Optional methods use ? tokens like this:
interface X { y?(): z; }
It seems easiest to detect and disambiguate these from ternary
expressions by checking if the code is in a declaration context. Turns
out that that didn't quite work properly for interfaces in Java and JS,
and for JS file root contexts.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you.
llvm-svn: 236488
OriginalColumn might not be set, so fall back to Location and SourceMgr
in case it is missing. Also initialize end column in case the token is
multi line, but it's the ` token itself that starts the multi line.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you!
llvm-svn: 236383
Parameters can have templated types and default values (= ...), which is
another location in which a template closer should be followed by
whitespace.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you.
llvm-svn: 236382
The current enum detection is overly aggressive. As NestingLevel only
applies per line (?) it classifies many if not most object literals as
enum declarations and adds superfluous line breaks into them. This
change narrows the heuristic by requiring an assignment just before the
open brace and requiring the line to start with an identifier.
Patch by Martin Probst. Thank you.
llvm-svn: 232320
This adds support for JavaScript class definitions (again following
TypeScript & AtScript style). This only required support for
visibility modifiers in JS, everything else was already working.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you.
llvm-svn: 229701
This patch adds support for type annotations that follow TypeScript's,
Flow's, and AtScript's syntax style.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7721
llvm-svn: 229700
Previously a regex-literal containing "/*" would through clang-format
off, e.g.:
var regex = /\/*$/;
Would lead to none of the following code to be formatted.
llvm-svn: 220860
Before:
var regex = / a\//; int i;
After:
var regex = /a\//;
int i;
This required pushing the Lexer into its wrapper class and generating a
new one in this specific case. Otherwise, the sequence get lexed as a
//-comment. This is hacky, but I don't know a better way (short of
supporting regex literals in the Lexer).
Pushing the Lexer down seems to make all the call sites simpler.
llvm-svn: 217444
Before:
e&& e.SomeFunction();
After:
e && e.SomeFunction();
Yeah, this might be useful for C++, too, but it is not such a frequent
pattern there (plus the fix is much harder).
llvm-svn: 217237
This worked initially but was broken by r210887.
Before:
function outer1(a, b) {
function inner1(a, b) { return a; } inner1(a, b);
} function outer2(a, b) { function inner2(a, b) { return a; } inner2(a, b); }
After:
function outer1(a, b) {
function inner1(a, b) { return a; }
inner1(a, b);
}
function outer2(a, b) {
function inner2(a, b) { return a; }
inner2(a, b);
}
Thanks to Adam Strzelecki for working on this.
llvm-svn: 212038
Before (JavaScript example, but can extend to other languages):
return {
a: 'E',
b: function() {
return function() {
f(); // This is wrong.
};
}
};
After:
return {
a: 'E',
b: function() {
return function() {
f(); // This is better.
};
}
};
llvm-svn: 210334
Before:
var literal = 'hello ' + 'world';
After:
var literal = 'hello ' +
'world';
There is no reason to concatenated two string literals with a '+' unless
the line break is intended.
llvm-svn: 209413
If simple (one-statement) blocks can be inlined, the length needs to be
calculated correctly.
Before (in JavaScript but this also affects lambdas, etc.):
var x = {
valueOf: function() { return 1; }
};
After:
var x = {valueOf: function() { return 1; }};
llvm-svn: 209410