Like this, I can subclass the visitor and provide a default behavior in visitNode: and
only override a couple of other visiting methods where needed.
Cheers,
Doru
On May 30, 2013, at 11:14 AM, Yuriy Tymchuk <[hidden email]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> so there are a few parts.
>
> 1) Visitors
> I suggest that abstract visitor should guide you how to visit this node. For example
just do 'visitNodes: aPrimaryWithSelectorsNode codeList' so when someone will
overwrite it he will know that he should pay attention to codeList data. Also comment will
be lovely to have and this is a tough part as almost no classes in PJ have comments.
>
> 2). AST nodes
> The reason why we create an AST is that PetitParser's native parse result are
arrays, and we want more structured data. For instance
this.getCommand().getContext().getUser().getActiveProfile() is a method call. It has a
selector "getActiveProfile" it has no parameters and it's invoked on
this.getCommand().getContext().getUser(). I may be wrong about this, but on the other hand
current AST is constructed like this. So maybe if you need some other kind of AST you
should create it and make one more subclass of parser that will construct that.
>
> Also I'll sent a copy to moose-dev because maybe people there will have better
vision.
>
> Cheers
> Uko
>
>
> On 29 трав. 2013, at 19:33, Chris Cunningham <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm not sure what exactly you want out of the visitor pattern. It seems like
the current accept.. methods (that aren't either 'TO DO' or
#subclassResponsibility, that is) just ask you to #visitNode: or #visitNodes: for the
various instance variables in the AST classes. Am I missing something here? I must say
that I haven't used the visitor pattern with parsed results before, and am not sure
what you want and/or need out of this.
>>
>> As for PrimaryWithSelectorsNode, after looking back at it, I can see that I have
obscured what the 'primary' was from when it was parsed out. however, in looking
at what could constitute a primary (versus the selectors part), I find myself confused
with what answering a primary would be. I could by most anything - for a single item
(boolean, literal, variable) to something very complex (such as a string of identifiers
hanging off of an identifier with or without message sends on the end). Instead I
attempted to simplify it into an array of the parts so that I could iterate over them as
needed. sometimes I would like to find the first in the list, sometimes the last, and
sometimes I'd like to search the whole list for a specific call (if present) in the
middle.
>>
>> so, take the code:
>> this.getCommand().getContext().getUser().getActiveProfile()
>> The current PJPrimaryWithSelectorsNode will have these in the codeList array:
>> this
>> getCommand()
>> getContext()
>> getUser()
>> getActiveProfile()
>> I did change the behaviour of the parsed #primaryWithselectors - previously it
would have bundled this and getCommand() together into one unit identified as
'primary' and all of the other methods as an array of 'selectors'.
>>
>> similarly, this code:
>> new SearchUrl(Search.class).set(parm1, p1).set(parm2, params.get2(p2)).set(parm3,
p3).getHref()
>> will return the codeList array:
>> new SearchUrl(Search.class)
>> set(parm1, p1)
>> set(parm2, params.get2(p2))
>> set(parm3, p3).getHref()
>> Previously, it would identify the first item of the array as the primary, and the
rest as the selectors. Which does make a lot of sense to me.
>>
>> finally, this code:
>> this.context.getUser().getActiveProfile().getProfileProperties()
>> will return in the code array:
>> this
>> context
>> getUser()
>> getActiveProfile()
>> getProfileProperties()
>> Previously, primary would have consisted of the array
>> this
>> context
>> getUser()
>> while selectors would have been the array of
>> getActiveProfile()
>> getProfileProperties()
>>
>> I should note that I'm not a Java coder myself and am not clear on how Java
coders identify the parts of their code. I have tried to mostly follow what was
previously there in the parser as it was clearer than what I'd likely come up with.
However, I can't really see myself why the 'primary' was primary in the
previous examples - is it clear and I should revert back, and have the visitor visit the
restored primary and selectors? or should I have the visitor visit each part of the
stacked structure that the Java coder has presented us? Which way would you prefer it -
I'll modify it to fit your desires.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Chris
>>
>> On Tue, May 28, 2013 at 10:55 PM, Yuriy Tymchuk <[hidden email]> wrote:
>> HI,
>>
>> I've checked the changes. `acceptPrimaryWithSelectorsNode:` has only a flag
so I didn't get how should I accept it and started to check out what the idea is. I
still don't get it. It has some code list that is usually an array. Why do we need
that node? What code entity does it represent? It looks like instead of building an AST
from parsed arrays we are wrapping them in other classes.
>>
>> Yuriy
>>
>> On 28 трав. 2013, at 21:30, Chris Cunningham <[hidden email]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi.
>>>
>>> I've added the missing method (as well as related missing #acceptVisitor:
methods on most of the other nodes that I've added) in the latest change.
>>>
>>> If you have any other questions or requests, please let me know.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Chris Cunningham
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, May 28, 2013 at 7:45 AM, Yuriy Tymchuk <[hidden email]> wrote:
>>> Thank you
>>>
>>> Надіслано з iPhone
>>>
>>> 28 трав. 2013 о 17:18 Chris <[hidden email]> написав(ла):
>>>
>>>> Thanks for letting me know. I'll fix that today.
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>
>>>> On May 28, 2013, at 1:59 AM, Yuriy Tymchuk <[hidden email]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> your changes to PetitJava break my builds on fast. The problem is
that `acceptVisitor:` of PJPrimaryWithSelectorsNode is not implementing `acceptVisitor:
aVisitor` method, and so PJASTNodeVisitor is not implementing some visiting method that
can give a hint on what should I do in my visitor subclass.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you for your contributions.
>>>>> Uko
>>>
>>
>>
>
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