable text ───┘ │ "Is <img> > <image>?" └─ tag ─────────────────────────────┘ }}} Text nodes ========== Text nodes are entirely modifiable text. {{{ This HTML document has no tags. └─ modifiable text ───────────┘ }}} Comments ======== The modifiable text inside a comment is the portion of the comment that doesn't form its syntax. This applies for a number of invalid comments. {{{ <!-- this is inside a comment --> │ └─ modifiable text ──────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────┘ }}} {{{ <!--> This invalid comment has no modifiable text. }}} {{{ <? this is an invalid comment --> │ └─ modifiable text ────────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────┘ }}} {{{ <[CDATA[this is an invalid comment]]> │ └─ modifiable text ───────┘ │ └─ comment token ───────────────────┘ }}} Other token types also have modifiable text. Consult the code or tests for further information. Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/5683 Discussed in https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/60170 Follows [57575] Props bernhard-reiter, dlh, dmsnell, jonsurrell, zieladam Fixes #60170 Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@57348 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56854 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2024-01-24 18:37:16 -05:00
}
/**
* Indicates if the currently-matched tag matches the given breadcrumbs.
*
* A "*" represents a single tag wildcard, where any tag matches, but not no tags.
*
* At some point this function _may_ support a `**` syntax for matching any number
* of unspecified tags in the breadcrumb stack. This has been intentionally left
* out, however, to keep this function simple and to avoid introducing backtracking,
* which could open up surprising performance breakdowns.
*
* Example:
*
* $processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<div><span><figure><img></figure></span></div>' );
* $processor->next_tag( 'img' );
* true === $processor->matches_breadcrumbs( array( 'figure', 'img' ) );
* true === $processor->matches_breadcrumbs( array( 'span', 'figure', 'img' ) );
* false === $processor->matches_breadcrumbs( array( 'span', 'img' ) );
* true === $processor->matches_breadcrumbs( array( 'span', '*', 'img' ) );
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param string[] $breadcrumbs DOM sub-path at which element is found, e.g. `array( 'FIGURE', 'IMG' )`.
* May also contain the wildcard `*` which matches a single element, e.g. `array( 'SECTION', '*' )`.
* @return bool Whether the currently-matched tag is found at the given nested structure.
*/
public function matches_breadcrumbs( $breadcrumbs ) {
// Everything matches when there are zero constraints.
if ( 0 === count( $breadcrumbs ) ) {
return true;
}
// Start at the last crumb.
$crumb = end( $breadcrumbs );
if ( '*' !== $crumb && $this->get_tag() !== strtoupper( $crumb ) ) {
return false;
}
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up() as $node ) {
$crumb = strtoupper( current( $breadcrumbs ) );
if ( '*' !== $crumb && $node->node_name !== $crumb ) {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
if ( false === prev( $breadcrumbs ) ) {
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
}
return false;
}
/**
* Indicates if the currently-matched node expects a closing
* token, or if it will self-close on the next step.
*
* Most HTML elements expect a closer, such as a P element or
* a DIV element. Others, like an IMG element are void and don't
* have a closing tag. Special elements, such as SCRIPT and STYLE,
* are treated just like void tags. Text nodes and self-closing
* foreign content will also act just like a void tag, immediately
* closing as soon as the processor advances to the next token.
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @todo When adding support for foreign content, ensure that
* this returns false for self-closing elements in the
* SVG and MathML namespace.
*
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 15:47:15 -04:00
* @param ?WP_HTML_Token $node Node to examine instead of current node, if provided.
* @return bool Whether to expect a closer for the currently-matched node,
* or `null` if not matched on any token.
*/
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 15:47:15 -04:00
public function expects_closer( $node = null ) {
$token_name = $node->node_name ?? $this->get_token_name();
if ( ! isset( $token_name ) ) {
return null;
}
return ! (
// Comments, text nodes, and other atomic tokens.
'#' === $token_name[0] ||
// Doctype declarations.
'html' === $token_name ||
// Void elements.
self::is_void( $token_name ) ||
// Special atomic elements.
in_array( $token_name, array( 'IFRAME', 'NOEMBED', 'NOFRAMES', 'SCRIPT', 'STYLE', 'TEXTAREA', 'TITLE', 'XMP' ), 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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
/**
* Steps through the HTML document and stop at the next tag, if any.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @throws Exception When unable to allocate a bookmark for the next token in the input HTML document.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @see self::PROCESS_NEXT_NODE
* @see self::REPROCESS_CURRENT_NODE
*
* @param string $node_to_process Whether to parse the next node or reprocess the current node.
* @return bool Whether a tag was matched.
*/
public function step( $node_to_process = self::PROCESS_NEXT_NODE ) {
// Refuse to proceed if there was a previous error.
if ( null !== $this->last_error ) {
return false;
}
if ( self::REPROCESS_CURRENT_NODE !== $node_to_process ) {
/*
* Void elements still hop onto the stack of open elements even though
* there's no corresponding closing tag. This is important for managing
* stack-based operations such as "navigate to parent node" or checking
* on an element's breadcrumbs.
*
* When moving on to the next node, therefore, if the bottom-most element
* on the stack is a void element, it must be closed.
*
* @todo Once self-closing foreign elements and BGSOUND are supported,
* they must also be implicitly closed here too. BGSOUND is
* special since it's only self-closing if the self-closing flag
* is provided in the opening tag, otherwise it expects a tag closer.
