Implement a new syntax to extract matched strings from expressions. For
example, instead of:
identifier = first:[a-zA-Z_] rest:[a-zA-Z0-9_]* { return first + rest.join(""); }
you can now just write:
identifier = $([a-zA-Z_] [a-zA-Z0-9_]*)
This is useful mostly for "lexical" rules at the bottom of many
grammars.
Note that structured match results are still built for the expressions
prefixed by "$", they are just ignored. I plan to optimize this later
(sometime after the code generator rewrite).
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 change makes code using |oneRuleGrammar| less verbose + prepares
for passing of the initializer (will be used by code added in the next
few commits).
This is the first of many commits that gradually convert PEG.js's test
suite from QUnit to Jasmine, cleaning it up on the way.
Main reason for the change is that Jasmine allows nested contexts,
allowing to structure the tests in a better way than QUnit. Moreover,
the tests needed to be cleaned up a bit.