1525 lines
50 KiB
JavaScript
1525 lines
50 KiB
JavaScript
/*
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Copyright (c) 2004-2010, The Dojo Foundation All Rights Reserved.
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Available via Academic Free License >= 2.1 OR the modified BSD license.
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see: http://dojotoolkit.org/license for details
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*/
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if(!dojo._hasResource["dojo._base.query"]){ //_hasResource checks added by build. Do not use _hasResource directly in your code.
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dojo._hasResource["dojo._base.query"] = true;
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if(typeof dojo != "undefined"){
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dojo.provide("dojo._base.query");
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dojo.require("dojo._base.NodeList");
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dojo.require("dojo._base.lang");
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}
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/*
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dojo.query() architectural overview:
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dojo.query is a relatively full-featured CSS3 query library. It is
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designed to take any valid CSS3 selector and return the nodes matching
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the selector. To do this quickly, it processes queries in several
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steps, applying caching where profitable.
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The steps (roughly in reverse order of the way they appear in the code):
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1.) check to see if we already have a "query dispatcher"
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- if so, use that with the given parameterization. Skip to step 4.
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2.) attempt to determine which branch to dispatch the query to:
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- JS (optimized DOM iteration)
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- native (FF3.1+, Safari 3.1+, IE 8+)
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3.) tokenize and convert to executable "query dispatcher"
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- this is where the lion's share of the complexity in the
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system lies. In the DOM version, the query dispatcher is
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assembled as a chain of "yes/no" test functions pertaining to
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a section of a simple query statement (".blah:nth-child(odd)"
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but not "div div", which is 2 simple statements). Individual
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statement dispatchers are cached (to prevent re-definition)
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as are entire dispatch chains (to make re-execution of the
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same query fast)
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4.) the resulting query dispatcher is called in the passed scope
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(by default the top-level document)
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- for DOM queries, this results in a recursive, top-down
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evaluation of nodes based on each simple query section
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- for native implementations, this may mean working around spec
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bugs. So be it.
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5.) matched nodes are pruned to ensure they are unique (if necessary)
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*/
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;(function(d){
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// define everything in a closure for compressability reasons. "d" is an
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// alias to "dojo" (or the toolkit alias object, e.g., "acme").
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Toolkit aliases
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// if you are extracing dojo.query for use in your own system, you will
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// need to provide these methods and properties. No other porting should be
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// necessary, save for configuring the system to use a class other than
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// dojo.NodeList as the return instance instantiator
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var trim = d.trim;
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var each = d.forEach;
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// d.isIE; // float
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// d.isSafari; // float
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// d.isOpera; // float
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// d.isWebKit; // float
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// d.doc ; // document element
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var qlc = d._NodeListCtor = d.NodeList;
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var getDoc = function(){ return d.doc; };
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// NOTE(alex): the spec is idiotic. CSS queries should ALWAYS be case-sensitive, but nooooooo
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var cssCaseBug = ((d.isWebKit||d.isMozilla) && ((getDoc().compatMode) == "BackCompat"));
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Global utilities
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// on browsers that support the "children" collection we can avoid a lot of
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// iteration on chaff (non-element) nodes.
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// why.
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var childNodesName = !!getDoc().firstChild["children"] ? "children" : "childNodes";
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var specials = ">~+";
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// global thunk to determine whether we should treat the current query as
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// case sensitive or not. This switch is flipped by the query evaluator
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// based on the document passed as the context to search.
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var caseSensitive = false;
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// how high?
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var yesman = function(){ return true; };
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Tokenizer
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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var getQueryParts = function(query){
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// summary:
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// state machine for query tokenization
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// description:
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// instead of using a brittle and slow regex-based CSS parser,
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// dojo.query implements an AST-style query representation. This
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// representation is only generated once per query. For example,
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// the same query run multiple times or under different root nodes
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// does not re-parse the selector expression but instead uses the
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// cached data structure. The state machine implemented here
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// terminates on the last " " (space) charachter and returns an
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// ordered array of query component structures (or "parts"). Each
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// part represents an operator or a simple CSS filtering
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// expression. The structure for parts is documented in the code
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// below.
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// NOTE:
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// this code is designed to run fast and compress well. Sacrifices
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// to readibility and maintainability have been made. Your best
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// bet when hacking the tokenizer is to put The Donnas on *really*
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// loud (may we recommend their "Spend The Night" release?) and
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// just assume you're gonna make mistakes. Keep the unit tests
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// open and run them frequently. Knowing is half the battle ;-)
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if(specials.indexOf(query.slice(-1)) >= 0){
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// if we end with a ">", "+", or "~", that means we're implicitly
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// searching all children, so make it explicit
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query += " * "
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}else{
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// if you have not provided a terminator, one will be provided for
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// you...
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query += " ";
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}
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var ts = function(/*Integer*/ s, /*Integer*/ e){
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// trim and slice.
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// take an index to start a string slice from and an end position
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// and return a trimmed copy of that sub-string
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return trim(query.slice(s, e));
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}
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// the overall data graph of the full query, as represented by queryPart objects
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var queryParts = [];
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// state keeping vars
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var inBrackets = -1, inParens = -1, inMatchFor = -1,
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inPseudo = -1, inClass = -1, inId = -1, inTag = -1,
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lc = "", cc = "", pStart;
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// iteration vars
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var x = 0, // index in the query
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ql = query.length,
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currentPart = null, // data structure representing the entire clause
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_cp = null; // the current pseudo or attr matcher
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// several temporary variables are assigned to this structure durring a
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// potential sub-expression match:
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// attr:
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// a string representing the current full attribute match in a
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// bracket expression
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// type:
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// if there's an operator in a bracket expression, this is
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// used to keep track of it
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// value:
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// the internals of parenthetical expression for a pseudo. for
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// :nth-child(2n+1), value might be "2n+1"
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var endTag = function(){
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// called when the tokenizer hits the end of a particular tag name.
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// Re-sets state variables for tag matching and sets up the matcher
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// to handle the next type of token (tag or operator).
