Trait cssparser::AtRuleParser
[−]
[src]
pub trait AtRuleParser<'i> {
type PreludeNoBlock;
type PreludeBlock;
type AtRule;
type Error: 'i;
fn parse_prelude<'t>(
&mut self,
name: CowRcStr<'i>,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<AtRuleType<Self::PreludeNoBlock, Self::PreludeBlock>, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>> { ... }
fn rule_without_block(
&mut self,
prelude: Self::PreludeNoBlock
) -> Self::AtRule { ... }
fn parse_block<'t>(
&mut self,
prelude: Self::PreludeBlock,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<Self::AtRule, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>> { ... }
}A trait to provide various parsing of at-rules.
For example, there could be different implementations for top-level at-rules
(@media, @font-face, …)
and for page-margin rules inside @page.
Default implementations that reject all at-rules are provided,
so that impl AtRuleParser<(), ()> for ... {} can be used
for using DeclarationListParser to parse a declartions list with only qualified rules.
Associated Types
type PreludeNoBlock
The intermediate representation of prelude of an at-rule without block;
type PreludeBlock
The intermediate representation of prelude of an at-rule with block;
type AtRule
The finished representation of an at-rule.
type Error: 'i
The error type that is included in the ParseError value that can be returned.
Provided Methods
fn parse_prelude<'t>(
&mut self,
name: CowRcStr<'i>,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<AtRuleType<Self::PreludeNoBlock, Self::PreludeBlock>, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>>
&mut self,
name: CowRcStr<'i>,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<AtRuleType<Self::PreludeNoBlock, Self::PreludeBlock>, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>>
Parse the prelude of an at-rule with the given name.
Return the representation of the prelude and the type of at-rule,
or Err(()) to ignore the entire at-rule as invalid.
See AtRuleType’s documentation for the return value.
The prelude is the part after the at-keyword
and before the ; semicolon or { /* ... */ } block.
At-rule name matching should be case-insensitive in the ASCII range.
This can be done with std::ascii::Ascii::eq_ignore_ascii_case,
or with the match_ignore_ascii_case! macro.
The given input is a "delimited" parser
that ends wherever the prelude should end.
(Before the next semicolon, the next {, or the end of the current block.)
fn rule_without_block(&mut self, prelude: Self::PreludeNoBlock) -> Self::AtRule
End an at-rule which doesn't have block. Return the finished representation of the at-rule.
This is only called when parse_prelude returned WithoutBlock, and
either the ; semicolon indeed follows the prelude, or parser is at
the end of the input.
fn parse_block<'t>(
&mut self,
prelude: Self::PreludeBlock,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<Self::AtRule, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>>
&mut self,
prelude: Self::PreludeBlock,
input: &mut Parser<'i, 't>
) -> Result<Self::AtRule, ParseError<'i, Self::Error>>
Parse the content of a { /* ... */ } block for the body of the at-rule.
Return the finished representation of the at-rule
as returned by RuleListParser::next or DeclarationListParser::next,
or Err(()) to ignore the entire at-rule as invalid.
This is only called when parse_prelude returned WithBlock, and a block
was indeed found following the prelude.