Nearly all special errors are now handled gracefully, i.e. the
parser will be able to continue after encountering them. In some
cases the associated error range has been improved using the new
end attribute stack.
To achieve this the error handling code has been moved out of the
node constructors and into special methods in the parser.
It's likely that an error after -> will trigger another one due to
missing semicolon without shifting a single token. We prevent an
immediate failure in this case by manually setting errorState to 2,
which will suppress the duplicate error message, but allow error
recovery.
Expr\List will now contain ArrayItems instead of plain variables.
I'm reusing ArrayItem, because code handling list() must also handle
arrays, and this allows both to go through the same code path.
This also renames Expr\List->vars to ->items.
TODO: Should Expr\List be dropped in favor of Expr\Array with an
extra flag?
Scalar\String_ and Scalar\Encapsed now have an additional "kind"
attribute, which may be one of:
* String_::KIND_SINGLE_QUOTED
* String_::KIND_DOUBLE_QUOTED
* String_::KIND_NOWDOC
* String_::KIND_HEREDOC
Additionally, if the string kind is one of the latter two, an
attribute "docLabel" is provided, which contains the doc string
label (STR in <<<STR) that was originally used.
The pretty printer will try to take the original kind of the string,
as well as the used doc string label into account.
To distinguish array() and [] syntax. The pretty printer respects
this attribute. The shortArraySyntax pretty printer option acts as
a default in case the attribute is not specified.
A Nop statement will be inserted into statement lists if there are
any trailing comments in the list (which would otherwise not be
associated with any node).
The pretty printer output currently still contains a superfluous
newline.
Magic constant names have been added after the PHP 7 release.
We do not support and likely will not support __halt_compiler here
due to lexer limitations.
As these are shared between Php5 and Php7 parsers they should be
in some common place, otherwise we'd have to always reference either
one or the other.