79 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Go
		
	
	
	
		
			Vendored
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			79 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Go
		
	
	
	
		
			Vendored
		
	
	
	
// Copyright 2012 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
 | 
						|
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
 | 
						|
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// Package atom provides integer codes (also known as atoms) for a fixed set of
 | 
						|
// frequently occurring HTML strings: tag names and attribute keys such as "p"
 | 
						|
// and "id".
 | 
						|
//
 | 
						|
// Sharing an atom's name between all elements with the same tag can result in
 | 
						|
// fewer string allocations when tokenizing and parsing HTML. Integer
 | 
						|
// comparisons are also generally faster than string comparisons.
 | 
						|
//
 | 
						|
// The value of an atom's particular code is not guaranteed to stay the same
 | 
						|
// between versions of this package. Neither is any ordering guaranteed:
 | 
						|
// whether atom.H1 < atom.H2 may also change. The codes are not guaranteed to
 | 
						|
// be dense. The only guarantees are that e.g. looking up "div" will yield
 | 
						|
// atom.Div, calling atom.Div.String will return "div", and atom.Div != 0.
 | 
						|
package atom // import "golang.org/x/net/html/atom"
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// Atom is an integer code for a string. The zero value maps to "".
 | 
						|
type Atom uint32
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// String returns the atom's name.
 | 
						|
func (a Atom) String() string {
 | 
						|
	start := uint32(a >> 8)
 | 
						|
	n := uint32(a & 0xff)
 | 
						|
	if start+n > uint32(len(atomText)) {
 | 
						|
		return ""
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	return atomText[start : start+n]
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
func (a Atom) string() string {
 | 
						|
	return atomText[a>>8 : a>>8+a&0xff]
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// fnv computes the FNV hash with an arbitrary starting value h.
 | 
						|
func fnv(h uint32, s []byte) uint32 {
 | 
						|
	for i := range s {
 | 
						|
		h ^= uint32(s[i])
 | 
						|
		h *= 16777619
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	return h
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
func match(s string, t []byte) bool {
 | 
						|
	for i, c := range t {
 | 
						|
		if s[i] != c {
 | 
						|
			return false
 | 
						|
		}
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	return true
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// Lookup returns the atom whose name is s. It returns zero if there is no
 | 
						|
// such atom. The lookup is case sensitive.
 | 
						|
func Lookup(s []byte) Atom {
 | 
						|
	if len(s) == 0 || len(s) > maxAtomLen {
 | 
						|
		return 0
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	h := fnv(hash0, s)
 | 
						|
	if a := table[h&uint32(len(table)-1)]; int(a&0xff) == len(s) && match(a.string(), s) {
 | 
						|
		return a
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	if a := table[(h>>16)&uint32(len(table)-1)]; int(a&0xff) == len(s) && match(a.string(), s) {
 | 
						|
		return a
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	return 0
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
// String returns a string whose contents are equal to s. In that sense, it is
 | 
						|
// equivalent to string(s) but may be more efficient.
 | 
						|
func String(s []byte) string {
 | 
						|
	if a := Lookup(s); a != 0 {
 | 
						|
		return a.String()
 | 
						|
	}
 | 
						|
	return string(s)
 | 
						|
}
 |