There is the patch(I4297aea3489bb66c98c664da2332584c27793bfa) which will
add DeprecationHelper trait to Parser class in order to deprecate public
Parser::mUser. DeprecationHelper trait has appropriate magic methods
which help to use dynamic properties. In order not to mock them via
createMock(), so getMockBuilder() and onlyMethods() was used.
onlyMethods() method helps to specify methods which need to be mocked.
Now we can use dynamic properties in Parser related tests of Cite
extension.
Bug: T285713
Change-Id: Ie75c9cd66d296ce7cf15432e2093817e18004443
The standard type for these returns is NodeList and HTMLCollection, which
are almost *but not quite* the same as an array. In two places we got a
little complacent and assumed our non-standard DOMCompat workarounds would
always return arrays. Tweaked the types of DOMCompat to report that they
return an `iterable`, which is a PHP7.1 "pseudo-type" that unifies
arrays and \Traversable types like HTMLCollection/NodeList. This
allows phan to catch places where we slip up and assume an array type
return.
It does introduce a new wrinkle, though, since there is no simple way
to turn an iterable into an array. We're using a simple
`iterable_to_array` helper function for this.
Change-Id: I35bdeb3afa30ef5182e71733a0a606aadcafb435
In PHP's DOM extension, one of the legacy bugs is that
DOMNode::getAttribute() can never return `null` (to indicate that the
attribute is missing), instead it returns an empty string in that
case. This isn't (modern) spec-compliant behavior (it's a leftover
from ancient times) and we had to watch this carefully when porting
from JS.
In the time since the port, we've written new code and embedded this
assumption that DOMNode::getAttribute() will never return null into
the new code we've written. Fix this. Always use `getAttribute(...)
?? ''` (unless we're just doing an equality test against a non-empty
string, or the code is preceded by a `hasAttribute` test) so that our
code will work whether or not getAttribute returns null for a missing
attribute.
Change-Id: If33200e1053b2dd79abb5dfb3808c05ff3a0bbba
This now aligns with Parsoid commit 88d4620278988d121761fb440952d1d66a70ce99
Required some newline fixes to resync after "Refactor newline logic"
(change I6691c70f8e3fa3f21e2d11035bed9cdc2dc87093 /
commit 6389459b1e) was merged
this morning.
Change-Id: I64fba6cc9330a55d4e1eeb5371164b3eb4efa508
Mostly comments along the lines of "{classname} constructor"
in the doc block for the __construct method.
Change-Id: I67ffe070985dc75a5d817b1b5ac97b529d7ab4b8
I tried many things, but wasn't able to reproduce the error
described in T283755. What probably happens goes like this:
* Somehow $this->refs[$group] is initialized, but
$this->groupRefSequence[$group] is not.
* There are not many places in the code where this can
happen. There are a few suspicious lines in rollbackRef(),
but they are all guarded. The only problematic place is in
appendText().
* This problematic line is only called for <ref> in
<references>.
* Somehow a <ref> is valid enough to make it to appendText(),
but not valid enough to make it to pushRef().
* The next time another <ref> is added to the same group, it
appears like the group already exists ($this->refs[$group]
is set), but $this->groupRefSequence[$group] is missing.
I was unable to find a wikitext example that would behave like
this.
This patch just makes sure the initialization is done but
doesn't care why it was missing. The following code is fine
with an existing ref that contains nothing but text (which is
how appendText() leaves it behind).
Bug: T283755
Change-Id: I36ac56ef6ed98676a3e8f430a796826351a5f4e9
This button has the same function as the menu item
"Cite -> Basic" on sites that don't have Citoid configured.
Bug: T108713
Change-Id: I8b419ecdc3b0206974c5f413bfd2e35873fe9850