This means that "foo[1]" uses this AST:
(predicate (test nil "foo") (int 1))
Instead of this AST:
(test nil "foo" (int 1))
This makes it easier for the XPath evaluator to process predicates correctly.
This is the first spec of many that will be re-written. Eventually this will
remove the need of the shared examples as well as removing lots of code
duplication and odd context blocks.
This method can be used to compare two NodeSet instances. By using
XML::NodeSet#equal_nodes?() the need for exposing the "nodes" instance variable
is also removed.
This expression could be used to get all elements that _don't_ have any
namespace. The problem is that this can't be expressed as just a node test,
instead the resulting XPath would have to look something like the following:
X[local-name() = name()]
However, since the XPath predicates are already created for pseudo classes and
such, also injecting the above into it would be a real big pain. As such I've
decided not to support it.
Instead of using "descendant-or-self" Oga will use "descendant". This ensures
that expressions such as "foo *" don't return a set also including the "foo"
element.
Nokogiri solves this problem in a somewhat different way by using //foo//* for
the CSS expression "foo *". While this works in Nokogiri the expression
"descendant-or-self::node()" is slow as a snail in Oga (due to its nature of
retrieving _all_ nodes first). By using "descendant" we can work around this
problem.
When running XPath queries such as "self::node()" the result should be a set
containing the document itself. This in turn fixes expressions such as
descendant-or-self::node()/a.
These currently fail due to the child:: selector not working entirely as it
should be. Consider the following XML:
<a><b><b><c class="x"></c></b></b></a>
And the following XPath:
descendant-or-self::node()/a
In Nokogiri/libxml this will return a node set containing the <a> node. In Oga
however this will return an empty node set. This will require some further
investigation to see what exactly is going on, and in particular what is the
correct behaviour.