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there, same for #class_eval to simplify, and adds coverage for class_eval
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Signed-off-by: Jeremy Kemper <jeremy@bitsweat.net>
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warnings are in dependencies.
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[#3848 state:committed]
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Kemper <jeremy@bitsweat.net>
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Instead, all Strings are always not html_safe?. Instead, you can get a SafeBuffer from a String by calling #html_safe, which will SafeBuffer.new(self).
* Additionally, instead of doing concat("</form>".html_safe), you can do
safe_concat("</form>"), which will skip both the flag set, and the flag
check.
* For the first pass, I converted virtually all #html_safe!s to #html_safe,
and the tests pass. A further optimization would be to try to use
#safe_concat as much as possible, reducing the performance impact if
we know up front that a String is safe.
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this without the performance hit and make Fixnum safe by default.
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through String#<< which checks if the String is safe, use safe_concat, which uses the original (internal) String#<< and leaves the safe flag as is. Results in a significant performance improvement.
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This consists of:
* String#html_safe! a method to mark a string as 'safe'
* ActionView::SafeBuffer a string subclass which escapes anything unsafe which is concatenated to it
* Calls to String#html_safe! throughout the rails helpers
* a 'raw' helper which lets you concatenate trusted HTML from non-safety-aware sources (e.g. presantized strings in the DB)
* New ERB implementation based on erubis which uses a SafeBuffer instead of a String
Hat tip to Django for the inspiration.
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