In this case, there was never a ref with this name in the article so
no backlinks should be rendered.
TODO:
* test case with empty parent backlink and LDR parent
Bug: T353451
Change-Id: I8a7abd05a48ce83da3beb92b15e894d53252bd33
Testing internal methods is brittle. This code path is already
covered by parser test "Valid follow="…" after it's parent"
Bug: T353451
Change-Id: I3b7a4b9962de1f25a7b57f82d80813219d633594
Same as Icfa8215 where we removed the …_suffix messages.
This patch is not blocked on anything according to CodeSearch:
https://codesearch.wmcloud.org/search/?q=cite_references%3F_link_prefix
According to GlobalSearch there are 2 usages we need to talk about:
https://global-search.toolforge.org/?q=.®ex=1&namespaces=8&title=Cite.references%3F.link.prefix.*
zh.wiktionary replaces "cite_ref-" with "_ref-", and "cite_note-"
with "_note-", i.e. they did nothing but remove the word "cite". This
happened in 2006, with no explanation.
ka.wikibooks and ka.wikiquote replace "cite_note-" with "_შენიშვნა-",
which translates back to "_note-". One user did this in 2007,
16 seconds apart.
It appears like both are attempts to localize what can be localized,
no matter if it's really necessary or not.
https://zh.wiktionary.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Shibo77?offset=20060510https://ka.wikiquote.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Trulala?offset=20070219
Note how one user experimented with an "a" in some of the edits to
see what effect the change might have, to imediatelly revert it.
The modifications don't really have an effect on anything, except on
the anchors in the resulting <a href="#_ref-5"> and <sup id="_ref-5">
HTML. It might also be briefly visible in the browser's address bar
when such a link is clicked. We can only assume the two users did this
to make the URL appear shorter (?). A discussion apparently never
happened. Bot users are inactive.
Both pieces of HTML are generated in the Cite code. Removing the
messages will change all places the same time. All links will
continue to work. The only possible effect is that hard-coded
weblinks to an individual reference will link to the top of the
article instead. But:
a) This is extremely unlikely to happen. There is no reason to link
to a reference from outside of the article.
b) Such links are not guaranteed to work anyway as they can break
for a multitude of other reasons, e.g. the <ref> being renamed,
removed, or replaced.
c) Even if such a link breaks, it still links to the correct article.
There is also no on-wiki code on zh.wiktionary that would do anything
with the shortened prefix:
https://zh.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?search=insource%3A%2F_%28ref%7Cnote%29-%2F&title=Special%3A%E6%90%9C%E7%B4%A2&profile=advanced&fulltext=1&ns2=1&ns4=1&ns8=1&ns10=1&ns12=1&ns828=1&ns2300=1
I argue this is safe to remove, even without contacting the mentioned
communities first.
Bug: T321217
Change-Id: I160a119710dc35679dbdc2f39ddf453dbd5a5dfa
This fixes a minor issue introduced in I294b59f. Two identical
dir="…" with different capitalizations should not be reported as an
error.
Turns out the implementation in the Cite extension doesn't care
about this capitalization at all. That's why I suggest to do the
normalization as early as possible. This is slightly different in
the Parsoid implementation.
Bug: T202593
Change-Id: I96b4a281d6020d61d1f36ec027cf833bbb244f03
* Since Cite development happens in two repos (here and the Parsoid
repo), integrated tests ensures that changes don't fall too far
out of sync.
CI runs Parsoid-integrated-mode tests in extensions repo with the
vendor-released Parsoid.
Parsoid CI runs Parsoid-standalone-mode tests in the Parsoid repo
which also has a copy of the citeParserTests.txt file found here.
But, that CI run uses the Parsoid patch itself.
This difference makes for unnecessrily laborious test syncing
while making changes to the two repos. It is manageable for one-off
changes but when making lots of updates that changes tests a lot,
this quickly becomes painful.
* For now, we can break this coupling temporarily by disabling
Parsoid-integrated-mode test runs. This simplifies the test syncing
by letting patches in Cite repo to be merged in a chain and then
doing a single test sync to the Parsoid repo (otherwise, Parsoid's
CI will be broken since the html/php sections in Parsoid's cite
test copy will be out of date).
* Filed T354215 to move Parsoid's Cite implemntation to this repo
which eliminates this complexity altogether.
Change-Id: Id5727381b0e23058d098180c308797b2555ad02f
WikiEditor also uses 'html' instead of 'text' on headings. At the
moment both keys have the same behavior, but the original intended idea
is to have 'html' as already valid HTML (like on .parse()) and 'text'
on plain text which has to be escaped.
Change-Id: I1b4035a86ed56bfeb12d33b463d67099f7ae40e3
Internal ref key is always an int, but another string `key` is
created in the formatters. This patch makes the typing explicit. We
can distinguish between these two different values in a later patch.
Bug: T353451
Change-Id: Id5e40517705961f4d54622e91264430d9f62008d
I'm not sure how much this helps. But this merges two code paths
that are both about "we are in the middle of a <references> section
right now.
Nothing changes, as proven by the tests.
Bug: T353266
Change-Id: I446e224b81d35c47736a437d78527c0cc8636f77
This classifies as a "warning" because we still show everything,
just with an error message appended.
Disabling the Parsoid tests right away hopefully makes it easier to
do the same change in Parsoid.
Bug: T202593
Depends-On: If14acd1070617ca8c4d15be6b1759bd47ead4926
Change-Id: I294b59f989f553932b40d08308906dd72d92d2cd
* This now aligns with Parsoid commit 0fab92ba453d424aedeadaaa9e1514c42bbd94d1
* Disabled the newly added tests because that Parsoid fixes for the
tests haven't been released to vendor to let CI pass these tests.
* Re-enabled a previously disabled test.
Change-Id: I4ab87d2d486b7a1fef652c50c4f1e79ddfe83ce6
This reverts commit b163add15b.
Reason for revert: This was my mistake. I forgot that reverting this
would break Parsoid CI once the Parsoid Cite patch merged. So, I have to
wait till the Parsoid Cite change is released to vendor before I sync
the test change here.
Change-Id: Icaecee1e56907980681aae01be377b6906bd93a6
This moves one more error situation into the stack class, together
with other error situations that are already there.
Bug: T353266
Change-Id: Icf169650f67f64e6d29d175c3b47cf558b8de3d4
Check out how this gets rid of so many "to do" as well as
"deprecated" comments.
Next qustion: The elements in the stack become more and more
complicated. It's probably worth converting them from arrays into
first-class objects. But this is for another patch.
Bug: T353266
Change-Id: If14acd1070617ca8c4d15be6b1759bd47ead4926
We are discussing this for a long time and finally renamed the tag
on Phabricator: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/tag/cite-extends
This patch updates only places where it can't have any negative
consequences.
This is also a direct follow-up to Ic73f1b7 where this class was
created.
Bug: T353269
Change-Id: I644fe41d3386b9bf02b83366654301633efd535f
For example, use convenient upstream methods, and generally make the
test setup a bit more readable.
Bug: T353227
Change-Id: Ifab71041fcc3f804315793ca7b783f84829c7a0f
Same arguments as in Iafa2412. The one reason to use more detailled
per-method @covers annotations is to avoid "accidental coverage"
where code is marked as being covered by tests that don't assert
anything that would be meaningful for this code. This is especially a
problem with older, bigger classes with lots of side effects.
But all the new classes we introduced over the years are small, with
predictable, local effects.
That's also why we keep the more detailled @covers annotations for
the original Cite class.
Bug: T353227
Bug: T353269
Change-Id: I69850f4d740d8ad5a7c2368b9068dc91e47cc797