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Creates an empty document. It has *nothing* in it at all.
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Concatenates any consecutive text nodes This will set delegates for parseSaw* (note: this overwrites anything else you set, and you setting subsequently will overwrite this) that add those things to the dom tree when it sees them. Call this before calling parse(). Note this will also preserve the prolog and doctype from the original file, if there was one.
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implementing the FileResource interface; it calls toString.
These functions all forward to the root element. See the documentation in the Element class.
FIXME: btw, this could just be a lazy range......
this uses a weird thing... it's [name=] if no colon and [property=] if colon
This returns the <body> element, if there is one. (It different than Javascript, where it is called 'body', because body is a keyword in D.)
This is just something I'm toying with. Right now, you use opIndex to put in css selectors. It returns a struct that forwards calls to all elements it holds, and returns itself so you can chain it.
Take XMLish data and try to make the DOM tree out of it.
Given the kind of garbage you find on the Internet, try to make sense of it. Equivalent to document.parse(data, false, false, null); (Case-insensitive, non-strict, determine character encoding from the data.) NOTE: this makes no attempt at added security.
These functions all forward to the root element. See the documentation in the Element class.
Sets a meta tag in the document header. It is kinda hacky to work easily for both Facebook open graph and traditional html meta tags/
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If you're using this for some other kind of XML, you can set the content type here.
implementing the FileResource interface, useful for sending via http automatically.
Gets the <title> element's innerText, if one exists
Sets the title of the page, creating a <title> element if needed.
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If the parser sees <% asp code... %>, it will call this callback. It will be passed "% asp code... %" or "%= asp code .. %" Return true if you want the node appended to the document.
if it sees a <! that is not CDATA or comment (CDATA is handled automatically and comments call parseSawComment), it calls this function with the contents. <!SOMETHING foo> calls parseSawBangInstruction("SOMETHING foo") Return true if you want the node appended to the document.
If the parser sees a html comment, it will call this callback <!-- comment --> will call parseSawComment(" comment ") Return true if you want the node appended to the document.
If the parser sees <?php php code... ?>, it will call this callback. It will be passed "?php php code... ?" or "?= asp code .. ?" Note: dom.d cannot identify the other php <? code ?> short format. Return true if you want the node appended to the document.
if it sees a <?xxx> that is not php or asp it calls this function with the contents. <?SOMETHING foo> calls parseSawQuestionInstruction("?SOMETHING foo") Unlike the php/asp ones, this ends on the first > it sees, without requiring ?>. Return true if you want the node appended to the document.
stuff after the root, only stored in non-strict mode and not used in toString, but available in case you want it
if these were kept, this is stuff that appeared before the root element, such as <?xml version ?> decls and <!DOCTYPE>s
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The main document interface, including a html parser.