1 | <?php |
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2 | /** @file |
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3 | * The Query Path package provides tools for manipulating a structured document. |
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4 | * Typically, the sort of structured document is one using a Document Object Model |
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5 | * (DOM). |
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6 | * The two major DOMs are the XML DOM and the HTML DOM. Using Query Path, you can |
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7 | * build, parse, search, and modify DOM documents. |
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8 | * |
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9 | * To use QueryPath, only one file must be imported: qp.php. This file defines |
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10 | * the `qp()` function, and also registers an autoloader if necessary. |
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11 | * |
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12 | * Standard usage: |
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13 | * |
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14 | * @code |
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15 | * <?php |
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16 | * require 'qp.php'; |
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17 | * |
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18 | * $xml = '<?xml version="1.0"?><test><foo id="myID"/></test>'; |
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19 | * |
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20 | * // Procedural call a la jQuery: |
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21 | * $qp = qp($xml, '#myID'); |
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22 | * $qp->append('<new><elements/></new>')->writeHTML(); |
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23 | * |
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24 | * // Object-oriented version with a factory: |
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25 | * $qp = QueryPath::with($xml)->find('#myID') |
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26 | * $qp->append('<new><elements/></new>')->writeHTML(); |
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27 | * ?> |
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28 | * @endcode |
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29 | * |
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30 | * The above would print (formatted for readability): |
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31 | * @code |
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32 | * <?xml version="1.0"?> |
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33 | * <test> |
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34 | * <foo id="myID"> |
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35 | * <new> |
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36 | * <element/> |
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37 | * </new> |
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38 | * </foo> |
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39 | * </test> |
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40 | * @endcode |
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41 | * |
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42 | * ## Discovering the Library |
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43 | * |
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44 | * To gain familiarity with QueryPath, the following three API docs are |
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45 | * the best to start with: |
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46 | * |
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47 | *- qp(): This function constructs new queries, and is the starting point |
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48 | * for manipulating a document. htmlqp() is an alias tuned for HTML |
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49 | * documents (especially old HTML), and QueryPath::with(), QueryPath::withXML() |
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50 | * and QueryPath::withHTML() all perform a similar role, but in a purely |
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51 | * object oriented way. |
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52 | *- QueryPath: This is the top-level class for the library. It defines the |
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53 | * main factories and some useful functions. |
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54 | *- QueryPath::Query: This defines all of the functions in QueryPath. When |
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55 | * working with HTML and XML, the QueryPath::DOMQuery is the actual |
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56 | * implementation that you work with. |
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57 | * |
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58 | * Included with the source code for QueryPath is a complete set of unit tests |
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59 | * as well as some example files. Those are good resources for learning about |
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60 | * how to apply QueryPath's tools. The full API documentation can be generated |
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61 | * from these files using Doxygen, or you can view it online at |
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62 | * http://api.querypath.org. |
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63 | * |
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64 | * If you are interested in building extensions for QueryPath, see the |
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65 | * QueryPath and QueryPath::Extension classes. There you will find information on adding |
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66 | * your own tools to QueryPath. |
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67 | * |
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68 | * QueryPath also comes with a full CSS 3 selector implementation (now |
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69 | * with partial support for the current draft of the CSS 4 selector spec). If |
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70 | * you are interested in reusing that in other code, you will want to start |
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71 | * with QueryPath::CSS::EventHandler.php, which is the event interface for the parser. |
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72 | * |
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73 | * All of the code in QueryPath is licensed under an MIT-style license |
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74 | * license. All of the code is Copyright, 2012 by Matt Butcher. |
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75 | * |
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76 | * @author M Butcher <matt @aleph-null.tv> |
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77 | * @license MIT |
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78 | * @see QueryPath |
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79 | * @see qp() |
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80 | * @see http://querypath.org The QueryPath home page. |
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81 | * @see http://api.querypath.org An online version of the API docs. |
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82 | * @see http://technosophos.com For how-tos and examples. |
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83 | * @copyright Copyright (c) 2009-2012, Matt Butcher. |
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84 | * @version -UNSTABLE% (3.x.x) |
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85 | * |
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86 | */ |
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87 | namespace QueryPath; |
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88 | |||
89 | use \Masterminds\HTML5; |
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90 | use QueryPath\ExtensionRegistry; |
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91 | |||
92 | /** |
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93 | * |
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94 | */ |
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95 | class QueryPath |
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96 | { |
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97 | |||
98 | /** |
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99 | * The version string for this version of QueryPath. |
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100 | * |
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101 | * Standard releases will be of the following form: <MAJOR>.<MINOR>[.<PATCH>][-STABILITY]. |
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102 | * |
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103 | * Examples: |
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104 | * - 2.0 |
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105 | * - 2.1.1 |
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106 | * - 2.0-alpha1 |
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107 | * |
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108 | * Developer releases will always be of the form dev-<DATE>. |
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109 | * |
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110 | * @since 2.0 |
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111 | */ |
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112 | public const VERSION = '3.0.x'; |
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113 | |||
114 | /** |
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115 | * Major version number. |
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116 | * |
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117 | * Examples: |
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118 | * - 3 |
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119 | * - 4 |
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120 | * |
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121 | * @since 3.0.1 |
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122 | */ |
