* When there are multiple <cite> elements, the first that contains a
known class is used. We assume the earlier one must be the relevant
one.
* When there are multiple known classes in e.g. <cite class="web news">,
the last one is used. This follows how CSS works.
* There is extra validation if the corresponding message exists, just
to be sure. This is cheap.
Bug: T274979
Change-Id: Iee3481ea16af96b40faf978e254718e5a48917f3
I played around with a lot of options, and settled with:
* When there is nothing but text, but the text is all
whitespace, don't show it.
* Make sure an <img> with no text is still shown. This is done
by checking for child elements.
A possible future enhancement could be to check the visible
width of the element as well. Unfortunately this fails in
tests. Everything is 0 in tests.
Bug: T240543
Depends-On: I2929a86b6a09f3b72e5e2f4151cb13f52446897d
Change-Id: I94ed575abcd69241c82480ade07017e61cc26c9c
Notice how this actually reduces the size of the final, compiled index.js.
It's not much, but still.
One issue I noticed is that the coverage reports for the JS code stopped
working. I have no idea why.
Bug: T208951
Change-Id: I2fe92579574b3b1ba4d2dd064899eee944045a96
While reviewing the code of the reference endpoint I found it encodes
two CSS class names, "mw-reference-text" and "reference-text". So far
our scraping gateway only implemented one.
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/diffusion/GMOA/repository/master/
This patch also extracts a piece of code to a named function. This makes
it much easier to read, I feel.
Bug: T214908
Change-Id: I9d1bb1f4c21eb9d57a6b763ca1f756e6cf7049e0
This just adds a simple test if passing the id of the clicked
reference source footnote works.
Bug: T213905
Change-Id: Ifc6549aa0203f19a5b24fa854b0aaf0cfb25674d
To make sure that we enable the link highlighting in the Cite extension we want
to trigger the click handler on the original footnote link. This is done by
passing the id of the source element to the model and the renderer.
Bug: T213905
Change-Id: I0bd59ac326269f3c0850946851fb79b611dc2a57
This installs a series of safety nets:
* The selector [href*="#"] skips links without a fragment.
* It's still possible that a fragment exists, but is empty.
mwTitle.getFragment() checks this.
* The gateway does not assume the element exists, but checks this first.
If there is no such element, the gateway aborts the request in a way
that no error popup is shown. This is currently only possible with the
`{ textStatus: 'abort', xhr: { readyState: 0 } }` response as seen in
this patch. We might need to introduce a new, more clean way to silently
quit a fetchPreviewForTitle() call.
* The test for the reference gateway finally covers the scraping code.
Bug: T214970
Bug: T214971
Change-Id: I9ec57e0fbb0d21beaaa7b359c1c2bef64d2c14f5
This will affect all links, including [[Other page#Fragment]] for
example. But it will not have much of an effect there. The mw.Title
class is able to understand strings like "Other page#Fragment". All
old code calls title.getPrefixedDb() on the result. This will *not*
include the fragment. Only the new code will use title.getFragment().
I made sure this does not affect regular page previews, even when the
link is something like [[Other page#Fragment]].
Bug: T213415
Change-Id: I15611a44aa0477cc5e48ee4b12aae3cd981d977c
I guess both is fine: either having the default in the gateway (as it
was before), or in the renderer (as this patch proposes). I, personally,
feel better with having it closer to where it is needed. This way it's
not possible to accidentially deliver a model object with an empty title.
The renderer will catch this.
At the moment we don't know exactly how we will fetch other titles (e.g.
"Book").
This change is split from I15611a4 where it was a little misplaced.
It also includes a test for the default fallback title.
Bug: T213907
Change-Id: I8ec3ddc21a417da7f95feff7b080cbd60d5472e7
Excluding tests for the renderer which keeps failing. This will be
readded in a later patch.
Bug: T213415
Bug: T213908
Change-Id: If79fa3d0a7a20f121b1ceda6e0e33ad691b1ad30