File "documentation.php"
Full path: /home/argothem/www/organecyberpresse/plugins/auto/querypath/v3.0.0/lib/querypath/vendor/gravitypdf/querypath/src/documentation.php
File size: 11.26 KB
MIME-type: text/x-php
Charset: utf-8
<?php
/** @mainpage QueryPath: Find Your Way
* @image html querypath-200x333.png
* QueryPath is a PHP library for working with XML and HTML. It is a PHP implementation of jQuery's
* traversal and modification libraries.
*
* @section getting_started Getting Started
*
* To being using QueryPath, you will probably want to take a look at these three pieces of
* documentation:
* - qp(): The main QueryPath function (like jQuery's $ function.)
* - htmlqp(): A specialized version of qp() for dealing with poorly formatted HTML.
* - QueryPath: The QueryPath class, which has all of the main functions.
*
* One substantial difference from jQuery is that QueryPath does not return a new object for
* each call (for performance reasons). Instead, the same object is mutated from call to call.
* A chain, then, typically performs all methods on the same object.
* When you need multiple objects, QueryPath has a {@link QueryPath::branch()} function that
* will return a cloned QueryPath object.
*
* QueryPath also has numerous functions that jQuery does not. Some (like QueryPath::top() and
* QueryPath::dataURL()) are extensions we find useful.
* Most, however, are to either emphasize PHP features (QueryPath::filterPreg()) or adapt to
* server-side needs (QueryPathEntities::replaceAllEntities()).
*
* @subsection basic_example A Few Basic Examples
*
* Here is a basic example of QueryPath usage:
*
* @code
* require 'QueryPath/QueryPath.php';
*
* qp('<?xml version="1.0"?><root><foo/></root>', 'foo')->append('<bar>baz</bar>')->writeXML();
* @endcode
*
* The above will create a new document from the XML string, find the <code>foo</code> element, and then
* append the <code>bar</code> element (complete with its text). Finally, the call to QueryPath::writeXML() will
* print the entire finished XML document to standard out (usually the web browser).
*
* Here's an example using htmlqp():
*
* @code
* require 'QueryPath/QueryPath.php';
*
* // URL to fetch:
* $url = 'http://technosophos.com';
*
* print htmlqp($url, 'title')->text();
* @endcode
*
* The above will fetch the HTML from the given URL and then find the <code>title</code> tag. It will extract
* the text (QueryPath::text()) from the title and print it.
*
* For more examples, check out the #Examples namespace (start with {@link examples/html.php}). Also, read about the
* qp() and htmlqp() functions.
*
* @subsection online_sources Online Sources
*
* - The official QueryPath site http://querypath.org
* - The latest API docs http://api.querypath.org
* - IBM DeveloperWorks Intro to QueryPath http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/web/library/os-php-querypath/index.html
* - QueryPath articles at TechnoSophos.Com http://technosophos.com/qp/articles
* - The QueryPath GitHub repository http://github.com/technosophos/querypath
*
* If you find a good online resource, please submit it as an issue in GitHub, and we will
* most likely add it here.
*
* @subsection more_examples A Larger Example
*
* @include examples/html.php
*
* @page extensions Using and Writing Extensions
*
* Using an extension is as easy as including it in your code:
*
* @code
* <?php
* require 'QueryPath/QueryPath.php';
* require 'QueryPath/Extension/QPXML.php';
*
* // Now I have the QPXML methods available:
* qp(QueryPath::HTML_STUB)->comment('This is an HTML comment.');
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* Like jQuery, QueryPath provides a simple mechanism for writing extensions.
*
* Check out QPXSL and QPXML for a few easy-to-read extensions. QPDB provides an example of
* a more complex extension.
*
* QueryPathExtension is the master interface for all extensions.
*
*/
/** @page CSSReference CSS Selector Reference
* QueryPath provides two query 'languages' that you can use to search through XML and HTML
* documents. The main query language is an implementation of the CSS3 Selectors specification. This
* is the query language that jQuery and CSS use -- and more recently, FireFox itself supports it
* via its JavaScript API. CSS3 should be familiar to developers and designers who have worked with
* HTML and stylesheets.
*
* QueryPath also allows XPath selectors, which can be executed using QueryPath::xpath(). While
* fewer functions take XPath expressions, it is noless a powerful tool for querying DOM objects.
*
* @code
* <?php
* qp($xml)->xpath('//foo');
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* QueryPath provides a full CSS3 selector implementation, including all of the specified operators,
* robost not() and has() support, pseudo-class/elements, and XML namespace support.
*
* Selectors can be passed into a number of QueryPath functions including qp(), htmlqp(),
* QueryPath::find(), QueryPath::top(), QueryPath::children() and others.
* @code
* <?php
* $qp = qp($html, 'body'); // Find the body
* $another_qp = $qp->branch('p'); // Create another QP object that searches BODY for P tags.
* $qp->find('strong>a'); // Find all of the A elements directly inside of STRONG elements.
* $qp->top('head'); // Start over at the top of the document, and find the HEAD tag.
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* In all of the examples above, CSS selectors are used to locate specific things inside of the
* document.
*
* @section selector_examples Example Selectors
* Example selectors:
* - <code>p</code>: Select all P elements in a document.
* - <code>strong a</code>: Select any A elements that are inside (children or descendants of) a STRONG
* element.
* - <code>strong>a</code>: Select only A elements that are directly beneath STRONG elements.
* - <code>:root>head</code> select HEAD elements that are directly beneath the document root.