*/
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$top_node = $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node();
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 15:47:15 -04:00
if ( isset( $top_node ) && ! static::expects_closer( $top_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 09:43:25 -04:00
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
}
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
if ( self::PROCESS_NEXT_NODE === $node_to_process ) {
parent::next_token();
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
// Finish stepping when there are no more tokens in the document.
if (
WP_HTML_Tag_Processor::STATE_INCOMPLETE_INPUT === $this->parser_state ||
WP_HTML_Tag_Processor::STATE_COMPLETE === $this->parser_state
) {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return false;
}
$this->state->current_token = new WP_HTML_Token(
$this->bookmark_token(),
$this->get_token_name(),
$this->has_self_closing_flag(),
$this->release_internal_bookmark_on_destruct
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 09:43:25 -04:00
);
try {
switch ( $this->state->insertion_mode ) {
case WP_HTML_Processor_State::INSERTION_MODE_IN_BODY:
return $this->step_in_body();
default:
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( "No support for parsing in the '{$this->state->insertion_mode}' state." );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
} catch ( WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception $e ) {
/*
* Exceptions are used in this class to escape deep call stacks that
* otherwise might involve messier calling and return conventions.
*/
return false;
}
}
/**
* Computes the HTML breadcrumbs for the currently-matched node, if matched.
*
* Breadcrumbs start at the outermost parent and descend toward the matched element.
* They always include the entire path from the root HTML node to the matched element.
*
* @todo It could be more efficient to expose a generator-based version of this function
* to avoid creating the array copy on tag iteration. If this is done, it would likely
* be more useful to walk up the stack when yielding instead of starting at the top.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* Example
*
* $processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<p><strong><em><img></em></strong></p>' );
* $processor->next_tag( 'IMG' );
* $processor->get_breadcrumbs() === array( 'HTML', 'BODY', 'P', 'STRONG', 'EM', 'IMG' );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
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 15:47:15 -04:00
* @todo make aware of queue of elements, because stack operations have already been done by now.
*
* @return string[]|null Array of tag names representing path to matched node, if matched, otherwise NULL.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*/
public function get_breadcrumbs() {
$breadcrumbs = array();
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_down() as $stack_item ) {
$breadcrumbs[] = $stack_item->node_name;
}
return $breadcrumbs;
}
/**
* Returns the nesting depth of the current location in the document.
*
* Example:
*
* $processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<div><p></p></div>' );
* // The processor starts in the BODY context, meaning it has depth from the start: HTML > BODY.
* 2 === $processor->get_current_depth();
*
* // Opening the DIV element increases the depth.
* $processor->next_token();
* 3 === $processor->get_current_depth();
*
* // Opening the P element increases the depth.
* $processor->next_token();
* 4 === $processor->get_current_depth();
*
* // The P element is closed during `next_token()` so the depth is decreased to reflect that.
* $processor->next_token();
* 3 === $processor->get_current_depth();
*
* @since 6.6.0
*
* @return int Nesting-depth of current location in the document.
*/
public function get_current_depth() {
return $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->count();
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
/**
* Parses next element in the 'in body' insertion mode.
*
* This internal function performs the 'in body' insertion mode
* logic for the generalized WP_HTML_Processor::step() function.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception When encountering unsupported HTML input.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inbody
* @see WP_HTML_Processor::step
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @return bool Whether an element was found.
*/
private function step_in_body() {
$token_name = $this->get_token_name();
$token_type = $this->get_token_type();
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$op_sigil = '#tag' === $token_type ? ( parent::is_tag_closer() ? '-' : '+' ) : '';
$op = "{$op_sigil}{$token_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 09:43:25 -04:00
switch ( $op ) {
case '#comment':
case '#funky-comment':
case '#presumptuous-tag':
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
case '#text':
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$current_token = $this->bookmarks[ $this->state->current_token->bookmark_name ];
/*
* > A character token that is U+0000 NULL
*
* Any successive sequence of NULL bytes is ignored and won't
* trigger active format reconstruction. Therefore, if the text
* only comprises NULL bytes then the token should be ignored
* here, but if there are any other characters in the stream
* the active formats should be reconstructed.
*/
if (
1 <= $current_token->length &&
"\x00" === $this->html[ $current_token->start ] &&
strspn( $this->html, "\x00", $current_token->start, $current_token->length ) === $current_token->length
) {
// Parse error: ignore the token.
return $this->step();
}
/*
* Whitespace-only text does not affect the frameset-ok flag.
* It is probably inter-element whitespace, but it may also
* contain character references which decode only to whitespace.
*/
$text = $this->get_modifiable_text();
if ( strlen( $text ) !== strspn( $text, " \t\n\f\r" ) ) {
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
case 'html':
/*
* > A DOCTYPE token
* > Parse error. Ignore the token.
*/
return $this->step();
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is "button"
*/
case '+BUTTON':
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_scope( 'BUTTON' ) ) {
// @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible. This error does not impact the logic here.
$this->generate_implied_end_tags();
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( 'BUTTON' );
}
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "address", "article", "aside",
* > "blockquote", "center", "details", "dialog", "dir", "div", "dl",
* > "fieldset", "figcaption", "figure", "footer", "header", "hgroup",
* > "main", "menu", "nav", "ol", "p", "search", "section", "summary", "ul"
*/
case '+ADDRESS':
case '+ARTICLE':
case '+ASIDE':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '+BLOCKQUOTE':
case '+CENTER':
case '+DETAILS':
case '+DIALOG':
case '+DIR':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '+DIV':
case '+DL':
case '+FIELDSET':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '+FIGCAPTION':
case '+FIGURE':
case '+FOOTER':
case '+HEADER':
case '+HGROUP':
case '+MAIN':
case '+MENU':
case '+NAV':
case '+OL':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '+P':
case '+SEARCH':
case '+SECTION':
case '+SUMMARY':
case '+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 09:43:25 -04:00
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->close_a_p_element();
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return true;
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is one of: "address", "article", "aside", "blockquote",
* > "button", "center", "details", "dialog", "dir", "div", "dl", "fieldset",
* > "figcaption", "figure", "footer", "header", "hgroup", "listing", "main",
* > "menu", "nav", "ol", "pre", "search", "section", "summary", "ul"
*/
case '-ADDRESS':
case '-ARTICLE':
case '-ASIDE':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '-BLOCKQUOTE':
case '-BUTTON':
case '-CENTER':
case '-DETAILS':
case '-DIALOG':
case '-DIR':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '-DIV':
case '-DL':
case '-FIELDSET':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '-FIGCAPTION':
case '-FIGURE':
case '-FOOTER':
case '-HEADER':
case '-HGROUP':
case '-LISTING':
case '-MAIN':
case '-MENU':
case '-NAV':
case '-OL':
case '-PRE':
case '-SEARCH':
case '-SECTION':
case '-SUMMARY':
case '-UL':
if ( ! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_scope( $token_name ) ) {
// @todo Report parse error.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
// Ignore the token.
return $this->step();
}
$this->generate_implied_end_tags();
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node()->node_name !== $token_name ) {
// @todo Record parse error: this error doesn't impact parsing.
