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devdocs/Filter-Reference.md

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Table of contents: * Overview * Instance methods * Core filters * Custom filters - CleanHtmlFilter - EntriesFilter ## Overview Filters use the HTML::Pipeline library. They take an HTML string or Nokogiri node as input, optionally perform modifications and/or extract information from it, and then outputs the result. Together they form a pipeline where each filter hands its output to the next filter's input. Every documentation page passes through this pipeline before being copied on the local filesystem. Filters are subclasses of the Docs::Filter class and require a call method. A basic implementation looks like this: ruby module Docs class CustomFilter < Filter def call doc end end end Filters which manipulate the Nokogiri node object (doc and related methods) are HTML filters and must not manipulate the HTML string (html). Vice-versa, filters which manipulate the string representation of the document are text filters and must not manipulate the Nokogiri node object. The two types are divided into two stacks within the scrapers. These stacks are then combined into a pipeline that calls the HTML filters before the text filters (more details here). This is to avoid parsing the document multiple times. The call method must return either doc or html, depending on the type of filter. ## Instance methods * doc [Nokogiri::XML::Node]
The Nokogiri representation of the container element.
See Nokogiri's API docs for the list of available methods. * html [String]
The string representation of the container element.
* context [Hash] (frozen)
The scraper's options along with a few additional keys: :base_url, :root_url, :root_page and :url. * result [Hash]
Used to store the page's metadata and pass back information to the scraper.
Possible keys:
- :path — the page's normalized path - :store_path — the path where the page will be stored (equal to :path with .html at the end) - :internal_urls — the list of distinct internal URLs found within the page - :entries — the Entry objects to add to the index * css, at_css, xpath, at_xpath
Shortcuts for doc.css, doc.xpath, etc. * base_url, current_url, root_url [Docs::URL]
Shortcuts for context[:base_url], context[:url], and context[:root_url] respectively.
* root_path [String]
Shortcut for context[:root_path]. * subpath [String]
The sub-path from the base URL of the current URL.
Example: if base_url equals example.com/docs and current_url equals example.com/docs/file?raw, the returned value is /file. * slug [String]
The subpath removed of any leading slash or .html extension.
Example: if subpath equals /dir/file.html, the returned value is dir/file. * root_page? [Boolean]
Returns true if the current page is the root page. ## Core filters * ContainerFilter — changes the root node of the document (remove everything outside) * CleanHtmlFilter — removes HTML comments, <script>, <style>, etc. * NormalizeUrlsFilter — replaces all URLs with their fully qualified counterpart * InternalUrlsFilter — detects internal URLs (the ones to scrape) and replaces them with their unqualified, relative counterpart * NormalizePathsFilter — makes the internal paths consistent (e.g. always end with .html) * InnerHtmlFilter — converts the document to a string * CleanTextFilter — removes empty nodes * AttributionFilter — appends the license info and link to the original document * TitleFilter — prepends the document with a title (disabled by default) * EntriesFilter — abstract filter for extracting the page's metadata ## Custom filters Scrapers can have any number of custom filters but require at least the two described below. Note: filters are located in the lib/docs/filters directory. The class's name must be the CamelCase equivalent of the filename. ### CleanHtmlFilter The CleanHtml filter is tasked with cleaning the HTML markup where necessary and removing anything superfluous or nonessential. Only the core documentation should remain at the end. Nokogiri's many jQuery-like methods make it easy to search and modify elements — see the API docs. Here's an example implementation that covers the most common use-cases: ruby module Docs class MyScraper class CleanHtmlFilter < Filter def call css('hr').remove css('#changelog').remove if root_page? # Set id attributes on <h3> instead of an empty <a> css('h3').each do |node| node['id'] = node.at_css('a')['id'] end # Make proper table headers css('td.header').each do |node| node.name = 'th' end # Remove code highlighting css('pre').each do |node| node.content = node.content end doc end end end end Notes: * Empty elements will be automatically removed by the core CleanTextFilter later in the pipeline's execution. * Although the goal is to end up with a clean version of the page, try to keep the number of modifications to a minimum, so as to make the code easier to maintain. Custom CSS is the preferred way of normalizing the pages (except for hiding stuff which should always be done by removing the markup). * Try to document your filter's behavior as much as possible, particularly modifications that apply only to a subset of pages. It'll make updating the documentation easier. ### EntriesFilter The Entries filter is responsible for extracting the page's metadata, represented by a set of entries, each with a name, type and path. The following two models are used under the hood to represent the metadata: * Entry(name, type, path) * Type(name, slug, count) Each scraper must implement its own EntriesFilter by subclassing the Docs::EntriesFilter class. The base class already implements the call method and includes four methods which the subclasses can override: * get_name [String]
The name of the default entry (aka. the page's name).
It is usually guessed from the slug (documented above) or by searching the HTML markup.
Default: modified version of slug (underscores are replaced with spaces and forward slashes with dots) * get_type [String]
The type of the default entry (aka. the page's type).
Entries without a type can be searched for but won't be listed in the app's sidebar (unless no other entries have a type).
Default: nil * include_default_entry? [Boolean]
Whether to include the default entry.
Used when a page consists of multiple entries (returned by additional_entries) but doesn't have a name/type of its own, or to remove a page from the index (if it has no additional entries), in which case it won't be copied on the local filesystem and any link to it in the other pages will be broken (as explained on the Scraper Reference page, this is used to keep the :skip / :skip_patterns options to a maintainable size, or if the page includes links that can't reached from anywhere else).
Default: true * additional_entries [Array]
The list of additional entries.
Each entry is represented by an Array of three attributes: its name, fragment identifier, and type. The fragment identifier refers to the id attribute of the HTML element (usually a heading) that the entry relates to. It is combined with the page's path to become the entry's path. If absent or nil, the page's path is used. If the type is absent or nil, the default type is used.
Example: [ ['One'], ['Two', 'id'], ['Three', nil, 'type'] ] adds three additional entries, the first one named "One" with the default path and type, the second one named "Two" with the URL fragment "#id" and the default type, and the third one named "Three" with the default path and the type "type".
The list is usually constructed by running through the markup. Exceptions can also be hard-coded for specific pages.
Default: [] The following accessors are also available, but must not be overridden: * name [String]
Memoized version of get_name (nil for the root page). * type [String]
Memoized version of get_type (nil for the root page). Notes: * Leading and trailing whitespace is automatically removed from names and types. * Names must be unique across the documentation and as short as possible (ideally less than 30 characters). Whenever possible, methods should be differentiated from properties by appending (), and instance methods should be differentiated from class methods using the Class#method or object.method conventions. * You can call name from get_type or type from get_name but doing both will cause a stack overflow (i.e. you can infer the name from the type or the type from the name, but you can't do both at the same time). Don't call get_name or get_type directly as their value isn't memoized. * The root page has no name and no type (both are nil). get_name and get_type won't get called with the page (but additional_entries will). * Docs::EntriesFilter is an HTML filter. It must be added to the scraper's html_filters stack. * Try to document the code as much as possible, particularly the special cases. It'll make updating the documentation easier. Example: ruby module Docs class MyScraper class EntriesFilter < Docs::EntriesFilter def get_name node = at_css('h1') result = node.content.strip result << ' event' if type == 'Events' result << '()' if node['class'].try(:include?, 'function') result end def get_type object, method = *slug.split('/') method ? object : 'Miscellaneous' end def additional_entries return [] if root_page? css('h2').map do |node| [node.content, node['id']] end end def include_default_entry? !at_css('.obsolete') end end end end

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