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if(inTag >= 0){
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var tv = (inTag == x) ? null : ts(inTag, x); // .toLowerCase();
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currentPart[ (specials.indexOf(tv) < 0) ? "tag" : "oper" ] = tv;
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inTag = -1;
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}
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}
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var endId = function(){
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// called when the tokenizer might be at the end of an ID portion of a match
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if(inId >= 0){
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currentPart.id = ts(inId, x).replace(/\\/g, "");
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inId = -1;
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}
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}
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var endClass = function(){
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// called when the tokenizer might be at the end of a class name
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// match. CSS allows for multiple classes, so we augment the
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// current item with another class in its list
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if(inClass >= 0){
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currentPart.classes.push(ts(inClass+1, x).replace(/\\/g, ""));
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inClass = -1;
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}
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}
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var endAll = function(){
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// at the end of a simple fragment, so wall off the matches
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endId(); endTag(); endClass();
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}
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var endPart = function(){
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endAll();
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if(inPseudo >= 0){
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currentPart.pseudos.push({ name: ts(inPseudo+1, x) });
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}
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// hint to the selector engine to tell it whether or not it
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// needs to do any iteration. Many simple selectors don't, and
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// we can avoid significant construction-time work by advising
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// the system to skip them
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currentPart.loops = (
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currentPart.pseudos.length ||
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currentPart.attrs.length ||
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currentPart.classes.length );
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currentPart.oquery = currentPart.query = ts(pStart, x); // save the full expression as a string
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// otag/tag are hints to suggest to the system whether or not
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// it's an operator or a tag. We save a copy of otag since the
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// tag name is cast to upper-case in regular HTML matches. The
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// system has a global switch to figure out if the current
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// expression needs to be case sensitive or not and it will use
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// otag or tag accordingly
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currentPart.otag = currentPart.tag = (currentPart["oper"]) ? null : (currentPart.tag || "*");
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if(currentPart.tag){
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// if we're in a case-insensitive HTML doc, we likely want
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// the toUpperCase when matching on element.tagName. If we
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// do it here, we can skip the string op per node
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// comparison
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currentPart.tag = currentPart.tag.toUpperCase();
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}
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// add the part to the list
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if(queryParts.length && (queryParts[queryParts.length-1].oper)){
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// operators are always infix, so we remove them from the
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// list and attach them to the next match. The evaluator is
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// responsible for sorting out how to handle them.
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currentPart.infixOper = queryParts.pop();
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currentPart.query = currentPart.infixOper.query + " " + currentPart.query;
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/*
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console.debug( "swapping out the infix",
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currentPart.infixOper,
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"and attaching it to",
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currentPart);
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*/
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}
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queryParts.push(currentPart);
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currentPart = null;
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}
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// iterate over the query, charachter by charachter, building up a
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// list of query part objects
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for(; lc=cc, cc=query.charAt(x), x < ql; x++){
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// cc: the current character in the match
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// lc: the last charachter (if any)
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// someone is trying to escape something, so don't try to match any
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// fragments. We assume we're inside a literal.
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if(lc == "\\"){ continue; }
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if(!currentPart){ // a part was just ended or none has yet been created
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// NOTE: I hate all this alloc, but it's shorter than writing tons of if's
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pStart = x;
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// rules describe full CSS sub-expressions, like:
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// #someId
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// .className:first-child
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// but not:
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// thinger > div.howdy[type=thinger]
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// the indidual components of the previous query would be
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// split into 3 parts that would be represented a structure
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// like:
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// [
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// {
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// query: "thinger",
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// tag: "thinger",
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// },
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// {
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// query: "div.howdy[type=thinger]",
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// classes: ["howdy"],
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// infixOper: {
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// query: ">",
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// oper: ">",
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// }
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// },
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// ]
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currentPart = {
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query: null, // the full text of the part's rule
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pseudos: [], // CSS supports multiple pseud-class matches in a single rule
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attrs: [], // CSS supports multi-attribute match, so we need an array
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classes: [], // class matches may be additive, e.g.: .thinger.blah.howdy
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tag: null, // only one tag...
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oper: null, // ...or operator per component. Note that these wind up being exclusive.
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id: null, // the id component of a rule
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getTag: function(){
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return (caseSensitive) ? this.otag : this.tag;
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}
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};
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// if we don't have a part, we assume we're going to start at
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// the beginning of a match, which should be a tag name. This
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// might fault a little later on, but we detect that and this
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// iteration will still be fine.
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inTag = x;
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}
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if(inBrackets >= 0){
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// look for a the close first
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if(cc == "]"){ // if we're in a [...] clause and we end, do assignment
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if(!_cp.attr){
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// no attribute match was previously begun, so we
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// assume this is an attribute existance match in the
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// form of [someAttributeName]
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_cp.attr = ts(inBrackets+1, x);
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}else{
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// we had an attribute already, so we know that we're
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// matching some sort of value, as in [attrName=howdy]
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_cp.matchFor = ts((inMatchFor||inBrackets+1), x);
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}
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var cmf = _cp.matchFor;
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if(cmf){
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// try to strip quotes from the matchFor value. We want
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// [attrName=howdy] to match the same
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// as [attrName = 'howdy' ]
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if( (cmf.charAt(0) == '"') || (cmf.charAt(0) == "'") ){
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_cp.matchFor = cmf.slice(1, -1);
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}
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}
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// end the attribute by adding it to the list of attributes.
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currentPart.attrs.push(_cp);
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_cp = null; // necessary?
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inBrackets = inMatchFor = -1;
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}else if(cc == "="){
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// if the last char was an operator prefix, make sure we
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// record it along with the "=" operator.
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var addToCc = ("|~^$*".indexOf(lc) >=0 ) ? lc : "";
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_cp.type = addToCc+cc;
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_cp.attr = ts(inBrackets+1, x-addToCc.length);
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inMatchFor = x+1;
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}
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// now look for other clause parts
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}else if(inParens >= 0){
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// if we're in a parenthetical expression, we need to figure
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// out if it's attached to a pseduo-selector rule like
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// :nth-child(1)
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if(cc == ")"){
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if(inPseudo >= 0){
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_cp.value = ts(inParens+1, x);
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}
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inPseudo = inParens = -1;
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}
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}else if(cc == "#"){
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// start of an ID match
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endAll();
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inId = x+1;
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}else if(cc == "."){
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// start of a class match
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endAll();
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inClass = x;
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}else if(cc == ":"){
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// start of a pseudo-selector match
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endAll();
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inPseudo = x;
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}else if(cc == "["){
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// start of an attribute match.
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endAll();
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inBrackets = x;
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// provide a new structure for the attribute match to fill-in
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_cp = {
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/*=====
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attr: null, type: null, matchFor: null
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=====*/
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};
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}else if(cc == "("){
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// we really only care if we've entered a parenthetical
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// expression if we're already inside a pseudo-selector match
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if(inPseudo >= 0){
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// provide a new structure for the pseudo match to fill-in
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_cp = {
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name: ts(inPseudo+1, x),
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value: null
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}
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currentPart.pseudos.push(_cp);
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}
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inParens = x;
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}else if(
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(cc == " ") &&
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// if it's a space char and the last char is too, consume the
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// current one without doing more work
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(lc != cc)
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){
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endPart();
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}
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}
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return queryParts;
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};
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// DOM query infrastructure
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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var agree = function(first, second){
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// the basic building block of the yes/no chaining system. agree(f1,
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// f2) generates a new function which returns the boolean results of
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// both of the passed functions to a single logical-anded result. If
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// either are not possed, the other is used exclusively.
