From 3ac1ee16f377d31a0fb80c8dae28b6239ac4229e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Terin Stock Date: Sun, 9 Mar 2025 17:47:56 +0100 Subject: [chore] remove vendor --- vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go | 33 ---------------------------- 1 file changed, 33 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go deleted file mode 100644 index f19850e15..000000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/gorilla/css/scanner/doc.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ -// Copyright 2012 The Gorilla 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 gorilla/css/scanner generates tokens for a CSS3 input. - -It follows the CSS3 specification located at: - - http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-syntax/ - -To use it, create a new scanner for a given CSS string and call Next() until -the token returned has type TokenEOF or TokenError: - - s := scanner.New(myCSS) - for { - token := s.Next() - if token.Type == scanner.TokenEOF || token.Type == scanner.TokenError { - break - } - // Do something with the token... - } - -Following the CSS3 specification, an error can only occur when the scanner -finds an unclosed quote or unclosed comment. In these cases the text becomes -"untokenizable". Everything else is tokenizable and it is up to a parser -to make sense of the token stream (or ignore nonsensical token sequences). - -Note: the scanner doesn't perform lexical analysis or, in other words, it -doesn't care about the token context. It is intended to be used by a -lexer or parser. -*/ -package scanner -- cgit v1.2.3