/*! * Copyright 2016 The ANTLR Project. All rights reserved. * Licensed under the BSD-3-Clause license. See LICENSE file in the project root for license information. */ import { Parser } from "./Parser"; import { Recognizer } from "./Recognizer"; import { RuleNode } from "./tree/RuleNode"; import { ParseTree } from "./tree/ParseTree"; import { Interval } from "./misc/Interval"; import { ParseTreeVisitor } from "./tree/ParseTreeVisitor"; /** A rule context is a record of a single rule invocation. * * We form a stack of these context objects using the parent * pointer. A parent pointer of `undefined` indicates that the current * context is the bottom of the stack. The ParserRuleContext subclass * as a children list so that we can turn this data structure into a * tree. * * The root node always has a `undefined` pointer and invokingState of -1. * * Upon entry to parsing, the first invoked rule function creates a * context object (a subclass specialized for that rule such as * SContext) and makes it the root of a parse tree, recorded by field * Parser._ctx. * * public final SContext s() throws RecognitionException { * SContext _localctx = new SContext(_ctx, state); <-- create new node * enterRule(_localctx, 0, RULE_s); <-- push it * ... * exitRule(); <-- pop back to _localctx * return _localctx; * } * * A subsequent rule invocation of r from the start rule s pushes a * new context object for r whose parent points at s and use invoking * state is the state with r emanating as edge label. * * The invokingState fields from a context object to the root * together form a stack of rule indication states where the root * (bottom of the stack) has a -1 sentinel value. If we invoke start * symbol s then call r1, which calls r2, the would look like * this: * * SContext[-1] <- root node (bottom of the stack) * R1Context[p] <- p in rule s called r1 * R2Context[q] <- q in rule r1 called r2 * * So the top of the stack, _ctx, represents a call to the current * rule and it holds the return address from another rule that invoke * to this rule. To invoke a rule, we must always have a current context. * * The parent contexts are useful for computing lookahead sets and * getting error information. * * These objects are used during parsing and prediction. * For the special case of parsers, we use the subclass * ParserRuleContext. * * @see ParserRuleContext */ export declare class RuleContext extends RuleNode { _parent: RuleContext | undefined; invokingState: number; constructor(); constructor(parent: RuleContext | undefined, invokingState: number); static getChildContext(parent: RuleContext, invokingState: number): RuleContext; depth(): number; /** A context is empty if there is no invoking state; meaning nobody called * current context. */ get isEmpty(): boolean; get sourceInterval(): Interval; get ruleContext(): RuleContext; get parent(): RuleContext | undefined; /** @since 4.7. {@see ParseTree#setParent} comment */ setParent(parent: RuleContext): void; get payload(): RuleContext; /** Return the combined text of all child nodes. This method only considers * tokens which have been added to the parse tree. * * Since tokens on hidden channels (e.g. whitespace or comments) are not * added to the parse trees, they will not appear in the output of this * method. */ get text(): string; get ruleIndex(): number; /** For rule associated with this parse tree internal node, return * the outer alternative number used to match the input. Default * implementation does not compute nor store this alt num. Create * a subclass of ParserRuleContext with backing field and set * option contextSuperClass. * to set it. * * @since 4.5.3 */ get altNumber(): number; /** Set the outer alternative number for this context node. Default * implementation does nothing to avoid backing field overhead for * trees that don't need it. Create * a subclass of ParserRuleContext with backing field and set * option contextSuperClass. * * @since 4.5.3 */ set altNumber(altNumber: number); getChild(i: number): ParseTree; get childCount(): number; accept(visitor: ParseTreeVisitor): T; /** Print out a whole tree, not just a node, in LISP format * (root child1 .. childN). Print just a node if this is a leaf. * We have to know the recognizer so we can get rule names. */ toStringTree(recog: Parser): string; /** Print out a whole tree, not just a node, in LISP format * (root child1 .. childN). Print just a node if this is a leaf. */ toStringTree(ruleNames: string[] | undefined): string; toStringTree(): string; toString(): string; toString(recog: Recognizer | undefined): string; toString(ruleNames: string[] | undefined): string; toString(recog: Recognizer | undefined, stop: RuleContext | undefined): string; toString(ruleNames: string[] | undefined, stop: RuleContext | undefined): string; }