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if(!first){ return second; }
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if(!second){ return first; }
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return function(){
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return first.apply(window, arguments) && second.apply(window, arguments);
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}
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};
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var getArr = function(i, arr){
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// helps us avoid array alloc when we don't need it
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var r = arr||[]; // FIXME: should this be 'new d._NodeListCtor()' ?
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if(i){ r.push(i); }
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return r;
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};
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var _isElement = function(n){ return (1 == n.nodeType); };
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// FIXME: need to coalesce _getAttr with defaultGetter
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var blank = "";
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var _getAttr = function(elem, attr){
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if(!elem){ return blank; }
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if(attr == "class"){
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return elem.className || blank;
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}
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if(attr == "for"){
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return elem.htmlFor || blank;
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}
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if(attr == "style"){
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return elem.style.cssText || blank;
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}
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return (caseSensitive ? elem.getAttribute(attr) : elem.getAttribute(attr, 2)) || blank;
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};
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var attrs = {
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"*=": function(attr, value){
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return function(elem){
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// E[foo*="bar"]
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// an E element whose "foo" attribute value contains
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// the substring "bar"
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return (_getAttr(elem, attr).indexOf(value)>=0);
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}
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},
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"^=": function(attr, value){
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// E[foo^="bar"]
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// an E element whose "foo" attribute value begins exactly
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// with the string "bar"
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return function(elem){
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return (_getAttr(elem, attr).indexOf(value)==0);
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}
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},
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"$=": function(attr, value){
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// E[foo$="bar"]
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// an E element whose "foo" attribute value ends exactly
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// with the string "bar"
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var tval = " "+value;
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return function(elem){
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var ea = " "+_getAttr(elem, attr);
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return (ea.lastIndexOf(value)==(ea.length-value.length));
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}
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},
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"~=": function(attr, value){
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// E[foo~="bar"]
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// an E element whose "foo" attribute value is a list of
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// space-separated values, one of which is exactly equal
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// to "bar"
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// return "[contains(concat(' ',@"+attr+",' '), ' "+ value +" ')]";
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var tval = " "+value+" ";
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return function(elem){
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var ea = " "+_getAttr(elem, attr)+" ";
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return (ea.indexOf(tval)>=0);
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}
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},
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"|=": function(attr, value){
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// E[hreflang|="en"]
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// an E element whose "hreflang" attribute has a
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// hyphen-separated list of values beginning (from the
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// left) with "en"
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var valueDash = " "+value+"-";
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return function(elem){
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var ea = " "+_getAttr(elem, attr);
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return (
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(ea == value) ||
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(ea.indexOf(valueDash)==0)
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);
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}
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},
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"=": function(attr, value){
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return function(elem){
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return (_getAttr(elem, attr) == value);
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}
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}
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};
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// avoid testing for node type if we can. Defining this in the negative
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// here to avoid negation in the fast path.
|
|
var _noNES = (typeof getDoc().firstChild.nextElementSibling == "undefined");
|
|
var _ns = !_noNES ? "nextElementSibling" : "nextSibling";
|
|
var _ps = !_noNES ? "previousElementSibling" : "previousSibling";
|
|
var _simpleNodeTest = (_noNES ? _isElement : yesman);
|
|
|
|
var _lookLeft = function(node){
|
|
// look left
|
|
while(node = node[_ps]){
|
|
if(_simpleNodeTest(node)){ return false; }
|
|
}
|
|
return true;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var _lookRight = function(node){
|
|
// look right
|
|
while(node = node[_ns]){
|
|
if(_simpleNodeTest(node)){ return false; }
|
|
}
|
|
return true;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var getNodeIndex = function(node){
|
|
var root = node.parentNode;
|
|
var i = 0,
|
|
tret = root[childNodesName],
|
|
ci = (node["_i"]||-1),
|
|
cl = (root["_l"]||-1);
|
|
|
|
if(!tret){ return -1; }
|
|
var l = tret.length;
|
|
|
|
// we calcuate the parent length as a cheap way to invalidate the
|
|
// cache. It's not 100% accurate, but it's much more honest than what
|
|
// other libraries do
|
|
if( cl == l && ci >= 0 && cl >= 0 ){
|
|
// if it's legit, tag and release
|
|
return ci;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// else re-key things
|
|
root["_l"] = l;
|
|
ci = -1;
|
|
for(var te = root["firstElementChild"]||root["firstChild"]; te; te = te[_ns]){
|
|
if(_simpleNodeTest(te)){
|
|
te["_i"] = ++i;
|
|
if(node === te){
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// shortcuting the return at this step in indexing works
|
|
// very well for benchmarking but we avoid it here since
|
|
// it leads to potential O(n^2) behavior in sequential
|
|
// getNodexIndex operations on a previously un-indexed
|
|
// parent. We may revisit this at a later time, but for
|
|
// now we just want to get the right answer more often
|
|
// than not.
|
|
ci = i;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ci;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var isEven = function(elem){
|
|
return !((getNodeIndex(elem)) % 2);
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var isOdd = function(elem){
|
|
return ((getNodeIndex(elem)) % 2);
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var pseudos = {
|
|
"checked": function(name, condition){
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return !!("checked" in elem ? elem.checked : elem.selected);
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
"first-child": function(){ return _lookLeft; },
|
|
"last-child": function(){ return _lookRight; },
|
|
"only-child": function(name, condition){
|
|
return function(node){
|
|
if(!_lookLeft(node)){ return false; }
|
|
if(!_lookRight(node)){ return false; }
|
|
return true;
|
|
};
|
|
},
|
|
"empty": function(name, condition){
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
// DomQuery and jQuery get this wrong, oddly enough.
|
|
// The CSS 3 selectors spec is pretty explicit about it, too.
|
|
var cn = elem.childNodes;
|
|
var cnl = elem.childNodes.length;
|
|
// if(!cnl){ return true; }
|
|
for(var x=cnl-1; x >= 0; x--){
|
|
var nt = cn[x].nodeType;
|
|
if((nt === 1)||(nt == 3)){ return false; }
|
|
}
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
"contains": function(name, condition){
|
|
var cz = condition.charAt(0);
|
|
if( cz == '"' || cz == "'" ){ //remove quote
|
|
condition = condition.slice(1, -1);
|
|
}
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return (elem.innerHTML.indexOf(condition) >= 0);
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
"not": function(name, condition){
|
|
var p = getQueryParts(condition)[0];
|
|
var ignores = { el: 1 };
|
|
if(p.tag != "*"){
|
|
ignores.tag = 1;
|
|
}
|
|
if(!p.classes.length){
|
|
ignores.classes = 1;
|
|
}
|
|
var ntf = getSimpleFilterFunc(p, ignores);
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return (!ntf(elem));
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
"nth-child": function(name, condition){
|
|
var pi = parseInt;
|
|
// avoid re-defining function objects if we can
|
|
if(condition == "odd"){
|
|
return isOdd;
|
|
}else if(condition == "even"){
|
|
return isEven;
|
|
}
|
|
// FIXME: can we shorten this?
