protected void TransformVariableIntoReference(JSVariable variable, JSVariableDeclarationStatement statement, int declarationIndex, JSBlockStatement enclosingBlock) { var oldDeclaration = statement.Declarations[declarationIndex]; var valueType = oldDeclaration.Right.GetActualType(JSIL.TypeSystem); var newVariable = variable.Reference(); var enclosingFunction = Stack.OfType<JSFunctionExpression>().First(); JSExpression initialValue; // If the declaration was in function scope originally we can hoist the initial value // into our new variable declaration. If not, we need to initialize the ref variable // to the default value for its type. It will get the correct value assigned later. if (enclosingBlock == enclosingFunction.Body) initialValue = oldDeclaration.Right; else initialValue = new JSDefaultValueLiteral(valueType); var newDeclaration = new JSVariableDeclarationStatement(new JSBinaryOperatorExpression( JSOperator.Assignment, // We have to use a constructed ref to the variable here, otherwise // the declaration will look like 'var x.value = foo' new JSVariable(variable.Identifier, variable.IdentifierType, variable.Function), JSIL.NewReference(initialValue), newVariable.IdentifierType )); if (Tracing) Debug.WriteLine(String.Format("Transformed {0} into {1} in {2}", variable, newVariable, statement)); // Insert the new declaration directly before the top-level block containing the original // declaration. This ensures that if its initial value has a dependency on external state, // the declaration will not precede the values it depends on. // Note that for declarations that were hoisted out of inner blocks (conditionals, loops) // it doesn't actually matter where the insert occurs, since we initialize with a default // value in that case. enclosingFunction.Body.InsertNearChildRecursive( statement, newDeclaration, 0 ); // If the reference is being declared in function scope, it doesn't need a separate assignment // for its initialization. Otherwise, we need to insert an assignment after the original variable // declaration statement to ensure that the reference variable is initialized to the right value // at the exact right point in the function's execution. if (enclosingBlock != enclosingFunction.Body) { var newAssignment = new JSExpressionStatement( new JSBinaryOperatorExpression( JSOperator.Assignment, newVariable, oldDeclaration.Right, valueType ) ); var insertLocation = enclosingBlock.Statements.IndexOf(statement) + 1; enclosingBlock.Statements.Insert(insertLocation, newAssignment); } Variables[variable.Identifier] = newVariable; statement.Declarations.RemoveAt(declarationIndex); TransformedVariables.Add(variable.Identifier); }
protected void TransformVariableIntoReference(JSVariable variable, JSVariableDeclarationStatement statement, int declarationIndex) { if (variable.IsReference) Debugger.Break(); var oldDeclaration = statement.Declarations[declarationIndex]; var newVariable = variable.Reference(); var newDeclaration = new JSBinaryOperatorExpression( JSOperator.Assignment, // We have to use a constructed ref to the variable here, otherwise // the declaration will look like 'var x.value = foo' new JSVariable(variable.Identifier, variable.Type), JSIL.NewReference(oldDeclaration.Right), newVariable.Type ); if (Tracing) Debug.WriteLine(String.Format("Transformed {0} into {1} in {2}", variable, newVariable, statement)); Variables[variable.Identifier] = newVariable; statement.Declarations[declarationIndex] = newDeclaration; TransformedVariables.Add(variable.Identifier); }