}
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( $token_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 09:43:25 -04:00
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", "h6"
*/
case '+H1':
case '+H2':
case '+H3':
case '+H4':
case '+H5':
case '+H6':
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->close_a_p_element();
}
if (
in_array(
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node()->node_name,
array( 'H1', 'H2', 'H3', 'H4', 'H5', 'H6' ),
true
)
) {
// @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible.
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "pre", "listing"
*/
case '+PRE':
case '+LISTING':
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->close_a_p_element();
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
return true;
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is one of: "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", "h6"
*/
case '-H1':
case '-H2':
case '-H3':
case '-H4':
case '-H5':
case '-H6':
if ( ! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_scope( '(internal: H1 through H6 - do not use)' ) ) {
/*
* This is a parse error; ignore the token.
*
* @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible.
*/
return $this->step();
}
$this->generate_implied_end_tags();
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node()->node_name !== $token_name ) {
// @todo Record parse error: this error doesn't impact parsing.
}
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( '(internal: H1 through H6 - do not use)' );
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is "li"
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "dd", "dt"
*/
case '+DD':
case '+DT':
case '+LI':
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
$node = $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node();
$is_li = 'LI' === $token_name;
in_body_list_loop:
/*
* The logic for LI and DT/DD is the same except for one point: LI elements _only_
* close other LI elements, but a DT or DD element closes _any_ open DT or DD element.
*/
if ( $is_li ? 'LI' === $node->node_name : ( 'DD' === $node->node_name || 'DT' === $node->node_name ) ) {
$node_name = $is_li ? 'LI' : $node->node_name;
$this->generate_implied_end_tags( $node_name );
if ( $node_name !== $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node()->node_name ) {
// @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible. This error does not impact the logic here.
}
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( $node_name );
goto in_body_list_done;
}
if (
'ADDRESS' !== $node->node_name &&
'DIV' !== $node->node_name &&
'P' !== $node->node_name &&
$this->is_special( $node->node_name )
) {
/*
* > If node is in the special category, but is not an address, div,
* > or p element, then jump to the step labeled done below.
*/
goto in_body_list_done;
} else {
/*
* > Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the stack of open elements
* > and return to the step labeled loop.
*/
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up( $node ) as $item ) {
$node = $item;
break;
}
goto in_body_list_loop;
}
in_body_list_done:
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->close_a_p_element();
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is "li"
* > An end tag whose tag name is one of: "dd", "dt"
*/
case '-DD':
case '-DT':
case '-LI':
if (
/*
* An end tag whose tag name is "li":
* If the stack of open elements does not have an li element in list item scope,
* then this is a parse error; ignore the token.
*/
(
'LI' === $token_name &&
! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_list_item_scope( 'LI' )
) ||
/*
* An end tag whose tag name is one of: "dd", "dt":
* If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope that is an
* HTML element with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a
* parse error; ignore the token.
*/
(
'LI' !== $token_name &&
! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_scope( $token_name )
)
) {
/*
* This is a parse error, ignore the token.
*
* @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible.
*/
return $this->step();
}
$this->generate_implied_end_tags( $token_name );
if ( $token_name !== $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node()->node_name ) {
// @todo Indicate a parse error once it's possible. This error does not impact the logic here.
}
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( $token_name );
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is "p"
*/
case '-P':
if ( ! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
$this->close_a_p_element();
return true;
// > A start tag whose tag name is "a"
case '+A':
foreach ( $this->state->active_formatting_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
switch ( $item->node_name ) {
case 'marker':
break;
case 'A':
$this->run_adoption_agency_algorithm();
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->remove_node( $item );
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->remove_node( $item );
break;
}
}
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->push( $this->state->current_token );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "b", "big", "code", "em", "font", "i",
* > "s", "small", "strike", "strong", "tt", "u"
*/
case '+B':
case '+BIG':
case '+CODE':
case '+EM':
case '+FONT':
case '+I':
case '+S':
case '+SMALL':
case '+STRIKE':
case '+STRONG':
case '+TT':
case '+U':
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->push( $this->state->current_token );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return true;
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is one of: "a", "b", "big", "code", "em", "font", "i",
* > "nobr", "s", "small", "strike", "strong", "tt", "u"
*/
case '-A':
case '-B':
case '-BIG':
case '-CODE':
case '-EM':
case '-FONT':
case '-I':
case '-S':
case '-SMALL':
case '-STRIKE':
case '-STRONG':
case '-TT':
case '-U':
$this->run_adoption_agency_algorithm();
return true;
/*
* > An end tag whose tag name is "br"
* > Parse error. Drop the attributes from the token, and act as described in the next
* > entry; i.e. act as if this was a "br" start tag token with no attributes, rather
* > than the end tag token that it actually is.
*/
case '-BR':
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Closing BR tags require unimplemented special handling.' );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "area", "br", "embed", "img", "keygen", "wbr"
*/
case '+AREA':
case '+BR':
case '+EMBED':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
case '+IMG':
case '+KEYGEN':
case '+WBR':
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->frameset_ok = 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 09:43:25 -04:00
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is "input"
*/
case '+INPUT':
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$type_attribute = $this->get_attribute( 'type' );
/*
* > If the token does not have an attribute with the name "type", or if it does,
* > but that attribute's value is not an ASCII case-insensitive match for the
* > string "hidden", then: set the frameset-ok flag to "not ok".