|
|
if(condition.indexOf("n") != -1){
|
|
var tparts = condition.split("n", 2);
|
|
var pred = tparts[0] ? ((tparts[0] == '-') ? -1 : pi(tparts[0])) : 1;
|
|
var idx = tparts[1] ? pi(tparts[1]) : 0;
|
|
var lb = 0, ub = -1;
|
|
if(pred > 0){
|
|
if(idx < 0){
|
|
idx = (idx % pred) && (pred + (idx % pred));
|
|
}else if(idx>0){
|
|
if(idx >= pred){
|
|
lb = idx - idx % pred;
|
|
}
|
|
idx = idx % pred;
|
|
}
|
|
}else if(pred<0){
|
|
pred *= -1;
|
|
// idx has to be greater than 0 when pred is negative;
|
|
// shall we throw an error here?
|
|
if(idx > 0){
|
|
ub = idx;
|
|
idx = idx % pred;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
if(pred > 0){
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
var i = getNodeIndex(elem);
|
|
return (i>=lb) && (ub<0 || i<=ub) && ((i % pred) == idx);
|
|
}
|
|
}else{
|
|
condition = idx;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
var ncount = pi(condition);
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return (getNodeIndex(elem) == ncount);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var defaultGetter = (d.isIE) ? function(cond){
|
|
var clc = cond.toLowerCase();
|
|
if(clc == "class"){ cond = "className"; }
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return (caseSensitive ? elem.getAttribute(cond) : elem[cond]||elem[clc]);
|
|
}
|
|
} : function(cond){
|
|
return function(elem){
|
|
return (elem && elem.getAttribute && elem.hasAttribute(cond));
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var getSimpleFilterFunc = function(query, ignores){
|
|
// generates a node tester function based on the passed query part. The
|
|
// query part is one of the structures generatd by the query parser
|
|
// when it creates the query AST. The "ignores" object specifies which
|
|
// (if any) tests to skip, allowing the system to avoid duplicating
|
|
// work where it may have already been taken into account by other
|
|
// factors such as how the nodes to test were fetched in the first
|
|
// place
|
|
if(!query){ return yesman; }
|
|
ignores = ignores||{};
|
|
|
|
var ff = null;
|
|
|
|
if(!("el" in ignores)){
|
|
ff = agree(ff, _isElement);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!("tag" in ignores)){
|
|
if(query.tag != "*"){
|
|
ff = agree(ff, function(elem){
|
|
return (elem && (elem.tagName == query.getTag()));
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!("classes" in ignores)){
|
|
each(query.classes, function(cname, idx, arr){
|
|
// get the class name
|
|
/*
|
|
var isWildcard = cname.charAt(cname.length-1) == "*";
|
|
if(isWildcard){
|
|
cname = cname.substr(0, cname.length-1);
|
|
}
|
|
// I dislike the regex thing, even if memozied in a cache, but it's VERY short
|
|
var re = new RegExp("(?:^|\\s)" + cname + (isWildcard ? ".*" : "") + "(?:\\s|$)");
|
|
*/
|
|
var re = new RegExp("(?:^|\\s)" + cname + "(?:\\s|$)");
|
|
ff = agree(ff, function(elem){
|
|
return re.test(elem.className);
|
|
});
|
|
ff.count = idx;
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!("pseudos" in ignores)){
|
|
each(query.pseudos, function(pseudo){
|
|
var pn = pseudo.name;
|
|
if(pseudos[pn]){
|
|
ff = agree(ff, pseudos[pn](pn, pseudo.value));
|
|
}
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!("attrs" in ignores)){
|
|
each(query.attrs, function(attr){
|
|
var matcher;
|
|
var a = attr.attr;
|
|
// type, attr, matchFor
|
|
if(attr.type && attrs[attr.type]){
|
|
matcher = attrs[attr.type](a, attr.matchFor);
|
|
}else if(a.length){
|
|
matcher = defaultGetter(a);
|
|
}
|
|
if(matcher){
|
|
ff = agree(ff, matcher);
|
|
}
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!("id" in ignores)){
|
|
if(query.id){
|
|
ff = agree(ff, function(elem){
|
|
return (!!elem && (elem.id == query.id));
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(!ff){
|
|
if(!("default" in ignores)){
|
|
ff = yesman;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ff;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var _nextSibling = function(filterFunc){
|
|
return function(node, ret, bag){
|
|
while(node = node[_ns]){
|
|
if(_noNES && (!_isElement(node))){ continue; }
|
|
if(
|
|
(!bag || _isUnique(node, bag)) &&
|
|
filterFunc(node)
|
|
){
|
|
ret.push(node);
|
|
}
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var _nextSiblings = function(filterFunc){
|
|
return function(root, ret, bag){
|
|
var te = root[_ns];
|
|
while(te){
|
|
if(_simpleNodeTest(te)){
|
|
if(bag && !_isUnique(te, bag)){
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
if(filterFunc(te)){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
te = te[_ns];
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// get an array of child *elements*, skipping text and comment nodes
|
|
var _childElements = function(filterFunc){
|
|
filterFunc = filterFunc||yesman;
|
|
return function(root, ret, bag){
|
|
// get an array of child elements, skipping text and comment nodes
|
|
var te, x = 0, tret = root[childNodesName];
|
|
while(te = tret[x++]){
|
|
if(
|
|
_simpleNodeTest(te) &&
|
|
(!bag || _isUnique(te, bag)) &&
|
|
(filterFunc(te, x))
|
|
){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
// thanks, Dean!
