Before this commit, each node was responsible for computing the value of
its |resultIndex| property in the |computeVarIndices| pass. This was
possible because |resultIndex| was always equal to |index.result|,
meaning that nodes always wrote their match results to the top of the
stack.
This behavior would cause problems in the future where nodes will use
the stack also for storing positions. Parent nodes storing position on
the stack would have to copy their childs' match results from the top of
the stack to some position below where parent's match result would be
expected. There would be no way to tell the children to place their
match result somewhere else than the top of the stack and avoid copying.
This commit fixes the described problem by shifting the responsibility
for setting the value of node's |resultIndex| property to its parent.
This way it can direct its child to place its result wherever it wants
to.
This commit replaces all variable name computations in |computeVarNames|
and |computeParams| passes by computations of indices. The actual names
are computed later in the |generateCode| pass.
This change makes the code generator the only place that deals with the
actual variable names, making them easier to change for example.
The code generator code seems bit more complicated after the change, but
this complexity will pay off (and mostly disappear) later.
Places all code that does something with "action" AST nodes under code
handling "choice" nodes.
This ordering is logical because now all the node handling code matches
the sequence in which various node types usually appear when descending
through the AST tree.
Changes all code that does something with "literal", "class" or "any"
AST nodes so that the code deals with these in the follwing order:
1. literal
2. class
3. any
Previously the code used this ordering:
1. literal
2. any
3. class
The new ordering is more logical because the nodes are handled from the
most specific to the most generic.
PEG.js grammar rules are represented by |rule| nodes in the AST. Until
now, all such nodes had a |displayName| property which was either |null|
or stored rule's human-readable name. This commit gets rid of the
|displayName| property and starts representing rules with a
human-readable name using a new |named| node (a child of the |rule|
node).
This change simplifies code generation code a bit as tests for
|displayName| can be removed (see changes in generate-code.js). It also
separates different concerns from each other nicely.
This option enables/disables the results cache in generated parsers.
Until now, it was always enabled, but after this commit it needs to be
enabled explicitly (i.e. the |cache| option default value is |false|).
The reason is that parsing without it is *much* faster according to the
benchmark.
Note that disabling the cache breaks the linear parsing time guarantee,
meaning that with some grammars you can get exponential parsing time
with respect to the input length. This, together with the possibility of
improving the cache performance in the future, is the reason to keep it
as an option.
Speed impact
------------
Before: 214.08 kB/s
After: 827.52 kB/s
Difference: 286.54%
Size impact
-----------
Before: 1045396 b
After: 949783 b
Difference: -9.15%
(Measured by /tools/impact with Node.js v0.6.6 on x86_64 GNU/Linux.)
The "|| trick" is too brittle in this case -- it wouldn't work e.g. for
options with default value |true| and passed value |false|, enforcing
inconsistent default values handling.
This commit makes the library define the |PEG| global variable (for
browser export) and possibly assign it into |module.exports| (for
Node.js export) later. The |module.exports| assignment is done *outside*
the main library |function| statement.
The big idea behind this is to make copy & paste inclusion of the
library into another code easier -- one just needs to strip the last
three lines.
This option makes the generated parser track line and column during
parsing. Tracked line and column are made available inside actions and
predicates as |line| and |column| variables.
Note that in actions these variables denote start position of the
action's expression while in predicates they denote the current
position. The slightly different behavior is motivated by expected
usage.
This simplifies the code a bit and makes the AST more regular (each node
type has a fixed set of properties). The latter may get useful later
when generalizing visitors.
|quote| is used outside of the |parse| function so it must be defined in
more outer scope.
Fixes a problem (introduced in e9d8dc8eba)
where construction of some error messages could throw an error.
This has two main benefits:
1. The knowledge about scoping params in at one designated place,
making all future adjustments in this area easier.
2. Action-related code does not handle sequences specially anymore.
Such knowledge/behavior doesn't belong there.
Before this change, knowledge about variable names was spread between
the |computeStackDepths| pass and the code emitter code. For example,
the fact that the |&...| expression needs one variable to store a
position was represented in both places.
This changes consolidates that knowledge and introduces a new
|computeVarNames| pass. This pass replaces old |computeStackDepths|
pass, does all computations realted to variable names and stores the
results in the AST. Note that some knowledge about variables
(inevitably) remained in emitter code templates.
Beside DRYing things up, this change simplifies the emitter
significantly. By storing variable names in the AST it also allows
introduction of a pass that will identify parameters passed to actions
using proper symbol tables. Right now, this is done in a hackish way
directly in the emitter, which won't work well with changes planned in
GH-69.