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- <title>Naming Conventions - HTML Purifier</title>
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- <h1>Naming Conventions</h1>
-
- <div id="filing">Filed under Development</div>
- <div id="index">Return to the <a href="index.html">index</a>.</div>
- <div id="home"><a href="http://htmlpurifier.org/">HTML Purifier</a> End-User Documentation</div>
-
- <p>The classes in this library follow a few naming conventions, which may
- help you find the correct functionality more quickly. Here they are:</p>
-
- <dl>
-
- <dt>All classes occupy the HTMLPurifier pseudo-namespace.</dt>
- <dd>This means that all classes are prefixed with HTMLPurifier_. As such, all
- names under HTMLPurifier_ are reserved. I recommend that you use the name
- HTMLPurifierX_YourName_ClassName, especially if you want to take advantage
- of HTMLPurifier_ConfigDef.</dd>
-
- <dt>All classes correspond to their path if library/ was in the include path</dt>
- <dd>HTMLPurifier_AttrDef is located at HTMLPurifier/AttrDef.php; replace
- underscores with slashes and append .php and you'll have the location of
- the class.</dd>
-
- <dt>Harness and Test are reserved class names for unit tests</dt>
- <dd>The suffix <code>Test</code> indicates that the class is a subclass of UnitTestCase
- (of the Simpletest library) and is testable. "Harness" indicates a subclass
- of UnitTestCase that is not meant to be run but to be extended into
- concrete test cases and contains custom test methods (i.e. assert*())</dd>
-
- <dt>Class names do not necessarily represent inheritance hierarchies</dt>
- <dd>While we try to reflect inheritance in naming to some extent, it is not
- guaranteed (for instance, none of the classes inherit from HTMLPurifier,
- the base class). However, all class files have the require_once
- declarations to whichever classes they are tightly coupled to.</dd>
-
- <dt>Strategy has a meaning different from the Gang of Four pattern</dt>
- <dd>In Design Patterns, the Gang of Four describes a Strategy object as
- encapsulating an algorithm so that they can be switched at run-time. While
- our strategies are indeed algorithms, they are not meant to be substituted:
- all must be present in order for proper functioning.</dd>
-
- <dt>Abbreviations are avoided</dt>
- <dd>We try to avoid abbreviations as much as possible, but in some cases,
- abbreviated version is more readable than the full version. Here, we
- list common abbreviations:
- <ul>
- <li>Attr to Attributes (note that it is plural, i.e. <code>$attr = array()</code>)</li>
- <li>Def to Definition</li>
- <li><code>$ret</code> is the value to be returned in a function</li>
- </ul>
- </dd>
-
- <dt>Ambiguity concerning the definition of Def/Definition</dt>
- <dd>While a definition normally defines the structure/acceptable values of
- an entity, most of the definitions in this application also attempt
- to validate and fix the value. I am unsure of a better name, as
- "Validator" would exclude fixing the value, "Fixer" doesn't invoke
- the proper image of "fixing" something, and "ValidatorFixer" is too long!
- Some other suggestions were "Handler", "Reference", "Check", "Fix",
- "Repair" and "Heal".</dd>
-
- <dt>Transform not Transformer</dt>
- <dd>Transform is both a noun and a verb, and thus we define a "Transform" as
- something that "transforms," leaving "Transformer" (which sounds like an
- electrical device/robot toy).</dd>
-
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