*/
if ( ! is_string( $type_attribute ) || 'hidden' !== strtolower( $type_attribute ) ) {
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
}
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is "hr"
*/
case '+HR':
if ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_p_in_button_scope() ) {
$this->close_a_p_element();
}
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
$this->state->frameset_ok = false;
return true;
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is one of: "param", "source", "track"
*/
case '+PARAM':
case '+SOURCE':
case '+TRACK':
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
}
/*
* These tags require special handling in the 'in body' insertion mode
* but that handling hasn't yet been implemented.
*
* As the rules for each tag are implemented, the corresponding tag
* name should be removed from this list. An accompanying test should
* help ensure this list is maintained.
*
* @see Tests_HtmlApi_WpHtmlProcessor::test_step_in_body_fails_on_unsupported_tags
*
* Since this switch structure throws a WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception, it's
* possible to handle "any other start tag" and "any other end tag" below,
* as that guarantees execution doesn't proceed for the unimplemented tags.
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/parsing.html#parsing-main-inbody
*/
switch ( $token_name ) {
case 'APPLET':
case 'BASE':
case 'BASEFONT':
case 'BGSOUND':
case 'BODY':
case 'CAPTION':
case 'COL':
case 'COLGROUP':
case 'FORM':
case 'FRAME':
case 'FRAMESET':
case 'HEAD':
case 'HTML':
case 'IFRAME':
case 'LINK':
case 'MARQUEE':
case 'MATH':
case 'META':
case 'NOBR':
case 'NOEMBED':
case 'NOFRAMES':
case 'NOSCRIPT':
case 'OBJECT':
case 'OPTGROUP':
case 'OPTION':
case 'PLAINTEXT':
case 'RB':
case 'RP':
case 'RT':
case 'RTC':
case 'SARCASM':
case 'SCRIPT':
case 'SELECT':
case 'STYLE':
case 'SVG':
case 'TABLE':
case 'TBODY':
case 'TD':
case 'TEMPLATE':
case 'TEXTAREA':
case 'TFOOT':
case 'TH':
case 'THEAD':
case 'TITLE':
case 'TR':
case 'XMP':
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( "Cannot process {$token_name} element." );
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
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 15:47:15 -04:00
if ( ! parent::is_tag_closer() ) {
/*
* > Any other start tag
*/
$this->reconstruct_active_formatting_elements();
$this->insert_html_element( $this->state->current_token );
return true;
} else {
/*
* > Any other end tag
*/
/*
* Find the corresponding tag opener in the stack of open elements, if
* it exists before reaching a special element, which provides a kind
* of boundary in the stack. For example, a `</custom-tag>` should not
* close anything beyond its containing `P` or `DIV` element.
*/
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up() as $node ) {
if ( $token_name === $node->node_name ) {
break;
}
if ( self::is_special( $node->node_name ) ) {
// This is a parse error, ignore the token.
return $this->step();
}
}
$this->generate_implied_end_tags( $token_name );
if ( $node !== $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node() ) {
// @todo Record parse error: this error doesn't impact parsing.
}
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
if ( $node === $item ) {
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
}
}
/*
* Internal helpers
*/
/**
* Creates a new bookmark for the currently-matched token and returns the generated 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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
* @since 6.5.0 Renamed from bookmark_tag() to bookmark_token().
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @throws Exception When unable to allocate requested bookmark.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @return string|false Name of created bookmark, or false if unable to create.
*/
private function bookmark_token() {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
if ( ! parent::set_bookmark( ++$this->bookmark_counter ) ) {
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_EXCEEDED_MAX_BOOKMARKS;
throw new Exception( 'could not allocate bookmark' );
}
return "{$this->bookmark_counter}";
}
/*
* HTML semantic overrides for Tag Processor
*/
/**
* Returns the uppercase name of the matched tag.
*
* The semantic rules for HTML specify that certain tags be reprocessed
* with a different tag name. Because of this, the tag name presented
* by the HTML Processor may differ from the one reported by the HTML
* Tag Processor, which doesn't apply these semantic rules.
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* Example:
*
* $processor = new WP_HTML_Tag_Processor( '<div class="test">Test</div>' );
* $processor->next_tag() === true;
* $processor->get_tag() === 'DIV';
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* $processor->next_tag() === false;
* $processor->get_tag() === null;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @return string|null Name of currently matched tag in input HTML, or `null` if none found.
*/
public function get_tag() {
if ( null !== $this->last_error ) {
return null;
}
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 15:47:15 -04:00
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
return $this->current_element->token->node_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 09:43:25 -04:00
$tag_name = parent::get_tag();
switch ( $tag_name ) {
case 'IMAGE':
/*
* > A start tag whose tag name is "image"
* > Change the token's tag name to "img" and reprocess it. (Don't ask.)
*/
return 'IMG';
default:
return $tag_name;
}
}
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 15:47:15 -04:00
/**
* Returns the node name represented by the token.
*
* This matches the DOM API value `nodeName`. Some values
* are static, such as `#text` for a text node, while others
* are dynamically generated from the token itself.
*
* Dynamic names:
* - Uppercase tag name for tag matches.
* - `html` for DOCTYPE declarations.
*
* Note that if the Tag Processor is not matched on a token
* then this function will return `null`, either because it
* hasn't yet found a token or because it reached the end
* of the document without matching a token.
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for the HTML Processor.
*
* @return string|null Name of the matched token.
*/
public function get_token_name() {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
return $this->current_element->token->node_name;
}
return parent::get_token_name();
}
/**
* Indicates the kind of matched token, if any.
*
* This differs from `get_token_name()` in that it always
* returns a static string indicating the type, whereas
* `get_token_name()` may return values derived from the
* token itself, such as a tag name or processing
* instruction tag.
*
* Possible values:
* - `#tag` when matched on a tag.
* - `#text` when matched on a text node.