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123 | public const VERSION_MAJOR = 3; |
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124 | |||
125 | /** |
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126 | * This is a stub HTML 4.01 document. |
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127 | * |
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128 | * <b>Using {@link QueryPath::XHTML_STUB} is preferred.</b> |
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129 | * |
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130 | * This is primarily for generating legacy HTML content. Modern web applications |
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131 | * should use QueryPath::XHTML_STUB. |
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132 | * |
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133 | * Use this stub with the HTML familiy of methods (QueryPath::Query::html(), |
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134 | * QueryPath::Query::writeHTML(), QueryPath::Query::innerHTML()). |
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135 | */ |
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136 | public const HTML_STUB = '<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> |
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137 | <html lang="en"> |
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138 | <head> |
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139 | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> |
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140 | <title>Untitled</title> |
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141 | </head> |
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142 | <body></body> |
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143 | </html>'; |
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144 | |||
145 | public const HTML5_STUB = '<!DOCTYPE html> |
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146 | <html> |
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147 | <head> |
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148 | <title>Untitled</title> |
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149 | </head> |
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150 | <body></body> |
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151 | </html>'; |
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152 | |||
153 | /** |
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154 | * This is a stub XHTML document. |
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155 | * |
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156 | * Since XHTML is an XML format, you should use XML functions with this document |
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157 | * fragment. For example, you should use {@link xml()}, {@link innerXML()}, and |
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158 | * {@link writeXML()}. |
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159 | * |
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160 | * This can be passed into {@link qp()} to begin a new basic HTML document. |
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161 | * |
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162 | * Example: |
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163 | * |
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164 | * @code |
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165 | * $qp = qp(QueryPath::XHTML_STUB); // Creates a new XHTML document |
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166 | * $qp->writeXML(); // Writes the document as well-formed XHTML. |
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167 | * @endcode |
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168 | * @since 2.0 |
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169 | */ |
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170 | public const XHTML_STUB = '<?xml version="1.0"?> |
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171 | <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> |
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172 | <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> |
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173 | <head> |
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174 | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> |
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175 | <title>Untitled</title> |
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176 | </head> |
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177 | <body></body> |
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178 | </html>'; |
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179 | |||
180 | |||
181 | /** |
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182 | * @param null $document |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Documentation
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introduced
by
![]() |
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183 | * @param null $selector |
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0 ignored issues
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show
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184 | * @param array $options |
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185 | * @return mixed|\QueryPath\DOMQuery |
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186 | */ |
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187 | public static function with($document = NULL, $selector = NULL, array $options = []) |
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188 | { |
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189 | $qpClass = $options['QueryPath_class'] ?? '\QueryPath\DOMQuery'; |
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190 | |||
191 | return new $qpClass($document, $selector, $options); |
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192 | } |
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193 | |||
194 | public static function withXML($source = NULL, $selector = NULL, array $options = []) |
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195 | { |
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196 | $options += [ |
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197 | 'use_parser' => 'xml', |
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198 | ]; |
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199 | |||
200 | return self::with($source, $selector, $options); |
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201 | } |
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202 | |||
203 | public static function withHTML($source = NULL, $selector = NULL, array $options = []) |
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204 | { |
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205 | // Need a way to force an HTML parse instead of an XML parse when the |
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206 | // doctype is XHTML, since many XHTML documents are not valid XML |
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207 | // (because of coding errors, not by design). |
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208 | |||
209 | $options += [ |
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210 | 'ignore_parser_warnings' => true, |
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211 | 'convert_to_encoding' => 'ISO-8859-1', |
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212 | 'convert_from_encoding' => 'auto', |
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213 | //'replace_entities' => TRUE, |
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214 | 'use_parser' => 'html', |
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215 | // This is stripping actually necessary low ASCII. |
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216 | //'strip_low_ascii' => TRUE, |
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217 | ]; |
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218 | |||
219 | return @self::with($source, $selector, $options); |
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220 | } |
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221 | |||
222 | /** |
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223 | * Parse HTML5 documents. |
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224 | * |
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225 | * This uses HTML5-PHP to parse the document. In actuality, this parser does |
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226 | * a fine job with pre-HTML5 documents in most cases, though really old HTML |
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227 | * (like 2.0) may have some substantial quirks. |
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228 | * |
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229 | * <b>Supported Options</b> |
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230 | * Any options supported by HTML5-PHP are allowed here. Additionally, the |
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231 | * following options have meaning to QueryPath. |
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232 | * - QueryPath_class |
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233 | * |
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234 | * |
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235 | * @param mixed $source |
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236 | * A document as an HTML string, or a path/URL. For compatibility with |
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237 | * existing functions, a DOMDocument, SimpleXMLElement, DOMNode or array |
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238 | * of DOMNodes will be passed through as well. However, these types are not |
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239 | * validated in any way. |
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240 | * |
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241 | * @param string $selector |
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242 | * A CSS3 selector. |
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243 | * |
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244 | * @param array $options |
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245 | * An associative array of options, which is passed on into HTML5-PHP. Note |
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246 | * that the standard QueryPath options may be ignored for this function, |
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247 | * since it uses a different parser. |