|
|
var itemIsAfterRoot = d.isIE ? function(item, root){
|
|
return (item.sourceIndex > root.sourceIndex);
|
|
} : function(item, root){
|
|
return (item.compareDocumentPosition(root) == 2);
|
|
};
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
// test to see if node is below root
|
|
var _isDescendant = function(node, root){
|
|
var pn = node.parentNode;
|
|
while(pn){
|
|
if(pn == root){
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
pn = pn.parentNode;
|
|
}
|
|
return !!pn;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var _getElementsFuncCache = {};
|
|
|
|
var getElementsFunc = function(query){
|
|
var retFunc = _getElementsFuncCache[query.query];
|
|
// if we've got a cached dispatcher, just use that
|
|
if(retFunc){ return retFunc; }
|
|
// else, generate a new on
|
|
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// this function returns a function that searches for nodes and
|
|
// filters them. The search may be specialized by infix operators
|
|
// (">", "~", or "+") else it will default to searching all
|
|
// descendants (the " " selector). Once a group of children is
|
|
// founde, a test function is applied to weed out the ones we
|
|
// don't want. Many common cases can be fast-pathed. We spend a
|
|
// lot of cycles to create a dispatcher that doesn't do more work
|
|
// than necessary at any point since, unlike this function, the
|
|
// dispatchers will be called every time. The logic of generating
|
|
// efficient dispatchers looks like this in pseudo code:
|
|
//
|
|
// # if it's a purely descendant query (no ">", "+", or "~" modifiers)
|
|
// if infixOperator == " ":
|
|
// if only(id):
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return d.byId(id, root);
|
|
//
|
|
// elif id:
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(d.byId(id, root));
|
|
//
|
|
// elif cssClass && getElementsByClassName:
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(root.getElementsByClassName(cssClass));
|
|
//
|
|
// elif only(tag):
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return root.getElementsByTagName(tagName);
|
|
//
|
|
// else:
|
|
// # search by tag name, then filter
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(root.getElementsByTagName(tagName||"*"));
|
|
//
|
|
// elif infixOperator == ">":
|
|
// # search direct children
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(root.children);
|
|
//
|
|
// elif infixOperator == "+":
|
|
// # search next sibling
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(root.nextElementSibling);
|
|
//
|
|
// elif infixOperator == "~":
|
|
// # search rightward siblings
|
|
// return def(root):
|
|
// return filter(nextSiblings(root));
|
|
|
|
var io = query.infixOper;
|
|
var oper = (io ? io.oper : "");
|
|
// the default filter func which tests for all conditions in the query
|
|
// part. This is potentially inefficient, so some optimized paths may
|
|
// re-define it to test fewer things.
|
|
var filterFunc = getSimpleFilterFunc(query, { el: 1 });
|
|
var qt = query.tag;
|
|
var wildcardTag = ("*" == qt);
|
|
var ecs = getDoc()["getElementsByClassName"];
|
|
|
|
if(!oper){
|
|
// if there's no infix operator, then it's a descendant query. ID
|
|
// and "elements by class name" variants can be accelerated so we
|
|
// call them out explicitly:
|
|
if(query.id){
|
|
// testing shows that the overhead of yesman() is acceptable
|
|
// and can save us some bytes vs. re-defining the function
|
|
// everywhere.
|
|
filterFunc = (!query.loops && wildcardTag) ?
|
|
yesman :
|
|
getSimpleFilterFunc(query, { el: 1, id: 1 });
|
|
|
|
retFunc = function(root, arr){
|
|
var te = d.byId(query.id, (root.ownerDocument||root));
|
|
if(!te || !filterFunc(te)){ return; }
|
|
if(9 == root.nodeType){ // if root's a doc, we just return directly
|
|
return getArr(te, arr);
|
|
}else{ // otherwise check ancestry
|
|
if(_isDescendant(te, root)){
|
|
return getArr(te, arr);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}else if(
|
|
ecs &&
|
|
// isAlien check. Workaround for Prototype.js being totally evil/dumb.
|
|
/\{\s*\[native code\]\s*\}/.test(String(ecs)) &&
|
|
query.classes.length &&
|
|
!cssCaseBug
|
|
){
|
|
// it's a class-based query and we've got a fast way to run it.
|
|
|
|
// ignore class and ID filters since we will have handled both
|
|
filterFunc = getSimpleFilterFunc(query, { el: 1, classes: 1, id: 1 });
|
|
var classesString = query.classes.join(" ");
|
|
retFunc = function(root, arr, bag){
|
|
var ret = getArr(0, arr), te, x=0;
|
|
var tret = root.getElementsByClassName(classesString);
|
|
while((te = tret[x++])){
|
|
if(filterFunc(te, root) && _isUnique(te, bag)){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
}else if(!wildcardTag && !query.loops){
|
|
// it's tag only. Fast-path it.
|
|
retFunc = function(root, arr, bag){
|
|
var ret = getArr(0, arr), te, x=0;
|
|
var tret = root.getElementsByTagName(query.getTag());
|
|
while((te = tret[x++])){
|
|
if(_isUnique(te, bag)){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
}else{
|
|
// the common case:
|
|
// a descendant selector without a fast path. By now it's got
|
|
// to have a tag selector, even if it's just "*" so we query
|
|
// by that and filter
|
|
filterFunc = getSimpleFilterFunc(query, { el: 1, tag: 1, id: 1 });
|
|
retFunc = function(root, arr, bag){
|
|
var ret = getArr(0, arr), te, x=0;
|
|
// we use getTag() to avoid case sensitivity issues
|
|
var tret = root.getElementsByTagName(query.getTag());
|
|
while((te = tret[x++])){
|
|
if(filterFunc(te, root) && _isUnique(te, bag)){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
}else{
|
|
// the query is scoped in some way. Instead of querying by tag we
|
|
// use some other collection to find candidate nodes
|
|
var skipFilters = { el: 1 };
|
|
if(wildcardTag){
|
|
skipFilters.tag = 1;
|
|
}
|
|
filterFunc = getSimpleFilterFunc(query, skipFilters);
|
|
if("+" == oper){
|
|
retFunc = _nextSibling(filterFunc);
|
|
}else if("~" == oper){
|
|
retFunc = _nextSiblings(filterFunc);
|
|
}else if(">" == oper){
|
|
retFunc = _childElements(filterFunc);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
// cache it and return
|
|
return _getElementsFuncCache[query.query] = retFunc;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var filterDown = function(root, queryParts){
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// this is the guts of the DOM query system. It takes a list of
|
|
// parsed query parts and a root and finds children which match
|
|
// the selector represented by the parts
|
|
var candidates = getArr(root), qp, x, te, qpl = queryParts.length, bag, ret;
|
|
|
|
for(var i = 0; i < qpl; i++){
|
|
ret = [];
|
|
qp = queryParts[i];
|
|
x = candidates.length - 1;
|
|
if(x > 0){
|
|
// if we have more than one root at this level, provide a new
|
|
// hash to use for checking group membership but tell the
|
|
// system not to post-filter us since we will already have been
|
|
// gauranteed to be unique
|
|
bag = {};
|
|
ret.nozip = true;
|
|
}
|
|
var gef = getElementsFunc(qp);
|
|
for(var j = 0; (te = candidates[j]); j++){
|
|
// for every root, get the elements that match the descendant
|
|
// selector, adding them to the "ret" array and filtering them
|
|
// via membership in this level's bag. If there are more query
|
|
// parts, then this level's return will be used as the next
|
|
// level's candidates
|
|
gef(te, ret, bag);
|
|
}
|
|
if(!ret.length){ break; }
|
|
candidates = ret;
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|
|
// the query runner
|
|
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|
|
|
|
// these are the primary caches for full-query results. The query
|
|
// dispatcher functions are generated then stored here for hash lookup in
|
|
// the future
|
|
var _queryFuncCacheDOM = {},
|
|
_queryFuncCacheQSA = {};
|
|
|
|
// this is the second level of spliting, from full-length queries (e.g.,
|
|
// "div.foo .bar") into simple query expressions (e.g., ["div.foo",
|
|
// ".bar"])
|
|
var getStepQueryFunc = function(query){
|
|
var qparts = getQueryParts(trim(query));
|
|
|
|
// if it's trivial, avoid iteration and zipping costs
|
|
if(qparts.length == 1){
|
|
// we optimize this case here to prevent dispatch further down the
|
|
// chain, potentially slowing things down. We could more elegantly
|
|
// handle this in filterDown(), but it's slower for simple things
|
|
// that need to be fast (e.g., "#someId").
