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HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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<?php
/**
* HTML API: WP_HTML_Processor_State class
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage HTML-API
* @since 6.4.0
*/
/**
* Core class used by the HTML processor during HTML parsing
* for managing the internal parsing state.
*
* This class is designed for internal use by the HTML processor.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @access private
*
* @see WP_HTML_Processor
*/
class WP_HTML_Processor_State {
/*
* Insertion mode constants.
*
* These constants exist and are named to make it easier to
* discover and recognize the supported insertion modes in
* the parser.
*
* Out of all the possible insertion modes, only those
* supported by the parser are listed here. As support
* is added to the parser for more modes, add them here
* following the same naming and value pattern.
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-insertion-mode
*/
/**
* Initial insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-initial-insertion-mode
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_INITIAL = 'insertion-mode-initial';
/**
* Before HTML insertion mode for full HTML parser.
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 6.7.0
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
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*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-before-html-insertion-mode
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
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* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_BEFORE_HTML = 'insertion-mode-before-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
/**
* Before head insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-beforehead
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_BEFORE_HEAD = 'insertion-mode-before-head';
/**
* In head insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inhead
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_HEAD = 'insertion-mode-in-head';
/**
* In head noscript insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inheadnoscript
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_HEAD_NOSCRIPT = 'insertion-mode-in-head-noscript';
/**
* After head insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-afterhead
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_AFTER_HEAD = 'insertion-mode-after-head';
/**
* In body insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inbody
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_BODY = 'insertion-mode-in-body';
/**
* In table insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-intable
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_TABLE = 'insertion-mode-in-table';
/**
* In table text insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-intabletext
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_TABLE_TEXT = 'insertion-mode-in-table-text';
/**
* In caption insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-incaption
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_CAPTION = 'insertion-mode-in-caption';
/**
* In column group insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-incolumngroup
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_COLUMN_GROUP = 'insertion-mode-in-column-group';
/**
* In table body insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-intablebody
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_TABLE_BODY = 'insertion-mode-in-table-body';
/**
* In row insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inrow
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_ROW = 'insertion-mode-in-row';
/**
* In cell insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-incell
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_CELL = 'insertion-mode-in-cell';
/**
* In select insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inselect
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_SELECT = 'insertion-mode-in-select';
/**
* In select in table insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inselectintable
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_SELECT_IN_TABLE = 'insertion-mode-in-select-in-table';
/**
* In template insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-intemplate
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_TEMPLATE = 'insertion-mode-in-template';
/**
* After body insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-afterbody
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_AFTER_BODY = 'insertion-mode-after-body';
/**
* In frameset insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-inframeset
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_IN_FRAMESET = 'insertion-mode-in-frameset';
/**
* After frameset insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#parsing-main-afterframeset
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_AFTER_FRAMESET = 'insertion-mode-after-frameset';
/**
* After after body insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-after-after-body-insertion-mode
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_AFTER_AFTER_BODY = 'insertion-mode-after-after-body';
/**
* After after frameset insertion mode for full HTML parser.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-after-after-frameset-insertion-mode
* @see WP_HTML_Processor_State::$insertion_mode
*
* @var string
*/
const INSERTION_MODE_AFTER_AFTER_FRAMESET = 'insertion-mode-after-after-frameset';
/**
* No-quirks mode document compatability mode.
*
* > In no-quirks mode, the behavior is (hopefully) the desired behavior
* > described by the modern HTML and CSS specifications.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var string
*/
const NO_QUIRKS_MODE = 'no-quirks-mode';
/**
* Quirks mode document compatability mode.
*
* > In quirks mode, layout emulates behavior in Navigator 4 and Internet
* > Explorer 5. This is essential in order to support websites that were
* > built before the widespread adoption of web standards.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var string
*/
const QUIRKS_MODE = 'quirks-mode';
/**
* The stack of template insertion modes.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#the-insertion-mode:stack-of-template-insertion-modes
*
* @var array<string>
*/
public $stack_of_template_insertion_modes = array();
HTML-API: Introduce minimal HTML Processor. This patch introduces the //first// of //many// iterations on the evolution of the HTML API, the HTML Processor, which is built in order to understand HTML structure including nesting, misnesting, and complicated semantic rules. In the first iteration, the HTML Processor is arbitrarily limited to a minimal subset of functionality so that we can review it, ship it, test it, and collect feedback before moving forward. This means that this patch is more or less an extension to the Tag Processor query language, providing the ability not only to scan for a tag of a given name, but also to find an HTML element in a specific nesting path. The HTML Processor also aborts any time it encounters: - a tag that isn't a `P`, `DIV`, `FIGURE`, `FIGCAPTION`, `IMG`, `STRONG`, `B`, `EM`, `I`, `A`, `BIG`, `CODE`, `FONT`, `SMALL`, `STRIKE`, `TT`, or `U` tag. this limit exists because many HTML elements require specific rules and we are trying to limit the number of rules introduced at once. this work is targeted at existing work in places like the image block. - certain misnesting constructs that evoke complicated resolution inside the HTML spec. where possible and where simple to do reliably, certain parse errors are handled. in most cases the HTML Processor aborts. The structure of the HTML Processor is established in this patch. Further spec-compliance comes through filling out //more of the same// kind and nature of code as is found in this patch. Certain critical HTML algorithms are partially supported, and where support requires more than is present, the HTML Processor acknowledges this and refuses to operate. In this patch are explorations for how to verify that new HTML support is fully added (instead of allowing for partial updates that leave some code paths non-compliant). Performance is hard to measure since support is so limited at the current time, but it should generally follow the performance of the Tag Processor somewhat close as the overhead is minimized as much as practical. Props dmsnell, zieladam, costdev. Fixes #58517. Built from https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@56274 git-svn-id: http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55786 1a063a9b-81f0-0310-95a4-ce76da25c4cd
2023-07-20 09:43:25 -04:00
/**
* Tracks open elements while scanning HTML.
