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htmlpurifier/library/HTMLPurifier/AttrDef.php
Edward Z. Yang 66ddc4cc5a Add lots of documentation.
git-svn-id: http://htmlpurifier.org/svnroot/htmlpurifier/trunk@293 48356398-32a2-884e-a903-53898d9a118a
2006-08-17 20:29:34 +00:00

57 lines
1.9 KiB
PHP

<?php
require_once 'HTMLPurifier/AttrContext.php';
/**
* Base class for all validating attribute definitions.
*
* This family of classes forms the core for not only HTML attribute validation,
* but also any sort of string that needs to be validated or cleaned (which
* means CSS properties and composite definitions are defined here too).
* Besides defining (through code) what precisely makes the string valid,
* subclasses are also responsible for cleaning the code if possible.
*/
class HTMLPurifier_AttrDef
{
/**
* Abstract function defined for functions that validate and clean strings.
*
* This function forms the basis for all the subclasses: they must
* define this method.
*
* @public
* @param $string String to be validated and cleaned.
* @param $config Mandatory HTMLPurifier_Config object.
* @param $context Mandatory HTMLPurifier_AttrContext object.
*/
function validate($string, $config, &$context) {
trigger_error('Cannot call abstract function', E_USER_ERROR);
}
/**
* Convenience method that parses a string as if it were CDATA.
*
* This method process a string in the manner specified at
* <http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/types.html#h-6.2> by removing
* leading and trailing whitespace, ignoring line feeds, and replacing
* carriage returns and tabs with spaces. While most useful for HTML
* attributes specified as CDATA, it can also be applied to most CSS
* values.
*
* @note This method is not entirely standards compliant, as trim() removes
* more types of whitespace than specified in the spec. In practice,
* this is rarely a problem.
*
* @public
*/
function parseCDATA($string) {
$string = trim($string);
$string = str_replace("\n", '', $string);
$string = str_replace(array("\r", "\t"), ' ', $string);
return $string;
}
}
?>