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248 | * |
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249 | * @return QueryPath |
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250 | */ |
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251 | public static function withHTML5($source = NULL, $selector = NULL, $options = []) |
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252 | { |
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253 | $qpClass = $options['QueryPath_class'] ?? '\QueryPath\DOMQuery'; |
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254 | |||
255 | if (is_string($source)) { |
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256 | $html5 = new HTML5(); |
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257 | if (strpos($source, '<') !== false && strpos($source, '>') !== false) { |
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258 | $source = $html5->loadHTML($source); |
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259 | } else { |
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260 | $source = $html5->load($source); |
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261 | } |
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262 | } |
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263 | |||
264 | $qp = new $qpClass($source, $selector, $options); |
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265 | |||
266 | return $qp; |
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267 | } |
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268 | |||
269 | /** |
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270 | * Enable one or more extensions. |
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271 | * |
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272 | * Extensions provide additional features to QueryPath. To enable and |
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273 | * extension, you can use this method. |
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274 | * |
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275 | * In this example, we enable the QPTPL extension: |
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276 | * |
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277 | * @code |
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278 | * <?php |
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279 | * QueryPath::enable('\QueryPath\QPTPL'); |
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280 | * ?> |
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281 | * @endcode |
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282 | * |
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283 | * Note that the name is a fully qualified class name. |
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284 | * |
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285 | * We can enable more than one extension at a time like this: |
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286 | * |
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287 | * @code |
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288 | * <?php |
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289 | * $extensions = array('\QueryPath\QPXML', '\QueryPath\QPDB'); |
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290 | * QueryPath::enable($extensions); |
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291 | * ?> |
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292 | * @endcode |
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293 | * |
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294 | * @attention If you are not using an autoloader, you will need to |
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295 | * manually `require` or `include` the files that contain the |
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296 | * extensions. |
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297 | * |
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298 | * @param mixed $extensionNames |
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299 | * The name of an extension or an array of extension names. |
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300 | * QueryPath assumes that these are extension class names, |
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301 | * and attempts to register these as QueryPath extensions. |
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302 | */ |
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303 | public static function enable($extensionNames): void |
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304 | { |
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305 | if (is_array($extensionNames)) { |
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306 | foreach ($extensionNames as $extension) { |
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307 | ExtensionRegistry::extend($extension); |
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308 | } |
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309 | } else { |
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310 | ExtensionRegistry::extend($extensionNames); |
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311 | } |
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312 | } |
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313 | |||
314 | /** |
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315 | * Get a list of all of the enabled extensions. |
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316 | * |
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317 | * This example dumps a list of extensions to standard output: |
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318 | * |
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319 | * @code |
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320 | * <?php |
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321 | * $extensions = QueryPath::enabledExtensions(); |
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322 | * print_r($extensions); |
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323 | * ?> |
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324 | * @endcode |
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325 | * |
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326 | * @return array |
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327 | * An array of extension names. |
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328 | * |
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329 | * @see QueryPath::ExtensionRegistry |
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330 | */ |
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331 | public static function enabledExtensions() : array |
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332 | { |
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333 | return ExtensionRegistry::extensionNames(); |
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334 | } |
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335 | |||
336 | |||
337 | /** |
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338 | * A static function for transforming data into a Data URL. |
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339 | * |
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340 | * This can be used to create Data URLs for injection into CSS, JavaScript, or other |
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341 | * non-XML/HTML content. If you are working with QP objects, you may want to use |
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342 | * dataURL() instead. |
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343 | * |
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344 | * @param mixed $data |
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345 | * The contents to inject as the data. The value can be any one of the following: |
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346 | * - A URL: If this is given, then the subsystem will read the content from that URL. THIS |
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347 | * MUST BE A FULL URL, not a relative path. |
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348 | * - A string of data: If this is given, then the subsystem will encode the string. |
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349 | * - A stream or file handle: If this is given, the stream's contents will be encoded |
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350 | * and inserted as data. |
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351 | * (Note that we make the assumption here that you would never want to set data to be |
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352 | * a URL. If this is an incorrect assumption, file a bug.) |
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353 | * @param string $mime |
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354 | * The MIME type of the document. |
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355 | * @param resource $context |
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356 | * A valid context. Use this only if you need to pass a stream context. This is only necessary |
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357 | * if $data is a URL. (See {@link stream_context_create()}). |
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358 | * @return string An encoded data URL. |
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359 | */ |
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360 | public static function encodeDataURL($data, $mime = 'application/octet-stream', $context = NULL) : string |
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361 | { |
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362 | if (is_resource($data)) { |
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363 | $data = stream_get_contents($data); |
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364 | } elseif (filter_var($data, FILTER_VALIDATE_URL)) { |
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365 | $data = file_get_contents($data, false, $context); |
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366 | } |
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367 | |||
368 | $encoded = base64_encode($data); |
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369 | |||
370 | return 'data:' . $mime . ';base64,' . $encoded; |
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371 | } |
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372 | |||
373 | } |
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374 |