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ruby--ruby/lib/rdoc/markup/to_html_crossref.rb
drbrain 75ef9e79d6 Import RDoc 2.5.4
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@27396 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2010-04-19 05:08:28 +00:00

148 lines
5.2 KiB
Ruby

require 'rdoc/markup/to_html'
##
# Subclass of the RDoc::Markup::ToHtml class that supports looking up words
# from a context. Those that are found will be hyperlinked.
class RDoc::Markup::ToHtmlCrossref < RDoc::Markup::ToHtml
##
# Regular expression to match class references
#
# 1) There can be a '\' in front of text to suppress any cross-references
# 2) There can be a '::' in front of class names to reference from the
# top-level namespace.
# 3) The method can be followed by parenthesis
CLASS_REGEXP_STR = '\\\\?((?:\:{2})?[A-Z]\w*(?:\:\:\w+)*)'
##
# Regular expression to match method references.
#
# See CLASS_REGEXP_STR
METHOD_REGEXP_STR = '([a-z]\w*[!?=]?)(?:\([\w.+*/=<>-]*\))?'
##
# Regular expressions matching text that should potentially have
# cross-reference links generated are passed to add_special. Note that
# these expressions are meant to pick up text for which cross-references
# have been suppressed, since the suppression characters are removed by the
# code that is triggered.
CROSSREF_REGEXP = /(
# A::B::C.meth
#{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}(?:[.#]|::)#{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}
# Stand-alone method (proceeded by a #)
| \\?\##{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}
# Stand-alone method (proceeded by ::)
| ::#{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}
# A::B::C
# The stuff after CLASS_REGEXP_STR is a
# nasty hack. CLASS_REGEXP_STR unfortunately matches
# words like dog and cat (these are legal "class"
# names in Fortran 95). When a word is flagged as a
# potential cross-reference, limitations in the markup
# engine suppress other processing, such as typesetting.
# This is particularly noticeable for contractions.
# In order that words like "can't" not
# be flagged as potential cross-references, only
# flag potential class cross-references if the character
# after the cross-referece is a space or sentence
# punctuation.
| #{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}(?=[\s\)\.\?\!\,\;]|\z)
# Things that look like filenames
# The key thing is that there must be at least
# one special character (period, slash, or
# underscore).
| (?:\.\.\/)*[-\/\w]+[_\/\.][-\w\/\.]+
# Things that have markup suppressed
| \\[^\s]
)/x
##
# RDoc::CodeObject for generating references
attr_accessor :context
##
# Creates a new crossref resolver that generates links relative to +context+
# which lives at +from_path+ in the generated files. '#' characters on
# references are removed unless +show_hash+ is true.
def initialize(from_path, context, show_hash)
raise ArgumentError, 'from_path cannot be nil' if from_path.nil?
super()
@markup.add_special(CROSSREF_REGEXP, :CROSSREF)
@from_path = from_path
@context = context
@show_hash = show_hash
@seen = {}
end
##
# We're invoked when any text matches the CROSSREF pattern. If we find the
# corresponding reference, generate a hyperlink. If the name we're looking
# for contains no punctuation, we look for it up the module/class chain.
# For example, HyperlinkHtml is found, even without the Generator:: prefix,
# because we look for it in module Generator first.
def handle_special_CROSSREF(special)
name = special.text
# This ensures that words entirely consisting of lowercase letters will
# not have cross-references generated (to suppress lots of erroneous
# cross-references to "new" in text, for instance)
return name if name =~ /\A[a-z]*\z/
return @seen[name] if @seen.include? name
lookup = name
name = name[0, 1] unless @show_hash if name[0, 1] == '#'
# Find class, module, or method in class or module.
#
# Do not, however, use an if/elsif/else chain to do so. Instead, test
# each possible pattern until one matches. The reason for this is that a
# string like "YAML.txt" could be the txt() class method of class YAML (in
# which case it would match the first pattern, which splits the string
# into container and method components and looks up both) or a filename
# (in which case it would match the last pattern, which just checks
# whether the string as a whole is a known symbol).
if /#{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}([.#]|::)#{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}/ =~ lookup then
container = $1
type = $2
type = '#' if type == '.'
method = "#{type}#{$3}"
ref = @context.find_symbol container, method
end
ref = @context.find_symbol lookup unless ref
out = if lookup == '\\' then
lookup
elsif lookup =~ /^\\/ then
$'
elsif ref and ref.document_self then
"<a href=\"#{ref.as_href @from_path}\">#{name}</a>"
else
name
end
@seen[name] = out
out
end
end