* - `#cdata-section` when matched on a CDATA node.
* - `#comment` when matched on a comment.
* - `#doctype` when matched on a DOCTYPE declaration.
* - `#presumptuous-tag` when matched on an empty tag closer.
* - `#funky-comment` when matched on a funky comment.
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for the HTML Processor.
*
* @return string|null What kind of token is matched, or null.
*/
public function get_token_type() {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
$node_name = $this->current_element->token->node_name;
if ( ctype_upper( $node_name[0] ) ) {
return '#tag';
}
if ( 'html' === $node_name ) {
return '#doctype';
}
return $node_name;
}
return parent::get_token_type();
}
/**
* Returns the value of a requested attribute from a matched tag opener if that attribute exists.
*
* Example:
*
* $p = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( '<div enabled class="test" data-test-id="14">Test</div>' );
* $p->next_token() === true;
* $p->get_attribute( 'data-test-id' ) === '14';
* $p->get_attribute( 'enabled' ) === true;
* $p->get_attribute( 'aria-label' ) === null;
*
* $p->next_tag() === false;
* $p->get_attribute( 'class' ) === null;
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for HTML Processor.
*
* @param string $name Name of attribute whose value is requested.
* @return string|true|null Value of attribute or `null` if not available. Boolean attributes return `true`.
*/
public function get_attribute( $name ) {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
// Closing tokens cannot contain attributes.
if ( WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation ) {
return null;
}
$node_name = $this->current_element->token->node_name;
// Only tags can contain attributes.
if ( 'A' > $node_name[0] || 'Z' < $node_name[0] ) {
return null;
}
if ( $this->current_element->token->bookmark_name === (string) $this->bookmark_counter ) {
return parent::get_attribute( $name );
}
}
return null;
}
/**
* Gets lowercase names of all attributes matching a given prefix in the current tag.
*
* Note that matching is case-insensitive. This is in accordance with the spec:
*
* > There must never be two or more attributes on
* > the same start tag whose names are an ASCII
* > case-insensitive match for each other.
* - HTML 5 spec
*
* Example:
*
* $p = new WP_HTML_Tag_Processor( '<div data-ENABLED class="test" DATA-test-id="14">Test</div>' );
* $p->next_tag( array( 'class_name' => 'test' ) ) === true;
* $p->get_attribute_names_with_prefix( 'data-' ) === array( 'data-enabled', 'data-test-id' );
*
* $p->next_tag() === false;
* $p->get_attribute_names_with_prefix( 'data-' ) === null;
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for the HTML Processor.
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#attributes-2:ascii-case-insensitive
*
* @param string $prefix Prefix of requested attribute names.
* @return array|null List of attribute names, or `null` when no tag opener is matched.
*/
public function get_attribute_names_with_prefix( $prefix ) {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
if ( WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation ) {
return null;
}
$mark = $this->bookmarks[ $this->current_element->token->bookmark_name ];
if ( 0 === $mark->length ) {
return null;
}
}
return parent::get_attribute_names_with_prefix( $prefix );
}
/**
* Returns the modifiable text for a matched token, or an empty string.
*
* Modifiable text is text content that may be read and changed without
* changing the HTML structure of the document around it. This includes
* the contents of `#text` nodes in the HTML as well as the inner
* contents of HTML comments, Processing Instructions, and others, even
* though these nodes aren't part of a parsed DOM tree. They also contain
* the contents of SCRIPT and STYLE tags, of TEXTAREA tags, and of any
* other section in an HTML document which cannot contain HTML markup (DATA).
*
* If a token has no modifiable text then an empty string is returned to
* avoid needless crashing or type errors. An empty string does not mean
* that a token has modifiable text, and a token with modifiable text may
* have an empty string (e.g. a comment with no contents).
*
* @since 6.6.0 Subclassed for the HTML Processor.
*
* @return string
*/
public function get_modifiable_text() {
if ( isset( $this->current_element ) ) {
if ( WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation ) {
return '';
}
$mark = $this->bookmarks[ $this->current_element->token->bookmark_name ];
if ( 0 === $mark->length ) {
return '';
}
}
return parent::get_modifiable_text();
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
/**
* Removes a bookmark that is no longer needed.
*
* Releasing a bookmark frees up the small
* performance overhead it requires.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param string $bookmark_name Name of the bookmark to remove.
* @return bool Whether the bookmark already existed before removal.
*/
public function release_bookmark( $bookmark_name ) {
return parent::release_bookmark( "_{$bookmark_name}" );
}
/**
* Moves the internal cursor in the HTML Processor to a given bookmark's location.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* Be careful! Seeking backwards to a previous location resets the parser to the
* start of the document and reparses the entire contents up until it finds the
* sought-after bookmarked location.
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* In order to prevent accidental infinite loops, there's a
* maximum limit on the number of times seek() can be called.
*
* @throws Exception When unable to allocate a bookmark for the next token in the input HTML document.
*
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param string $bookmark_name Jump to the place in the document identified by this bookmark name.
* @return bool Whether the internal cursor was successfully moved to the bookmark's location.
*/
public function seek( $bookmark_name ) {
// Flush any pending updates to the document before beginning.
$this->get_updated_html();
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$actual_bookmark_name = "_{$bookmark_name}";
$processor_started_at = $this->state->current_token
? $this->bookmarks[ $this->state->current_token->bookmark_name ]->start
: 0;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$bookmark_starts_at = $this->bookmarks[ $actual_bookmark_name ]->start;
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$bookmark_length = $this->bookmarks[ $actual_bookmark_name ]->length;
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 09:43:25 -04:00
$direction = $bookmark_starts_at > $processor_started_at ? 'forward' : 'backward';
/*
* If seeking backwards, it's possible that the sought-after bookmark exists within an element
* which has been closed before the current cursor; in other words, it has already been removed
* from the stack of open elements. This means that it's insufficient to simply pop off elements
* from the stack of open elements which appear after the bookmarked location and then jump to
* that location, as the elements which were open before won't be re-opened.