|
|
var tef = getElementsFunc(qparts[0]);
|
|
return function(root){
|
|
var r = tef(root, new qlc());
|
|
if(r){ r.nozip = true; }
|
|
return r;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// otherwise, break it up and return a runner that iterates over the parts recursively
|
|
return function(root){
|
|
return filterDown(root, qparts);
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// NOTES:
|
|
// * we can't trust QSA for anything but document-rooted queries, so
|
|
// caching is split into DOM query evaluators and QSA query evaluators
|
|
// * caching query results is dirty and leak-prone (or, at a minimum,
|
|
// prone to unbounded growth). Other toolkits may go this route, but
|
|
// they totally destroy their own ability to manage their memory
|
|
// footprint. If we implement it, it should only ever be with a fixed
|
|
// total element reference # limit and an LRU-style algorithm since JS
|
|
// has no weakref support. Caching compiled query evaluators is also
|
|
// potentially problematic, but even on large documents the size of the
|
|
// query evaluators is often < 100 function objects per evaluator (and
|
|
// LRU can be applied if it's ever shown to be an issue).
|
|
// * since IE's QSA support is currently only for HTML documents and even
|
|
// then only in IE 8's "standards mode", we have to detect our dispatch
|
|
// route at query time and keep 2 separate caches. Ugg.
|
|
|
|
// we need to determine if we think we can run a given query via
|
|
// querySelectorAll or if we'll need to fall back on DOM queries to get
|
|
// there. We need a lot of information about the environment and the query
|
|
// to make the determiniation (e.g. does it support QSA, does the query in
|
|
// question work in the native QSA impl, etc.).
|
|
var nua = navigator.userAgent;
|
|
// some versions of Safari provided QSA, but it was buggy and crash-prone.
|
|
// We need te detect the right "internal" webkit version to make this work.
|
|
var wk = "WebKit/";
|
|
var is525 = (
|
|
d.isWebKit &&
|
|
(nua.indexOf(wk) > 0) &&
|
|
(parseFloat(nua.split(wk)[1]) > 528)
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
// IE QSA queries may incorrectly include comment nodes, so we throw the
|
|
// zipping function into "remove" comments mode instead of the normal "skip
|
|
// it" which every other QSA-clued browser enjoys
|
|
var noZip = d.isIE ? "commentStrip" : "nozip";
|
|
|
|
var qsa = "querySelectorAll";
|
|
var qsaAvail = (
|
|
!!getDoc()[qsa] &&
|
|
// see #5832
|
|
(!d.isSafari || (d.isSafari > 3.1) || is525 )
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
//Don't bother with n+3 type of matches, IE complains if we modify those.
|
|
var infixSpaceRe = /n\+\d|([^ ])?([>~+])([^ =])?/g;
|
|
var infixSpaceFunc = function(match, pre, ch, post) {
|
|
return ch ? (pre ? pre + " " : "") + ch + (post ? " " + post : "") : /*n+3*/ match;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var getQueryFunc = function(query, forceDOM){
|
|
//Normalize query. The CSS3 selectors spec allows for omitting spaces around
|
|
//infix operators, >, ~ and +
|
|
//Do the work here since detection for spaces is used as a simple "not use QSA"
|
|
//test below.
|
|
query = query.replace(infixSpaceRe, infixSpaceFunc);
|
|
|
|
if(qsaAvail){
|
|
// if we've got a cached variant and we think we can do it, run it!
|
|
var qsaCached = _queryFuncCacheQSA[query];
|
|
if(qsaCached && !forceDOM){ return qsaCached; }
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// else if we've got a DOM cached variant, assume that we already know
|
|
// all we need to and use it
|
|
var domCached = _queryFuncCacheDOM[query];
|
|
if(domCached){ return domCached; }
|
|
|
|
// TODO:
|
|
// today we're caching DOM and QSA branches separately so we
|
|
// recalc useQSA every time. If we had a way to tag root+query
|
|
// efficiently, we'd be in good shape to do a global cache.
|
|
|
|
var qcz = query.charAt(0);
|
|
var nospace = (-1 == query.indexOf(" "));
|
|
|
|
// byId searches are wicked fast compared to QSA, even when filtering
|
|
// is required
|
|
if( (query.indexOf("#") >= 0) && (nospace) ){
|
|
forceDOM = true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
var useQSA = (
|
|
qsaAvail && (!forceDOM) &&
|
|
// as per CSS 3, we can't currently start w/ combinator:
|
|
// http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-selectors/#w3cselgrammar
|
|
(specials.indexOf(qcz) == -1) &&
|
|
// IE's QSA impl sucks on pseudos
|
|
(!d.isIE || (query.indexOf(":") == -1)) &&
|
|
|
|
(!(cssCaseBug && (query.indexOf(".") >= 0))) &&
|
|
|
|
// FIXME:
|
|
// need to tighten up browser rules on ":contains" and "|=" to
|
|
// figure out which aren't good
|
|
// Latest webkit (around 531.21.8) does not seem to do well with :checked on option
|
|
// elements, even though according to spec, selected options should
|
|
// match :checked. So go nonQSA for it:
|
|
// http://bugs.dojotoolkit.org/ticket/5179
|
|
(query.indexOf(":contains") == -1) && (query.indexOf(":checked") == -1) &&
|
|
(query.indexOf("|=") == -1) // some browsers don't grok it
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
// TODO:
|
|
// if we've got a descendant query (e.g., "> .thinger" instead of
|
|
// just ".thinger") in a QSA-able doc, but are passed a child as a
|
|
// root, it should be possible to give the item a synthetic ID and
|
|
// trivially rewrite the query to the form "#synid > .thinger" to
|
|
// use the QSA branch
|
|
|
|
|
|
if(useQSA){
|
|
var tq = (specials.indexOf(query.charAt(query.length-1)) >= 0) ?