* - <code>h1, h2</code>: Select all H1's and H2's.
* - <code>a:link</code>: Select all A tags that have hrefs
* - <code>div.content</code>: Select all DIV elements that have the class=content set.
* - <code>#my-id</code>: Select the element that has id=my-id.
* - <code>p:contains(Hello World)</code>: Select any P elements that have the text Hello World.
* - <code>p:not(.nav)</code>: Select any elements in P that do not have the nav class.
*
* @section pseudo_reference Pseudo-class and pseudo-element selectors
* QueryPath provides an implementation of the CSS3 spec, including the CSS3 pseudo-classes and
* pseudo-elements defined in the spec. Some of the CSS3 pseudo-classes require a user agent, and
* so cannot be adequately captured on the server side, but all others have been implemented.
*
* Additionally, jQuery has added its own pseudo-classes, and jQuery users have come to expect those
* to work. So for the sake of convenience, we have implemented those as well. These include the
* form pseudo-classes, along with several others.
*
* Finally, QueryPath has added a couple of useful pseudo-classes, namely :x-root and
* :contains-exactly.
*
* @subsection pseudoelement_ref Pseudo-Elements
*
* Pseudo-elements are new in CSS3, and are syntactically similar to pseudo-classes. To use a
* pseudo-element in a selector, use the double-colon syntax: <code>::begins</code>. The following pseudo-
* elements are defined in QueryPath:
*
* - first-line: Selects the first line -- everything up to the first LF character (\ n).
* - first-letter: Slects the first letter of the element.
*
* These throw exceptions because they cannot be implemented without a user agent:
* - before
* - after
* - selection
*
* Pseudo-elements should be used with care, as they act like elements, but are not.
*
* @code
* <?php
* $textNode = qp($xml, 'p::first-letter')->get();
* ?>
* @endcode
*
* @subsection pseudoclass_reference Pseudo-Classes
*
* Pseudo-classes are more familiar to CSS and jQuery users. They use a single-colon syntax, and
* are used to narrow the set of selected elements.
*
* The following pseudo-classes are supported:
* - link: Matches anything with the href attribute.
* - root: The root element of the document
* - x-root: The root element that was passed into QueryPath's constructor
* - x-reset: Same as above.
* - even: All even elements in a set. First element is odd.
* - odd: Odd elements in a set. First element is odd.
* - nth-child: Every nth child in a set.
* - nth-last-child: Every nth child in a set, counting from the end.
* - nth-of-type: Every nth tag in a set.
* - nth-last-of-type: Every nth tag in a set, counting from the end.
* - first-child: The first child in a set.
* - last-child: The last child in a set.
* - first-of-type: The first child of the specified tag in a set.
* - last-of-type: The last child of the specified tag in a set.
* - only-child: Matches only if this is the only child in a set.
* - only-of-type: Matches only if it is the only child of the given tag in a set.
* - empty: Selects only empty elements.
* - not: The negation operator, takes a CSS3 selector, e.g. <code>:not(strong>a)</code>.
* - lt: Items in a set whose index is less than the given integer, e.g. <code>lt(3)</code>
* - gt: Items in a set whose index is greater than the given integer, e.g. <code>gt(3)</code>
* - nth: The nth item in a set, e.g. <code>nth(3)</code>
* - eq: The nth item in a set, e.g. <code>eq(3)</code>
* - first: The first item in a set.
* - last: The last item in a set.
* - parent: Matches if the item is a parent of child elements.
* - enabled: Matches (form) items that are enabled
* - disabled: Matches form items that are disabled
* - checked: Matches form items that are checked
* - text: Matches form items that are text fields
* - radio: Matches form items that are radio fields
* - checkbox: Matches form items that are checkboxes.
* - file: Matches form items that are file upload widgets.
* - password: Mathces form items that are password entry boxes.
* - submit: Matches submit buttons
* - image: Matches image buttons
* - reset: Matches reset buttons
* - button: Matches buttons
* - header: Matches header fields (h1-h6)
* - has: Matches any items that have children that match the given selector, e.g. <code>:has(strong>a)</code>
* - contains: Contains *text* that matches. This is a substring match.
* - contains-exactly: Contains *exactly* the given text. This is NOT a substring match.
*
* These generate errors because they are not implemented:
* - indeterminate
* - lang
*
* These are quietly ignored because they require a user agent to be meaningful.
* - visited
* - hover
* - active
* - focus
* - animated
* - visible
* - hidden
* - target
*
* Examples:
* @code
* <?php
* qp($html, 'form input:text'); // Get all text input elements in a form.
* ?>
* @endcode
* @section xml_namespaces XML Namespaces
* QueryPath also supports the CSS3 namespace selection syntax. <b>This is syntactically different
* than the XML namespace tag format</b>. To select a tag whose namespaced name is foo:bar, the
* CSS element selector would be <code>foo|bar</code> (note the vertical bar instead of a colon). While
* QueryPath does its best to resolve namespaces to short names, there is a possibility that a
* malformed namespace will prevent specific namespace queries.
*
* You can also query across namespaces with <code>*|tagname</code>.
*
* @code
* <?php
* qp($xml, 'atom|entry'); // Find all <atom:entry> elements.
* qp($xml, 'atom|entry > xmedia|video'); // Find all <xmedia:video> elements directly inside <atom:entry> elements.
* qp($xml, '*|entry'); // Find any namespaced tag that has `entry` as the tag name.
* ?>
* @endcode
*/