*
* In order to maintain consistency, the HTML Processor rewinds to the start of the document
* and reparses everything until it finds the sought-after bookmark.
*
* There are potentially better ways to do this: cache the parser state for each bookmark and
* restore it when seeking; store an immutable and idempotent register of where elements open
* and close.
*
* If caching the parser state it will be essential to properly maintain the cached stack of
* open elements and active formatting elements when modifying the document. This could be a
* tedious and time-consuming process as well, and so for now will not be performed.
*
* It may be possible to track bookmarks for where elements open and close, and in doing so
* be able to quickly recalculate breadcrumbs for any element in the document. It may even
* be possible to remove the stack of open elements and compute it on the fly this way.
* If doing this, the parser would need to track the opening and closing locations for all
* tokens in the breadcrumb path for any and all bookmarks. By utilizing bookmarks themselves
* this list could be automatically maintained while modifying the document. Finding the
* breadcrumbs would then amount to traversing that list from the start until the token
* being inspected. Once an element closes, if there are no bookmarks pointing to locations
* within that element, then all of these locations may be forgotten to save on memory use
* and computation time.
*/
if ( 'backward' === $direction ) {
/*
* Instead of clearing the parser state and starting fresh, calling the stack methods
* maintains the proper flags in the parser.
*/
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
if ( 'context-node' === $item->bookmark_name ) {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->remove_node( $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 09:43:25 -04:00
foreach ( $this->state->active_formatting_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
if ( 'context-node' === $item->bookmark_name ) {
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->remove_node( $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 09:43:25 -04:00
parent::seek( 'context-node' );
$this->state->insertion_mode = WP_HTML_Processor_State::INSERTION_MODE_IN_BODY;
$this->state->frameset_ok = true;
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 15:47:15 -04:00
$this->element_queue = array();
$this->current_element = null;
}
// When moving forwards, reparse the document until reaching the same location as the original bookmark.
if ( $bookmark_starts_at === $this->bookmarks[ $this->state->current_token->bookmark_name ]->start ) {
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
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 15:47:15 -04:00
while ( $this->next_token() ) {
if ( $bookmark_starts_at === $this->bookmarks[ $this->state->current_token->bookmark_name ]->start ) {
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 15:47:15 -04:00
while ( isset( $this->current_element ) && WP_HTML_Stack_Event::POP === $this->current_element->operation ) {
$this->current_element = array_shift( $this->element_queue );
}
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
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
}
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
/**
* Sets a bookmark in the HTML document.
*
* Bookmarks represent specific places or tokens in the HTML
* document, such as a tag opener or closer. When applying
* edits to a document, such as setting an attribute, the
* text offsets of that token may shift; the bookmark is
* kept updated with those shifts and remains stable unless
* the entire span of text in which the token sits is removed.
*
* Release bookmarks when they are no longer needed.
*
* Example:
*
* <main><h2>Surprising fact you may not know!</h2></main>
* ^ ^
* \-|-- this `H2` opener bookmark tracks the token
*
* <main class="clickbait"><h2>Surprising fact you may no…
* ^ ^
* \-|-- it shifts with edits
*
* Bookmarks provide the ability to seek to a previously-scanned
* place in the HTML document. This avoids the need to re-scan
* the entire document.
*
* Example:
*
* <ul><li>One</li><li>Two</li><li>Three</li></ul>
* ^^^^
* want to note this last item
*
* $p = new WP_HTML_Tag_Processor( $html );
* $in_list = false;
* while ( $p->next_tag( array( 'tag_closers' => $in_list ? 'visit' : 'skip' ) ) ) {
* if ( 'UL' === $p->get_tag() ) {
* if ( $p->is_tag_closer() ) {
* $in_list = false;
* $p->set_bookmark( 'resume' );
* if ( $p->seek( 'last-li' ) ) {
* $p->add_class( 'last-li' );
* }
* $p->seek( 'resume' );
* $p->release_bookmark( 'last-li' );
* $p->release_bookmark( 'resume' );
* } else {
* $in_list = true;
* }
* }
*
* if ( 'LI' === $p->get_tag() ) {
* $p->set_bookmark( 'last-li' );
* }
* }
*
* Bookmarks intentionally hide the internal string offsets
* to which they refer. They are maintained internally as
* updates are applied to the HTML document and therefore
* retain their "position" - the location to which they
* originally pointed. The inability to use bookmarks with
* functions like `substr` is therefore intentional to guard
* against accidentally breaking the HTML.
*
* Because bookmarks allocate memory and require processing
* for every applied update, they are limited and require
* a name. They should not be created with programmatically-made
* names, such as "li_{$index}" with some loop. As a general
* rule they should only be created with string-literal names
* like "start-of-section" or "last-paragraph".
*
* Bookmarks are a powerful tool to enable complicated behavior.
* Consider double-checking that you need this tool if you are
* reaching for it, as inappropriate use could lead to broken
* HTML structure or unwanted processing overhead.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @param string $bookmark_name Identifies this particular bookmark.
* @return bool Whether the bookmark was successfully created.
*/
public function set_bookmark( $bookmark_name ) {
return parent::set_bookmark( "_{$bookmark_name}" );
}
/**
* Checks whether a bookmark with the given name exists.
*
* @since 6.5.0
*
* @param string $bookmark_name Name to identify a bookmark that potentially exists.
* @return bool Whether that bookmark exists.
*/
public function has_bookmark( $bookmark_name ) {
return parent::has_bookmark( "_{$bookmark_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 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* HTML Parsing Algorithms
*/
/**
* Closes a P element.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception When encountering unsupported HTML input.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#close-a-p-element
*/
private function close_a_p_element() {
$this->generate_implied_end_tags( 'P' );
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop_until( 'P' );
}
/**
* Closes elements that have implied end tags.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#generate-implied-end-tags
*
* @param string|null $except_for_this_element Perform as if this element doesn't exist in the stack of open elements.