*
* This property is initialized in the constructor and never null.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#stack-of-open-elements
*
* @var WP_HTML_Open_Elements
*/
public $stack_of_open_elements;
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
/**
* Tracks open formatting elements, used to handle mis-nested formatting element tags.
*
* This property is initialized in the constructor and never null.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#list-of-active-formatting-elements
*
* @var WP_HTML_Active_Formatting_Elements
*/
public $active_formatting_elements;
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
/**
* Refers to the currently-matched tag, if any.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @var WP_HTML_Token|null
*/
public $current_token = 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
/**
* Tree construction insertion mode.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#insertion-mode
*
* @var string
*/
public $insertion_mode = self::INSERTION_MODE_INITIAL;
/**
* Indicates if the document is in quirks mode or no-quirks mode.
*
* Impact on HTML parsing:
*
* - In `NO_QUIRKS_MODE` CSS class and ID selectors match in a byte-for-byte
* manner, otherwise for backwards compatability, class selectors are to
* match in an ASCII case-insensitive manner.
*
* - When not in `QUIRKS_MODE`, a TABLE start tag implicitly closes an open P tag
* if one is in scope and open, otherwise the TABLE becomes a child of the P.
*
* `QUIRKS_MODE` impacts many styling-related aspects of an HTML document, but
* none of the other changes modifies how the HTML is parsed or selected.
*
* @see self::QUIRKS_MODE
* @see self::NO_QUIRKS_MODE
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var string
*/
public $document_mode = self::NO_QUIRKS_MODE;
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
/**
* Context node initializing fragment parser, if created as a fragment parser.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-frag-parse-context
*
* @var [string, array]|null
*/
public $context_node = null;
/**
* The recognized encoding of the input byte stream.
*
* > The stream of code points that comprises the input to the tokenization
* > stage will be initially seen by the user agent as a stream of bytes
* > (typically coming over the network or from the local file system).
* > The bytes encode the actual characters according to a particular character
* > encoding, which the user agent uses to decode the bytes into characters.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var string|null
*/
public $encoding = null;
/**
* The parser's confidence in the input encoding.
*
* > When the HTML parser is decoding an input byte stream, it uses a character
* > encoding and a confidence. The confidence is either tentative, certain, or
* > irrelevant. The encoding used, and whether the confidence in that encoding
* > is tentative or certain, is used during the parsing to determine whether to
* > change the encoding. If no encoding is necessary, e.g. because the parser is
* > operating on a Unicode stream and doesn't have to use a character encoding
* > at all, then the confidence is irrelevant.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var string
*/
public $encoding_confidence = 'tentative';
/**
* HEAD element pointer.
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/parsing.html#head-element-pointer
*
* @var WP_HTML_Token|null
*/
public $head_element = null;
/**
* FORM element pointer.
*
* > points to the last form element that was opened and whose end tag has
* > not yet been seen. It is used to make form controls associate with
* > forms in the face of dramatically bad markup, for historical reasons.
* > It is ignored inside template elements.
*
* @todo This may be invalidated by a seek operation.
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#form-element-pointer
*
* @since 6.7.0
*
* @var WP_HTML_Token|null
*/
public $form_element = null;
/**
* The frameset-ok flag indicates if a `FRAMESET` element is allowed in the current state.
*
* > The frameset-ok flag is set to "ok" when the parser is created. It is set to "not ok" after certain tokens are seen.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#frameset-ok-flag
*
* @var bool
*/
public $frameset_ok = 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
/**
* Constructor - creates a new and empty state value.
*
* @since 6.4.0
*
* @see WP_HTML_Processor
*/
public function __construct() {
$this->stack_of_open_elements = new WP_HTML_Open_Elements();
$this->active_formatting_elements = new WP_HTML_Active_Formatting_Elements();
}
}