|
|
(query + " *") : query;
|
|
return _queryFuncCacheQSA[query] = function(root){
|
|
try{
|
|
// the QSA system contains an egregious spec bug which
|
|
// limits us, effectively, to only running QSA queries over
|
|
// entire documents. See:
|
|
// http://ejohn.org/blog/thoughts-on-queryselectorall/
|
|
// despite this, we can also handle QSA runs on simple
|
|
// selectors, but we don't want detection to be expensive
|
|
// so we're just checking for the presence of a space char
|
|
// right now. Not elegant, but it's cheaper than running
|
|
// the query parser when we might not need to
|
|
if(!((9 == root.nodeType) || nospace)){ throw ""; }
|
|
var r = root[qsa](tq);
|
|
// skip expensive duplication checks and just wrap in a NodeList
|
|
r[noZip] = true;
|
|
return r;
|
|
}catch(e){
|
|
// else run the DOM branch on this query, ensuring that we
|
|
// default that way in the future
|
|
return getQueryFunc(query, true)(root);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}else{
|
|
// DOM branch
|
|
var parts = query.split(/\s*,\s*/);
|
|
return _queryFuncCacheDOM[query] = ((parts.length < 2) ?
|
|
// if not a compound query (e.g., ".foo, .bar"), cache and return a dispatcher
|
|
getStepQueryFunc(query) :
|
|
// if it *is* a complex query, break it up into its
|
|
// constituent parts and return a dispatcher that will
|
|
// merge the parts when run
|
|
function(root){
|
|
var pindex = 0, // avoid array alloc for every invocation
|
|
ret = [],
|
|
tp;
|
|
while((tp = parts[pindex++])){
|
|
ret = ret.concat(getStepQueryFunc(tp)(root));
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
}
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
var _zipIdx = 0;
|
|
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// this function is Moo inspired, but our own impl to deal correctly
|
|
// with XML in IE
|
|
var _nodeUID = d.isIE ? function(node){
|
|
if(caseSensitive){
|
|
// XML docs don't have uniqueID on their nodes
|
|
return (node.getAttribute("_uid") || node.setAttribute("_uid", ++_zipIdx) || _zipIdx);
|
|
|
|
}else{
|
|
return node.uniqueID;
|
|
}
|
|
} :
|
|
function(node){
|
|
return (node._uid || (node._uid = ++_zipIdx));
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// determine if a node in is unique in a "bag". In this case we don't want
|
|
// to flatten a list of unique items, but rather just tell if the item in
|
|
// question is already in the bag. Normally we'd just use hash lookup to do
|
|
// this for us but IE's DOM is busted so we can't really count on that. On
|
|
// the upside, it gives us a built in unique ID function.
|
|
var _isUnique = function(node, bag){
|
|
if(!bag){ return 1; }
|
|
var id = _nodeUID(node);
|
|
if(!bag[id]){ return bag[id] = 1; }
|
|
return 0;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// attempt to efficiently determine if an item in a list is a dupe,
|
|
// returning a list of "uniques", hopefully in doucment order
|
|
var _zipIdxName = "_zipIdx";
|
|
var _zip = function(arr){
|
|
if(arr && arr.nozip){
|
|
return (qlc._wrap) ? qlc._wrap(arr) : arr;
|
|
}
|
|
// var ret = new d._NodeListCtor();
|
|
var ret = new qlc();
|
|
if(!arr || !arr.length){ return ret; }
|
|
if(arr[0]){
|
|
ret.push(arr[0]);
|
|
}
|
|
if(arr.length < 2){ return ret; }
|
|
|
|
_zipIdx++;
|
|
|
|
// we have to fork here for IE and XML docs because we can't set
|
|
// expandos on their nodes (apparently). *sigh*
|
|
if(d.isIE && caseSensitive){
|
|
var szidx = _zipIdx+"";
|
|
arr[0].setAttribute(_zipIdxName, szidx);
|
|
for(var x = 1, te; te = arr[x]; x++){
|
|
if(arr[x].getAttribute(_zipIdxName) != szidx){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
te.setAttribute(_zipIdxName, szidx);
|
|
}
|
|
}else if(d.isIE && arr.commentStrip){
|
|
try{
|
|
for(var x = 1, te; te = arr[x]; x++){
|
|
if(_isElement(te)){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}catch(e){ /* squelch */ }
|
|
}else{
|
|
if(arr[0]){ arr[0][_zipIdxName] = _zipIdx; }
|
|
for(var x = 1, te; te = arr[x]; x++){
|
|
if(arr[x][_zipIdxName] != _zipIdx){
|
|
ret.push(te);
|
|
}
|
|
te[_zipIdxName] = _zipIdx;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
return ret;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// the main executor
|
|
d.query = function(/*String*/ query, /*String|DOMNode?*/ root){
|
|
// summary:
|
|
// Returns nodes which match the given CSS3 selector, searching the
|
|
// entire document by default but optionally taking a node to scope
|
|
// the search by. Returns an instance of dojo.NodeList.
|
|
// description:
|
|
// dojo.query() is the swiss army knife of DOM node manipulation in
|
|
// Dojo. Much like Prototype's "$$" (bling-bling) function or JQuery's
|
|
// "$" function, dojo.query provides robust, high-performance
|
|
// CSS-based node selector support with the option of scoping searches
|
|
// to a particular sub-tree of a document.
|
|
//
|
|
// Supported Selectors:
|
|
// --------------------
|
|
//
|
|
// dojo.query() supports a rich set of CSS3 selectors, including:
|
|
//
|
|
// * class selectors (e.g., `.foo`)
|
|
// * node type selectors like `span`
|
|
// * ` ` descendant selectors
|
|
// * `>` child element selectors
|
|
// * `#foo` style ID selectors
|
|
// * `*` universal selector
|
|
// * `~`, the immediately preceeded-by sibling selector
|
|
// * `+`, the preceeded-by sibling selector
|
|
// * attribute queries:
|
|
// | * `[foo]` attribute presence selector
|
|
// | * `[foo='bar']` attribute value exact match
|
|
// | * `[foo~='bar']` attribute value list item match
|
|
// | * `[foo^='bar']` attribute start match
|
|
// | * `[foo$='bar']` attribute end match
|
|
// | * `[foo*='bar']` attribute substring match
|
|
// * `:first-child`, `:last-child`, and `:only-child` positional selectors
|
|
// * `:empty` content emtpy selector
|
|
// * `:checked` pseudo selector
|
|
// * `:nth-child(n)`, `:nth-child(2n+1)` style positional calculations
|
|
// * `:nth-child(even)`, `:nth-child(odd)` positional selectors
|
|
// * `:not(...)` negation pseudo selectors
|
|
//
|
|
// Any legal combination of these selectors will work with
|
|
// `dojo.query()`, including compound selectors ("," delimited).
|
|
// Very complex and useful searches can be constructed with this
|
|
// palette of selectors and when combined with functions for
|
|
// manipulation presented by dojo.NodeList, many types of DOM
|
|
// manipulation operations become very straightforward.
