This fixes a FIXME I left in the code. Previously, I just stripped the
closing </li> to make sure the nested <ol> is *inside* of the <li>.
This relies on (Remex) Tidy to clean the incomplete HTML up.
This patch remembers the stripped </li> and adds it back.
This also makes sure the nested <ol> is closed, even if it was the
last element in the data structure.
Notice how this does not influence any test. I find this a bit
confusing. It looks like (Remex) Tidy is executed, even if the tests
are not marked as "html/php+tidy".
Bug: T237241
Change-Id: Idb804df46dc24406d6bba40414675b6ff4812d48
The "no key" error should have been unreachable, but I'm afraid that
null `$text` and empty string `$text` were reporting slightly different errors.
Unfortunately, we still have to care about `$text = '0'` because PHP, so
the expressions don't reduce to `if ( !$text ...`
Change-Id: Id1028611ec3bc462dca413f31f7f59637bd7cc7b
There was a call in the API that was *not* using normalizeKey(). Now
that the API is gone, we can inline this.
This patch also contains a bunch of cleanups that might already been
resolved in the previous patches.
Change-Id: Id3767b5830268c8cfe9c10efabfa4a31e9dafeb8
Forked from Icd933fc983.
Bugs and unimplemented features are documented as TODOs in the parser test
fixtures.
Bug: T237241
Change-Id: I9427e025ea0bcf2fa24fd539a775429cc64767cc
This API was never used in Wikimedia production, and would have caused
performance problems. Removing the dead code will simplify our refactoring.
Bug: T238195
Change-Id: I7088f257ec034c0d089e0abdaa5a739910598300
This is motivated by I9427e025e, which demonstrates that the existing
logic was hard to integrate into. There's a lot of redundant expressions
which make the function difficult to read, and code paths which have
less effect than they appear to.
Change-Id: Ida9612d1457f2593647b8fc02930d2e9ae824814
I noticed a possible issue related to the $this->refSequence counter
in the patch Ida9612d. Some of these counters might get messes up, but
there was never a test that checked what will happen to the *next*
reference then.
I checked the test cases in this patch with a very old version of the
codebase.
Change-Id: If6e56f727dce5d0e5e38e048e602437597248a42
We realized the trim() are not needed. This does not leave much behind
in the existing refArg() method, except that it checks for unknown keys.
I tried a few strategies and ended using the pretty new possibility to
have keys in list(), as well as use [] instead of list(). Both is
supported since PHP 7.1.
Change-Id: I569bfa14e68b64402519bd39022c197553881dde
We noticed the group="…" attribute was the only one that was not
trimmed. Does this mean it was possible to have two groups "a" and
" a"? It turns out: no. This was never possible because the parser
already trims all attributes before calling this code.
I tried to come up with the worst possible test case, but it succeeds,
even with very old versions of this codebase.
I suggest to remove the extra trimming from this codebase and rely on
what the parser provides.
Note the content is special and *not* trimmed by default.
Change-Id: Idff015447d7156ba7b5c03a5c423f199a71349f2
These exist two times, one time in the unit/ folder as a unit test, and
another time in the parent folder as an integration test. This confused
me already several times.
Change-Id: I147b8af8a7edba2582496468b4878faecc6d8110
Functional changes:
* hasGroup() will return false when a group exists, but is empty. This
is in line with what other methods like getGroups() already do.
Shouldn't have any effect on the existing code, but feels more clean
and consistent.
* getGroupRefs() won't fail any more when asked for an unknown group.
Tests:
* Add missing @covers for the constructor.
* Simplify test setup by always returning a spy. All tests need it
anyway.
* Cover 3 more methods.
Change-Id: Ie93e9af6258b757d842b30b0b059344733aad434
That was annoying me. Since we're passing a bare list, alphabetical
order helps make the code and tests readable.
Change-Id: I6384094e429e0e2a6fa810fdc28ae0643a0ccf7c