//! Character references are a construct that occurs in the [string][] and //! [text][] content types. //! //! They’re formed with the following BNF: //! //! ```bnf //! character_reference ::= '&' (numeric | named) ';' //! //! numeric ::= '#' (hexadecimal | decimal) //! ; Note: Limit of `6` imposed as all bigger numbers are invalid: //! hexadecimal ::= ('x' | 'X') 1*6(ascii_hexdigit) //! ; Note: Limit of `7` imposed as all bigger numbers are invalid: //! decimal ::= 1*7(ascii_digit) //! ; Note: Limit of `31` imposed by `CounterClockwiseContourIntegral`: //! ; Note: Limited to any known named character reference (see `constants.rs`) //! named ::= 1*31(ascii_alphanumeric) //! ``` //! //! Like much of markdown, there are no “invalid” character references. //! However, for security reasons, several numeric character references parse //! fine but are not rendered as their corresponding character and they are //! instead replaced by a U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (`�`). //! See [`decode_numeric`][decode_numeric] for more info. //! //! To escape ASCII punctuation characters, use the terser //! [character escape][character_escape] construct instead (as in, `\&`). //! //! Character references in markdown are not the same as character references //! in HTML. //! Notably, HTML allows several character references without a closing //! semicolon. //! See [*§ 13.2.5.72 Character reference state* in the HTML spec][html] for more info. //! //! Character references are parsed insensitive to casing. //! The casing of hexadecimal numeric character references has no effect. //! The casing of named character references does not matter when parsing them, //! but does affect whether they match. //! Depending on the name, one or more cases are allowed, such as that `AMP` //! and `amp` are both allowed but other cases are not. //! See [`CHARACTER_REFERENCES`][character_references] for which //! names match. //! //! ## Tokens //! //! * [`CharacterReference`][Token::CharacterReference] //! * [`CharacterReferenceMarker`][Token::CharacterReferenceMarker] //! * [`CharacterReferenceMarkerHexadecimal`][Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerHexadecimal] //! * [`CharacterReferenceMarkerNumeric`][Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerNumeric] //! * [`CharacterReferenceMarkerSemi`][Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerSemi] //! * [`CharacterReferenceValue`][Token::CharacterReferenceValue] //! //! ## References //! //! * [`character-reference.js` in `micromark`](https://github.com/micromark/micromark/blob/main/packages/micromark-core-commonmark/dev/lib/character-reference.js) //! * [*§ 2.5 Entity and numeric character references* in `CommonMark`](https://spec.commonmark.org/0.30/#entity-and-numeric-character-references) //! //! [string]: crate::content::string //! [text]: crate::content::text //! [character_escape]: crate::construct::character_reference //! [decode_numeric]: crate::util::decode_character_reference::decode_numeric //! [character_references]: crate::constant::CHARACTER_REFERENCES //! [html]: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/parsing.html#character-reference-state use crate::constant::{ CHARACTER_REFERENCES, CHARACTER_REFERENCE_DECIMAL_SIZE_MAX, CHARACTER_REFERENCE_HEXADECIMAL_SIZE_MAX, CHARACTER_REFERENCE_NAMED_SIZE_MAX, }; use crate::token::Token; use crate::tokenizer::{Code, State, Tokenizer}; /// Kind of a character reference. #[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq)] pub enum Kind { /// Numeric decimal character reference. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a b /// ^^^^^ /// ``` Decimal, /// Numeric hexadecimal character reference. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a{b /// ^^^^^^ /// ``` Hexadecimal, /// Named character reference. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a&b /// ^^^^^ /// ``` Named, } impl Kind { /// Get the maximum size of characters allowed in the value of a character /// reference. fn max(&self) -> usize { match self { Kind::Hexadecimal => CHARACTER_REFERENCE_HEXADECIMAL_SIZE_MAX, Kind::Decimal => CHARACTER_REFERENCE_DECIMAL_SIZE_MAX, Kind::Named => CHARACTER_REFERENCE_NAMED_SIZE_MAX, } } /// Check if a char is allowed. fn allowed(&self, char: char) -> bool { let check = match self { Kind::Hexadecimal => char::is_ascii_hexdigit, Kind::Decimal => char::is_ascii_digit, Kind::Named => char::is_ascii_alphanumeric, }; check(&char) } } /// State needed to parse character references. #[derive(Debug, Clone)] struct Info { /// All parsed characters. buffer: String, /// Kind of character reference. kind: Kind, } /// Start of a character reference. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a&b /// ^ /// > | a{b /// ^ /// > | a b /// ^ /// ``` pub fn start(tokenizer: &mut Tokenizer, code: Code) -> State { match code { Code::Char('&') if tokenizer.parse_state.constructs.character_reference => { tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReference); tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceMarker); tokenizer.consume(code); tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReferenceMarker); State::Fn(Box::new(open)) } _ => State::Nok, } } /// Inside a character reference, after `&`, before `#` for numeric references /// or an alphanumeric for named references. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a&b /// ^ /// > | a{b /// ^ /// > | a b /// ^ /// ``` fn open(tokenizer: &mut Tokenizer, code: Code) -> State { let info = Info { buffer: String::new(), kind: Kind::Named, }; if let Code::Char('#') = code { tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerNumeric); tokenizer.consume(code); tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerNumeric); State::Fn(Box::new(|t, c| numeric(t, c, info))) } else { tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceValue); value(tokenizer, code, info) } } /// Inside a numeric character reference, right before `x` for hexadecimals, /// or a digit for decimals. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a{b /// ^ /// > | a b /// ^ /// ``` fn numeric(tokenizer: &mut Tokenizer, code: Code, mut info: Info) -> State { if let Code::Char('x' | 'X') = code { tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerHexadecimal); tokenizer.consume(code); tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerHexadecimal); tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceValue); info.kind = Kind::Hexadecimal; State::Fn(Box::new(|t, c| value(t, c, info))) } else { tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceValue); info.kind = Kind::Decimal; value(tokenizer, code, info) } } /// Inside a character reference value, after the markers (`&#x`, `&#`, or /// `&`) that define its kind, but before the `;`. /// The character reference kind defines what and how many characters are /// allowed. /// /// ```markdown /// > | a&b /// ^^^ /// > | a{b /// ^^^ /// > | a b /// ^ /// ``` fn value(tokenizer: &mut Tokenizer, code: Code, mut info: Info) -> State { match code { Code::Char(';') if !info.buffer.is_empty() => { let unknown_named = Kind::Named == info.kind && !CHARACTER_REFERENCES.iter().any(|d| d.0 == info.buffer); if unknown_named { State::Nok } else { tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReferenceValue); tokenizer.enter(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerSemi); tokenizer.consume(code); tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReferenceMarkerSemi); tokenizer.exit(Token::CharacterReference); State::Ok } } Code::Char(char) => { if info.buffer.len() < info.kind.max() && info.kind.allowed(char) { info.buffer.push(char); tokenizer.consume(code); State::Fn(Box::new(|t, c| value(t, c, info))) } else { State::Nok } } _ => State::Nok, } }