The parser spends the majority of its time allocating and freeing trees and stack nodes.
Also, the memory footprint of the AST is a significant concern when using tree-sitter
with large files. This library is already unlikely to work very well with source files
larger than 4GB, so representing rows, columns, byte lengths and child indices as
unsigned 32 bit integers seems like the right choice.
* While generating the lex table, note which tokens can match the
same string. A token needs to be relexed when it has possible
homonyms in the current state.
* Also note which tokens can match substrings of each other tokens.
A token needs to be relexed when there are viable tokens that
could match longer strings in the current state and the next
token has been edited.
* Remove the logic for marking tokens as fragile on creation.
* Store the reusability/non-reusability of symbols off of individual
actions and onto the entire entry for the state & symbol.
* Use GLR stack-splitting to try all numbers of tokens to
discard until a repair is found.
* Check the validity of repairs by looking at the child trees,
rather than the statically-computed 'in-progress symbols' list