The use case we care about is this:
<ref extends="some_book"> </ref>
It doesn't make sense that works, but the following doesn't:
<ref extends="some_book"></ref>
We decided that both need to behave the same.
For consistency this patch is applying the same change to all references,
no matter if they use the extends attribute or not. This is an actual
change and might make existing wikitext render differently. However, I
would like to argue that all wikitext that was using this was broken. The
effect of a <ref> </ref> with some whitespace is that the <references>
section at the end of the article will contain – well – an empty footnote.
Bug: T237241
Change-Id: Iaee35583eabcb416b0a06849b89ebbfb0fb7fef9
Note it doesn't make a difference if this is behind the feature flag or
not. It should always be forbidden, and in fact is: Either the follows
attribute is unknown, or the combination is forbidden.
Bug: T236256
Change-Id: Iebbb2d1d5bab183ab0590b8a7a7f6e79d319b72c
What we find critical is:
* That all tests relevant for book referencing are in a separate file.
* That unimplemented stuff is marked with TODOs.
Not having to move tests to another file allows for nice diffs.
I tried to order the tests as good as I could. E.g. have all tests with
a group="…" next to each other, followed by all with a follow="…".
Change-Id: Idc1d9e7843b341235ab3d8ebe398e01946eb1845
Encapsulate the feature tests in dedicated files. These are picked
up by the test runner for matching glob `tests/parser/*.txt`, as can
be shown by,
phpunit.php --testsuite parsertests --filter=bookRef
Also adds TODO comments to some tests, documenting how the current output
will not match the fully implemented code's results.
Bug: T236256
Change-Id: Ie3e769c84856256180754aeff417da893a84b479