A precedence annotation wrapping a sequence of characters now only affects how tightly those characters bind to *each other*, not how tightly they bind to the preceding character. This bug surfaced because a generated lexer was failing to recognize a '\n' character as a token, instead treating it as ubiquitous whitespace. It made this error because, even though anonymous ubiquitous tokens have the lowest precedence, the character immediately *after* the '\n' was part of a normal token, which had *normal* precedence (0). Advancing into that following token was incorrectly prioritized above accepting the line-break token. |
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| .. | ||
| equals_pointer.h | ||
| rule_helpers.cc | ||
| rule_helpers.h | ||
| stream_methods.cc | ||
| stream_methods.h | ||