|
|
//
|
|
// Unsupported Selectors:
|
|
// ----------------------
|
|
//
|
|
// While dojo.query handles many CSS3 selectors, some fall outside of
|
|
// what's resaonable for a programmatic node querying engine to
|
|
// handle. Currently unsupported selectors include:
|
|
//
|
|
// * namespace-differentiated selectors of any form
|
|
// * all `::` pseduo-element selectors
|
|
// * certain pseduo-selectors which don't get a lot of day-to-day use:
|
|
// | * `:root`, `:lang()`, `:target`, `:focus`
|
|
// * all visual and state selectors:
|
|
// | * `:root`, `:active`, `:hover`, `:visisted`, `:link`,
|
|
// `:enabled`, `:disabled`
|
|
// * `:*-of-type` pseudo selectors
|
|
//
|
|
// dojo.query and XML Documents:
|
|
// -----------------------------
|
|
//
|
|
// `dojo.query` (as of dojo 1.2) supports searching XML documents
|
|
// in a case-sensitive manner. If an HTML document is served with
|
|
// a doctype that forces case-sensitivity (e.g., XHTML 1.1
|
|
// Strict), dojo.query() will detect this and "do the right
|
|
// thing". Case sensitivity is dependent upon the document being
|
|
// searched and not the query used. It is therefore possible to
|
|
// use case-sensitive queries on strict sub-documents (iframes,
|
|
// etc.) or XML documents while still assuming case-insensitivity
|
|
// for a host/root document.
|
|
//
|
|
// Non-selector Queries:
|
|
// ---------------------
|
|
//
|
|
// If something other than a String is passed for the query,
|
|
// `dojo.query` will return a new `dojo.NodeList` instance
|
|
// constructed from that parameter alone and all further
|
|
// processing will stop. This means that if you have a reference
|
|
// to a node or NodeList, you can quickly construct a new NodeList
|
|
// from the original by calling `dojo.query(node)` or
|
|
// `dojo.query(list)`.
|
|
//
|
|
// query:
|
|
// The CSS3 expression to match against. For details on the syntax of
|
|
// CSS3 selectors, see <http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-selectors/#selectors>
|
|
// root:
|
|
// A DOMNode (or node id) to scope the search from. Optional.
|
|
// returns: dojo.NodeList
|
|
// An instance of `dojo.NodeList`. Many methods are available on
|
|
// NodeLists for searching, iterating, manipulating, and handling
|
|
// events on the matched nodes in the returned list.
|
|
// example:
|
|
// search the entire document for elements with the class "foo":
|
|
// | dojo.query(".foo");
|
|
// these elements will match:
|
|
// | <span class="foo"></span>
|
|
// | <span class="foo bar"></span>
|
|
// | <p class="thud foo"></p>
|
|
// example:
|
|
// search the entire document for elements with the classes "foo" *and* "bar":
|
|
// | dojo.query(".foo.bar");
|
|
// these elements will match:
|
|
// | <span class="foo bar"></span>
|
|
// while these will not:
|
|
// | <span class="foo"></span>
|
|
// | <p class="thud foo"></p>
|
|
// example:
|
|
// find `<span>` elements which are descendants of paragraphs and
|
|
// which have a "highlighted" class:
|
|
// | dojo.query("p span.highlighted");
|
|
// the innermost span in this fragment matches:
|
|
// | <p class="foo">
|
|
// | <span>...
|
|
// | <span class="highlighted foo bar">...</span>
|
|
// | </span>
|
|
// | </p>
|
|
// example:
|
|
// set an "odd" class on all odd table rows inside of the table
|
|
// `#tabular_data`, using the `>` (direct child) selector to avoid
|
|
// affecting any nested tables:
|
|
// | dojo.query("#tabular_data > tbody > tr:nth-child(odd)").addClass("odd");
|
|
// example:
|
|
// remove all elements with the class "error" from the document
|
|
// and store them in a list:
|
|
// | var errors = dojo.query(".error").orphan();
|
|
// example:
|
|
// add an onclick handler to every submit button in the document
|
|
// which causes the form to be sent via Ajax instead:
|
|
// | dojo.query("input[type='submit']").onclick(function(e){
|
|
// | dojo.stopEvent(e); // prevent sending the form
|
|
// | var btn = e.target;
|
|
// | dojo.xhrPost({
|
|
// | form: btn.form,
|
|
// | load: function(data){
|
|
// | // replace the form with the response
|
|
// | var div = dojo.doc.createElement("div");
|
|
// | dojo.place(div, btn.form, "after");
|
|
// | div.innerHTML = data;
|
|
// | dojo.style(btn.form, "display", "none");
|
|
// | }
|
|
// | });
|
|
// | });
|
|
|
|
//Set list constructor to desired value. This can change
|
|
//between calls, so always re-assign here.
|
|
qlc = d._NodeListCtor;
|
|
|
|
if(!query){
|
|
return new qlc();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if(query.constructor == qlc){
|
|
return query;
|
|
}
|
|
if(typeof query != "string"){ // inline'd type check
|
|
return new qlc(query); // dojo.NodeList
|
|
}
|
|
if(typeof root == "string"){ // inline'd type check
|
|
root = d.byId(root);
|
|
if(!root){ return new qlc(); }
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
root = root||getDoc();
|
|
var od = root.ownerDocument||root.documentElement;
|
|
|
|
// throw the big case sensitivity switch
|
|
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// Opera in XHTML mode doesn't detect case-sensitivity correctly
|
|
// and it's not clear that there's any way to test for it
|
|
caseSensitive = (root.contentType && root.contentType=="application/xml") ||
|
|
(d.isOpera && (root.doctype || od.toString() == "[object XMLDocument]")) ||
|
|
(!!od) &&
|
|
(d.isIE ? od.xml : (root.xmlVersion||od.xmlVersion));
|
|
|
|
// NOTE:
|
|
// adding "true" as the 2nd argument to getQueryFunc is useful for
|
|
// testing the DOM branch without worrying about the
|
|
// behavior/performance of the QSA branch.
|
|
var r = getQueryFunc(query)(root);
|
|
|
|
// FIXME:
|
|
// need to investigate this branch WRT #8074 and #8075
|
|
if(r && r.nozip && !qlc._wrap){
|
|
return r;
|
|
}
|
|
return _zip(r); // dojo.NodeList
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// FIXME: need to add infrastructure for post-filtering pseudos, ala :last
|
|
d.query.pseudos = pseudos;
|
|
|
|
// one-off function for filtering a NodeList based on a simple selector
|
|
d._filterQueryResult = function(nodeList, simpleFilter){
|
|
var tmpNodeList = new d._NodeListCtor();
|
|
var filterFunc = getSimpleFilterFunc(getQueryParts(simpleFilter)[0]);
|
|
for(var x = 0, te; te = nodeList[x]; x++){
|
|
if(filterFunc(te)){ tmpNodeList.push(te); }
|
|
}
|
|
return tmpNodeList;
|
|
}
|
|
})(this["queryPortability"]||this["acme"]||dojo);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
}
|