October 2001, --Jcid Last update: Dec 2004 --------------- THE HTML PARSER --------------- Dillo's parser is more than just a HTML parser, it does XHTML and plain text also. It has parsing 'modes' that define its behaviour while working: typedef enum { DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_INIT, DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_STASH, DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_STASH_AND_BODY, DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_BODY, DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_VERBATIM, DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_PRE } DilloHtmlParseMode; The parser works upon a token-grained basis, i.e., the data stream is parsed into tokens and the parser is fed with them. The process is simple: whenever the cache has new data, it gets passed to Html_write, which groups data into tokens and calls the appropriate functions for the token type (TAG, SPACE or WORD). Note: when in DILLO_HTML_PARSE_MODE_VERBATIM, the parser doesn't try to split the data stream into tokens anymore, it simply collects until the closing tag. ------ TOKENS ------ * A chunk of WHITE SPACE --> Html_process_space * TAG --> Html_process_tag The tag-start is defined by two adjacent characters: first : '<' second: ALPHA | '/' | '!' | '?' Note: comments are discarded ( ) The tag's end is not as easy to find, nor to deal with!: 1) The HTML 4.01 sec. 3.2.2 states that "Attribute/value pairs appear before the final '>' of an element's start tag", but it doesn't define how to discriminate the "final" '>'. 2) '<' and '>' should be escaped as '<' and '>' inside attribute values. 3) The XML SPEC for XHTML states: AttrValue ::== '"' ([^<&"] | Reference)* '"' | "'" ([^<&'] | Reference)* "'" Current parser honors the XML SPEC. As it's a common mistake for human authors to mistype or forget one of the quote marks of an attribute value; the parser solves the problem with a look-ahead technique (otherwise the parser could skip significative amounts of well written HTML). * WORD --> Html_process_word A word is anything that doesn't start with SPACE, and that's outside of a tag, up to the first SPACE or tag start. SPACE = ' ' | \n | \r | \t | \f | \v ----------------- THE PARSING STACK ----------------- The parsing state of the document is kept in a stack: struct _DilloHtml { [...] DilloHtmlState *stack; gint stack_top; /* Index to the top of the stack [0 based] */ gint stack_max; [...] }; struct _DilloHtmlState { char *tag; DwStyle *style, *table_cell_style; DilloHtmlParseMode parse_mode; DilloHtmlTableMode table_mode; gint list_level; gint list_number; DwWidget *page, *table; gint32 current_bg_color; }; Basically, when a TAG is processed, a new state is pushed into the 'stack' and its 'style' is set to reflect the desired appearance (details in DwStyle.txt). That way, when a word is processed later (added to the Dw), all the information is within the top state. Closing TAGs just pop the stack.