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AttrDef.php

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  • AttrDef.php 3.17 KiB
    <?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.
     */
    
    abstract class HTMLPurifier_AttrDef
    {
    
        /**
         * Tells us whether or not an HTML attribute is minimized. Has no
         * meaning in other contexts.
         */
        public $minimized = false;
    
        /**
         * Tells us whether or not an HTML attribute is required. Has no
         * meaning in other contexts
         */
        public $required = false;
    
        /**
         * Validates and cleans passed string according to a definition.
         *
         * @param $string String to be validated and cleaned.
         * @param $config Mandatory HTMLPurifier_Config object.
         * @param $context Mandatory HTMLPurifier_AttrContext object.
         */
        abstract public function validate($string, $config, $context);
    
        /**
         * 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, as those extra characters usually have
         *       already been removed by HTMLPurifier_Encoder.
         *
         * @warning This processing is inconsistent with XML's whitespace handling
         *          as specified by section 3.3.3 and referenced XHTML 1.0 section
         *          4.7.  However, note that we are NOT necessarily
         *          parsing XML, thus, this behavior may still be correct. We
         *          assume that newlines have been normalized.
         */
        public function parseCDATA($string) {
            $string = trim($string);
            $string = str_replace(array("\n", "\t", "\r"), ' ', $string);
            return $string;
        }
    
        /**
         * Factory method for creating this class from a string.
         * @param $string String construction info
         * @return Created AttrDef object corresponding to $string
         */
        public function make($string) {
            // default implementation, return a flyweight of this object.