/******************************************************************************* * Copyright (c) 2005 IBM Corporation and others. * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html * * Contributors: * IBM Corporation - initial API and implementation *******************************************************************************/ package net.sourceforge.phpdt.core.dom; import net.sourceforge.phpdt.core.ICompilationUnit; /** * An AST requestor handles ASTs for compilation units passed to * ASTParser.createASTs. *

* ASTRequestor.acceptAST is called for each of the * compilation units passed to ASTParser.createASTs. * After all the compilation units have been processed, * ASTRequestor.acceptBindings is called for each * of the binding keys passed to ASTParser.createASTs. *

*

* This class is intended to be subclassed by clients. * AST requestors are serially reusable, but neither reentrant nor * thread-safe. *

* * @see ASTParser#createASTs(ICompilationUnit[], String[], ASTRequestor, org.eclipse.core.runtime.IProgressMonitor) * @since 3.1 */ public abstract class ASTRequestor { /** * The compilation unit resolver used to resolve bindings, or * null if none. Note that this field is non-null * only within the dynamic scope of a call to * ASTParser.createASTs. */ CompilationUnitResolver compilationUnitResolver = null; /** * Creates a new instance. */ protected ASTRequestor() { // do nothing } /** * Accepts an AST corresponding to the compilation unit. * That is, ast is an AST for source. *

* The default implementation of this method does nothing. * Clients should override to process the resulting AST. *

* * @param source the compilation unit the ast is coming from * @param ast the requested abtract syntax tree */ public void acceptAST(ICompilationUnit source, CompilationUnit ast) { // do nothing } /** * Accepts a binding corresponding to the binding key. * That is, binding is the binding for * bindingKey; binding is null * if the key cannot be resolved. *

* The default implementation of this method does nothing. * Clients should override to process the resulting binding. *

* * @param bindingKey the key of the requested binding * @param binding the requested binding, or null if none */ public void acceptBinding(String bindingKey, IBinding binding) { // do nothing } /** * Resolves bindings for the given binding keys. * The given binding keys must have been obtained earlier * using {@link IBinding#getKey()}. *

* If a binding key cannot be resolved, null is put in the resulting array. * Bindings can only be resolved in the dynamic scope of a ASTParser.createASTs, * and only if ASTParser.resolveBindings(true) was specified. *

*

* Caveat: During an acceptAST callback, there are implementation * limitations concerning the look up of binding keys representing local elements. * In some cases, the binding is unavailable, and null will be returned. * This is only an issue during an acceptAST callback, and only * when the binding key represents a local element (e.g., local variable, * local class, method declared in anonymous class). There is no such limitation * outside of acceptAST callbacks, or for top-level types and their * members even within acceptAST callbacks. *

* * @param bindingKeys the binding keys to look up * @return a list of bindings paralleling the bindingKeys parameter, * with null entries for keys that could not be resolved */ public final IBinding[] createBindings(String[] bindingKeys) { int length = bindingKeys.length; IBinding[] result = new IBinding[length]; for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) { result[i] = null; if (this.compilationUnitResolver != null) { result[i] = this.compilationUnitResolver.createBinding(bindingKeys[i]); } } return result; } }