php-parser/doc/component/Lexer.markdown
2014-02-19 23:06:39 +01:00

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Lexer component documentation
=============================
The lexer is responsible for providing tokens to the parser. The project comes with two lexers: `PhpParser\Lexer` and
`PhpParser\Lexer\Emulative`. The latter is an extension of the former, which adds the ability to emulate tokens of
newer PHP versions and thus allows parsing of new code on older versions.
A lexer has to define the following public interface:
startLexing($code);
getNextToken(&$value = null, &$startAttributes = null, &$endAttributes = null);
handleHaltCompiler();
startLexing
-----------
The `startLexing` method is invoked when the `parse()` method of the parser is called. It's argument will be whatever
was passed to the `parse()` method.
Even though `startLexing` is meant to accept a source code string, you could for example overwrite it to accept a file:
```php
<?php
class FileLexer extends PhpParser\Lexer {
public function startLexing($fileName) {
if (!file_exists($fileName)) {
throw new InvalidArgumentException(sprintf('File "%s" does not exist', $fileName));
}
parent::startLexing(file_get_contents($fileName));
}
}
$parser = new PhpParser\Parser(new FileLexer);
var_dump($parser->parse('someFile.php'));
var_dump($parser->parse('someOtherFile.php'));
```
getNextToken
------------
`getNextToken` returns the ID of the next token and sets some additional information in the three variables which it
accepts by-ref. If no more tokens are available it has to return `0`, which is the ID of the `EOF` token.
The first by-ref variable `$value` should contain the textual content of the token. It is what will be available as `$1`
etc in the parser.
The other two by-ref variables `$startAttributes` and `$endAttributes` define which attributes will eventually be
assigned to the generated nodes: The parser will take the `$startAttributes` from the first token which is part of the
node and the `$endAttributes` from the last token that is part of the node.
E.g. if the tokens `T_FUNCTION T_STRING ... '{' ... '}'` constitute a node, then the `$startAttributes` from the
`T_FUNCTION` token will be taken and the `$endAttributes` from the `'}'` token.
By default the lexer creates the attributes `startLine`, `comments` (both part of `$startAttributes`) and `endLine`
(part of `$endAttributes`).
If you don't want all these attributes to be added (to reduce memory usage of the AST) you can simply remove them by
overriding the method:
```php
<?php
class LessAttributesLexer extends PhpParser\Lexer {
public function getNextToken(&$value = null, &$startAttributes = null, &$endAttributes = null) {
$tokenId = parent::getNextToken($value, $startAttributes, $endAttributes);
// only keep startLine attribute
unset($startAttributes['comments']);
unset($endAttributes['endLine']);
return $tokenId;
}
}
```
You can obviously also add additional attributes. E.g. in conjunction with the above `FileLexer` you might want to add
a `fileName` attribute to all nodes:
```php
<?php
class FileLexer extends PhpParser\Lexer {
protected $fileName;
public function startLexing($fileName) {
if (!file_exists($fileName)) {
throw new InvalidArgumentException(sprintf('File "%s" does not exist', $fileName));
}
$this->fileName = $fileName;
parent::startLexing(file_get_contents($fileName));
}
public function getNextToken(&$value = null, &$startAttributes = null, &$endAttributes = null) {
$tokenId = parent::getNextToken($value, $startAttributes, $endAttributes);
// we could use either $startAttributes or $endAttributes here, because the fileName is always the same
// (regardless of whether it is the start or end token). We choose $endAttributes, because it is slightly
// more efficient (as the parser has to keep a stack for the $startAttributes).
$endAttributes['fileName'] = $this->fileName;
return $tokenId;
}
}
```
handleHaltCompiler
------------------
The method is invoked whenever a `T_HALT_COMPILER` token is encountered. It has to return the remaining string after the
construct (not including `();`).