To clean up the mess here a bit, check for invalid octal digits
with an explicit loop instead of mixing this into the string to
number conversion.
Also clean up some type usage.
This patch adds missing newlines, trims multiple redundant final
newlines into a single one, and trims redundant leading newlines in all
*.phpt sections.
According to POSIX, a line is a sequence of zero or more non-' <newline>'
characters plus a terminating '<newline>' character. [1] Files should
normally have at least one final newline character.
C89 [2] and later standards [3] mention a final newline:
"A source file that is not empty shall end in a new-line character,
which shall not be immediately preceded by a backslash character."
Although it is not mandatory for all files to have a final newline
fixed, a more consistent and homogeneous approach brings less of commit
differences issues and a better development experience in certain text
editors and IDEs.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_206
[2] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c89/c89-draft.html#2.1.1.2
[3] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c99/n1256.html#5.1.1.2
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/flexible_heredoc_nowdoc_syntaxes
* The ending label no longer has to be followed by a semicolon or
newline. Any non-label character is fine.
* The ending label may be indented. The indentation will be stripped
from all lines in the heredoc/nowdoc string.
Lexing of heredoc strings performs a scan-ahead to determine the
indentation of the ending label, so that the correct amount of
indentation can be removed when calculting the semantic values for
use by the parser. This makes the implementation quite a bit more
complicated than we would like :/
PHP requires integer typehints to be written "int" and does not
allow "integer" as an alias. This changes type error messages to
match the actual type name and avoids confusing messages like
"must be of the type integer, integer given".
This turned out to be rather inconvenient after all. Instead just
return the same output we did on PHP 5. If people want to have an
error, use TOKEN_PARSE.
we basically added a mechanism to store the token stream during parsing
and exposed the entire parser stack on the tokenizer extension through
an opt in flag: token_get_all($src, TOKEN_PARSE).
this change allows easy future language enhancements regarding context
aware parsing & scanning without further maintance on the tokenizer
extension while solves known inconsistencies "parseless" tokenizer
extension has when it handles `__halt_compiler()` presence.
Primarily to avoid getting fatal errors from token_get_all().
Implemented using a magic E_ERROR token, which the lexer emits to
force a parser failure.
Fixed recognition of the operator
Added opcode, still doing multiply instead of pow()
opcode now always returns int(42)
The right answer, but always a float
Yanked code from pow() implementation.
Should not handle negative long as exponent ourselves
Added test cases from pow()
Moved precedence higher than '~'
Added GMP operator overloading
Added ZEND_ASSIGN_POW (**=) operator.
Added pow() as a language construct.
Adjusted test cases for changed precedence.
Reduced pow() to shell function around ZEND_API pow_function()
Reduced test case to only contain edge cases
Added overloading test case
Moved unary minus above T_POW
Revert "Added pow() as a language construct."
Bad bad bad idea.
This reverts commit f60b98cf7a8371233d800a6faa286ddba4432d02.
Reverted unary minus behaviour due to previous revert.
Convert arrays to int(0)
Exponent with array as a base becomes int(0)
Rebase against master
Fixed tokenizer test case