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858362e761
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@19537 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
148 lines
5.7 KiB
Ruby
148 lines
5.7 KiB
Ruby
require 'rdoc/markup/to_html'
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##
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# Subclass of the RDoc::Markup::ToHtml class that supports looking up words in
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# the AllReferences list. Those that are found (like AllReferences in this
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# comment) will be hyperlinked
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class RDoc::Markup::ToHtmlCrossref < RDoc::Markup::ToHtml
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attr_accessor :context
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# Regular expressions to match class and method references.
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#
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# 1.) There can be a '\' in front of text to suppress
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# any cross-references (note, however, that the single '\'
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# is written as '\\\\' in order to escape it twice, once
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# in the Ruby String literal and once in the regexp).
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# 2.) There can be a '::' in front of class names to reference
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# from the top-level namespace.
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# 3.) The method can be followed by parenthesis,
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# which may or may not have things inside (this
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# apparently is allowed for Fortran 95, but I also think that this
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# is a good idea for Ruby, as it is very reasonable to want to
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# reference a call with arguments).
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#
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# NOTE: In order to support Fortran 95 properly, the [A-Z] below
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# should be changed to [A-Za-z]. This slows down rdoc significantly,
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# however, and the Fortran 95 support is broken in any case due to
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# the return in handle_special_CROSSREF if the token consists
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# entirely of lowercase letters.
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#
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# The markup/cross-referencing engine needs a rewrite for
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# Fortran 95 to be supported properly.
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CLASS_REGEXP_STR = '\\\\?((?:\:{2})?[A-Z]\w*(?:\:\:\w+)*)'
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METHOD_REGEXP_STR = '(\w+[!?=]?)(?:\([\.\w+\*\/\+\-\=\<\>]*\))?'
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# Regular expressions matching text that should potentially have
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# cross-reference links generated are passed to add_special.
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# Note that these expressions are meant to pick up text for which
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# cross-references have been suppressed, since the suppression
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# characters are removed by the code that is triggered.
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CROSSREF_REGEXP = /(
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# A::B::C.meth
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#{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}[\.\#]#{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}
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# Stand-alone method (proceeded by a #)
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| \\?\##{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}
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# A::B::C
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# The stuff after CLASS_REGEXP_STR is a
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# nasty hack. CLASS_REGEXP_STR unfortunately matches
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# words like dog and cat (these are legal "class"
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# names in Fortran 95). When a word is flagged as a
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# potential cross-reference, limitations in the markup
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# engine suppress other processing, such as typesetting.
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# This is particularly noticeable for contractions.
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# In order that words like "can't" not
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# be flagged as potential cross-references, only
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# flag potential class cross-references if the character
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# after the cross-referece is a space or sentence
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# punctuation.
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| #{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}(?=[\s\)\.\?\!\,\;]|\z)
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# Things that look like filenames
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# The key thing is that there must be at least
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# one special character (period, slash, or
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# underscore).
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| [\/\w]+[_\/\.][\w\/\.]+
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# Things that have markup suppressed
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| \\[^\s]
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)/x
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##
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# We need to record the html path of our caller so we can generate
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# correct relative paths for any hyperlinks that we find
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def initialize(from_path, context, show_hash)
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raise ArgumentError, 'from_path cannot be nil' if from_path.nil?
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super()
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@markup.add_special(CROSSREF_REGEXP, :CROSSREF)
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@from_path = from_path
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@context = context
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@show_hash = show_hash
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@seen = {}
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end
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##
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# We're invoked when any text matches the CROSSREF pattern
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# (defined in MarkUp). If we fine the corresponding reference,
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# generate a hyperlink. If the name we're looking for contains
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# no punctuation, we look for it up the module/class chain. For
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# example, HyperlinkHtml is found, even without the Generator::
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# prefix, because we look for it in module Generator first.
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def handle_special_CROSSREF(special)
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name = special.text
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# This ensures that words entirely consisting of lowercase letters will
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# not have cross-references generated (to suppress lots of
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# erroneous cross-references to "new" in text, for instance)
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return name if name =~ /\A[a-z]*\z/
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return @seen[name] if @seen.include? name
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if name[0, 1] == '#' then
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lookup = name[1..-1]
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name = lookup unless @show_hash
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else
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lookup = name
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end
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# Find class, module, or method in class or module.
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#
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# Do not, however, use an if/elsif/else chain to do so. Instead, test
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# each possible pattern until one matches. The reason for this is that a
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# string like "YAML.txt" could be the txt() class method of class YAML (in
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# which case it would match the first pattern, which splits the string
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# into container and method components and looks up both) or a filename
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# (in which case it would match the last pattern, which just checks
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# whether the string as a whole is a known symbol).
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if /#{CLASS_REGEXP_STR}[\.\#]#{METHOD_REGEXP_STR}/ =~ lookup then
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container = $1
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method = $2
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ref = @context.find_symbol container, method
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end
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ref = @context.find_symbol lookup unless ref
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out = if lookup =~ /^\\/ then
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$'
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elsif ref and ref.document_self then
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"<a href=\"#{ref.as_href(@from_path)}\">#{name}</a>"
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else
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name
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end
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@seen[name] = out
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out
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end
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end
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