*/
private function generate_implied_end_tags( $except_for_this_element = null ) {
$elements_with_implied_end_tags = array(
'DD',
'DT',
'LI',
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 09:43:25 -04:00
'P',
);
$current_node = $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node();
while (
$current_node && $current_node->node_name !== $except_for_this_element &&
in_array( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node(), $elements_with_implied_end_tags, true )
) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
}
}
/**
* Closes elements that have implied end tags, thoroughly.
*
* See the HTML specification for an explanation why this is
* different from generating end tags in the normal sense.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Processor::generate_implied_end_tags
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#generate-implied-end-tags
*/
private function generate_implied_end_tags_thoroughly() {
$elements_with_implied_end_tags = array(
'DD',
'DT',
'LI',
'P',
);
while ( in_array( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node(), $elements_with_implied_end_tags, true ) ) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}
}
/**
* Reconstructs the active formatting elements.
*
* > This has the effect of reopening all the formatting elements that were opened
* > in the current body, cell, or caption (whichever is youngest) that haven't
* > been explicitly closed.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception When encountering unsupported HTML input.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#reconstruct-the-active-formatting-elements
*
* @return bool Whether any formatting elements needed to be reconstructed.
*/
private function reconstruct_active_formatting_elements() {
/*
* > If there are no entries in the list of active formatting elements, then there is nothing
* > to reconstruct; stop this algorithm.
*/
if ( 0 === $this->state->active_formatting_elements->count() ) {
return false;
}
$last_entry = $this->state->active_formatting_elements->current_node();
if (
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 09:43:25 -04:00
/*
* > If the last (most recently added) entry in the list of active formatting elements is a marker;
* > stop this algorithm.
*/
'marker' === $last_entry->node_name ||
/*
* > If the last (most recently added) entry in the list of active formatting elements is an
* > element that is in the stack of open elements, then there is nothing to reconstruct;
* > stop this algorithm.
*/
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->contains_node( $last_entry )
) {
return false;
}
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot reconstruct active formatting elements when advancing and rewinding is required.' );
}
/**
* Runs the adoption agency algorithm.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @throws WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception When encountering unsupported HTML input.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#adoption-agency-algorithm
*/
private function run_adoption_agency_algorithm() {
$budget = 1000;
$subject = $this->get_tag();
$current_node = $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->current_node();
if (
// > If the current node is an HTML element whose tag name is subject
$current_node && $subject === $current_node->node_name &&
// > the current node is not in the list of active formatting elements
! $this->state->active_formatting_elements->contains_node( $current_node )
) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
return;
}
$outer_loop_counter = 0;
while ( $budget-- > 0 ) {
if ( $outer_loop_counter++ >= 8 ) {
return;
}
/*
* > Let formatting element be the last element in the list of active formatting elements that:
* > - is between the end of the list and the last marker in the list,
* > if any, or the start of the list otherwise,
* > - and has the tag name subject.
*/
$formatting_element = null;
foreach ( $this->state->active_formatting_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
if ( 'marker' === $item->node_name ) {
break;
}
if ( $subject === $item->node_name ) {
$formatting_element = $item;
break;
}
}
// > If there is no such element, then return and instead act as described in the "any other end tag" entry above.
if ( null === $formatting_element ) {
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot run adoption agency when "any other end tag" is required.' );
}
// > If formatting element is not in the stack of open elements, then this is a parse error; remove the element from the list, and return.
if ( ! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->contains_node( $formatting_element ) ) {
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->remove_node( $formatting_element );
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 09:43:25 -04:00
return;
}
// > If formatting element is in the stack of open elements, but the element is not in scope, then this is a parse error; return.
if ( ! $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->has_element_in_scope( $formatting_element->node_name ) ) {
return;
}
/*
* > Let furthest block be the topmost node in the stack of open elements that is lower in the stack
* > than formatting element, and is an element in the special category. There might not be one.
*/
$is_above_formatting_element = true;
$furthest_block = null;
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_down() as $item ) {
if ( $is_above_formatting_element && $formatting_element->bookmark_name !== $item->bookmark_name ) {
continue;
}
if ( $is_above_formatting_element ) {
$is_above_formatting_element = false;
continue;
}
if ( self::is_special( $item->node_name ) ) {
$furthest_block = $item;
break;
}
}
/*
* > If there is no furthest block, then the UA must first pop all the nodes from the bottom of the
* > stack of open elements, from the current node up to and including formatting element, then
* > remove formatting element from the list of active formatting elements, and finally return.
*/
if ( null === $furthest_block ) {
foreach ( $this->state->stack_of_open_elements->walk_up() as $item ) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->pop();
if ( $formatting_element->bookmark_name === $item->bookmark_name ) {
$this->state->active_formatting_elements->remove_node( $formatting_element );
return;
}
}
}
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot extract common ancestor in adoption agency algorithm.' );
}
$this->last_error = self::ERROR_UNSUPPORTED;
throw new WP_HTML_Unsupported_Exception( 'Cannot run adoption agency when looping required.' );
}
/**
* Inserts an HTML element on the stack of open elements.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#insert-a-foreign-element
*
* @param WP_HTML_Token $token Name of bookmark pointing to element in original input HTML.
*/
private function insert_html_element( $token ) {
$this->state->stack_of_open_elements->push( $token );
}
/*
* HTML Specification Helpers
*/
/**
* Returns whether an element of a given name is in the HTML special category.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#special
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of element to check.
* @return bool Whether the element of the given name is in the special category.
