The parser will now always generate Identifier nodes (for
non-namespaced identifiers). This obsoletes the useIdentifierNodes
parser option.
Node constructors still accepts strings and will implicitly create
an Identifier wrapper. Identifier implement __toString(), so that
outside of strict-mode many things continue to work without changes.
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?
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.
Adding this as an option to avoid breaking people's tests.
Some of the test results show pretty clearly that we are incorrectly
assigning the same comment multiple times for nested nodes (mentioned
in #36).
Adding only a single recovery rule for now.
The API is now:
* throwOnError parser option must be disabled.
* List of Errors is available through $parser->getErrors(). This
method is available either way.
* If no recovery is possible $parser->parse() will return null.
(Obviously only if throwOnError is disabled).
This adds an additional "returnType" subnode to Stmt\Function_,
Stmt\ClassMethod and Expr\Closure, as well as the corresponding
support in the name resolver and pretty printer.
* nested list()s will now create nested List nodes (instead of just
nested arrays)
* yield $k => $v was parsed with key and value swapped. This is now fixed
* the pretty printer now works with the newly added language constructs
Example: foreach ($coords as list($x, $y)) { ... }
This change slightly breaks backwards compatability, as it changes the
node structure for the previously existing `list(...) = $foo` assignments.
Those no longer have a dedicated `AssignList` node; instead they are
parsed as a normal `Assign` node with a `List` as `var`. Similarly the
use in `foreach` will generate a `List` for `valueVar`.
The new dereferencing syntaxes (new Foo)->bar and (new Foo)['bar'] were
causing a shift/reduce conflict with the '(' expr ')' rule. When
(new Foo) was encountered (without dereference operators following) the
parser thus threw a parse error.
The fix simply adds a special '(' new_expr ')' rule to expr. This does not
remove the shift/reduce conflict itself, but makes it irrelevant.
This fixes issue #20.