*/
public static function is_special( $tag_name ) {
$tag_name = strtoupper( $tag_name );
return (
'ADDRESS' === $tag_name ||
'APPLET' === $tag_name ||
'AREA' === $tag_name ||
'ARTICLE' === $tag_name ||
'ASIDE' === $tag_name ||
'BASE' === $tag_name ||
'BASEFONT' === $tag_name ||
'BGSOUND' === $tag_name ||
'BLOCKQUOTE' === $tag_name ||
'BODY' === $tag_name ||
'BR' === $tag_name ||
'BUTTON' === $tag_name ||
'CAPTION' === $tag_name ||
'CENTER' === $tag_name ||
'COL' === $tag_name ||
'COLGROUP' === $tag_name ||
'DD' === $tag_name ||
'DETAILS' === $tag_name ||
'DIR' === $tag_name ||
'DIV' === $tag_name ||
'DL' === $tag_name ||
'DT' === $tag_name ||
'EMBED' === $tag_name ||
'FIELDSET' === $tag_name ||
'FIGCAPTION' === $tag_name ||
'FIGURE' === $tag_name ||
'FOOTER' === $tag_name ||
'FORM' === $tag_name ||
'FRAME' === $tag_name ||
'FRAMESET' === $tag_name ||
'H1' === $tag_name ||
'H2' === $tag_name ||
'H3' === $tag_name ||
'H4' === $tag_name ||
'H5' === $tag_name ||
'H6' === $tag_name ||
'HEAD' === $tag_name ||
'HEADER' === $tag_name ||
'HGROUP' === $tag_name ||
'HR' === $tag_name ||
'HTML' === $tag_name ||
'IFRAME' === $tag_name ||
'IMG' === $tag_name ||
'INPUT' === $tag_name ||
'KEYGEN' === $tag_name ||
'LI' === $tag_name ||
'LINK' === $tag_name ||
'LISTING' === $tag_name ||
'MAIN' === $tag_name ||
'MARQUEE' === $tag_name ||
'MENU' === $tag_name ||
'META' === $tag_name ||
'NAV' === $tag_name ||
'NOEMBED' === $tag_name ||
'NOFRAMES' === $tag_name ||
'NOSCRIPT' === $tag_name ||
'OBJECT' === $tag_name ||
'OL' === $tag_name ||
'P' === $tag_name ||
'PARAM' === $tag_name ||
'PLAINTEXT' === $tag_name ||
'PRE' === $tag_name ||
'SCRIPT' === $tag_name ||
'SEARCH' === $tag_name ||
'SECTION' === $tag_name ||
'SELECT' === $tag_name ||
'SOURCE' === $tag_name ||
'STYLE' === $tag_name ||
'SUMMARY' === $tag_name ||
'TABLE' === $tag_name ||
'TBODY' === $tag_name ||
'TD' === $tag_name ||
'TEMPLATE' === $tag_name ||
'TEXTAREA' === $tag_name ||
'TFOOT' === $tag_name ||
'TH' === $tag_name ||
'THEAD' === $tag_name ||
'TITLE' === $tag_name ||
'TR' === $tag_name ||
'TRACK' === $tag_name ||
'UL' === $tag_name ||
'WBR' === $tag_name ||
'XMP' === $tag_name ||
// MathML.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
'MI' === $tag_name ||
'MO' === $tag_name ||
'MN' === $tag_name ||
'MS' === $tag_name ||
'MTEXT' === $tag_name ||
'ANNOTATION-XML' === $tag_name ||
// SVG.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
'FOREIGNOBJECT' === $tag_name ||
'DESC' === $tag_name ||
'TITLE' === $tag_name
);
}
/**
* Returns whether a given element is an HTML Void Element
*
* > area, base, br, col, embed, hr, img, input, link, meta, source, track, wbr
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#void-elements
*
* @param string $tag_name Name of HTML tag to check.
* @return bool Whether the given tag is an HTML Void Element.
*/
public static function is_void( $tag_name ) {
$tag_name = strtoupper( $tag_name );
return (
'AREA' === $tag_name ||
'BASE' === $tag_name ||
'BASEFONT' === $tag_name || // Obsolete but still treated as void.
'BGSOUND' === $tag_name || // Obsolete but still treated as void.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
'BR' === $tag_name ||
'COL' === $tag_name ||
'EMBED' === $tag_name ||
'FRAME' === $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 09:43:25 -04:00
'HR' === $tag_name ||
'IMG' === $tag_name ||
'INPUT' === $tag_name ||
'KEYGEN' === $tag_name || // Obsolete but still treated as void.
'LINK' === $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 09:43:25 -04:00
'META' === $tag_name ||
'PARAM' === $tag_name || // Obsolete but still treated as void.
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 09:43:25 -04:00
'SOURCE' === $tag_name ||
'TRACK' === $tag_name ||
'WBR' === $tag_name
);
}
/*
* Constants that would pollute the top of the class if they were found there.
*/
/**
* Indicates that the next HTML token should be parsed and processed.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var string
*/
const PROCESS_NEXT_NODE = 'process-next-node';
/**
* Indicates that the current HTML token should be reprocessed in the newly-selected insertion mode.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var string
*/
const REPROCESS_CURRENT_NODE = 'reprocess-current-node';
/**
* Indicates that the current HTML token should be processed without advancing the parser.
*
* @since 6.5.0
*
* @var string
*/
const PROCESS_CURRENT_NODE = 'process-current-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 09:43:25 -04:00
/**
* Indicates that the parser encountered unsupported markup and has bailed.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var string
*/
const ERROR_UNSUPPORTED = 'unsupported';
/**
* Indicates that the parser encountered more HTML tokens than it
* was able to process and has bailed.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var string
*/
const ERROR_EXCEEDED_MAX_BOOKMARKS = 'exceeded-max-bookmarks';
/**
* Unlock code that must be passed into the constructor to create this class.
*
* This class extends the WP_HTML_Tag_Processor, which has a public class
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 09:43:25 -04:00
* constructor. Therefore, it's not possible to have a private constructor here.
*
* This unlock code is used to ensure that anyone calling the constructor is
* doing so with a full understanding that it's intended to be a private API.
*
* @access private
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 09:43:25 -04:00
*/
const CONSTRUCTOR_UNLOCK_CODE = 'Use WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment() instead of calling the class constructor directly.';
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 09:43:25 -04:00
}