A struct declaration with variables is now absorbed into the 'declaration'
rule, like any other variable declaration.
A struct declaration without variables is now reduced to the
'struct_declaration_without_vars' rule.
They both are reduced to a 'declaration_statement' in the end.
In a declaration with multiple variables, the variables must be created
before the initializer of the next variable is parsed. This is required
for initializers such as:
float a = 1, b = a, c = b + 1;
A requisite for this is that the type information is parsed in the same
rule as the first variable (as a variable_def_typed) so it is
immediately available to declare the first variable. Then, the next
untyped variable declaration is parsed, and the type from the first
variable can be used to declare the second, before the third is parsed,
and so on.
Non-constant vector indexing is not solved with relative addressing
in the register indexes because this indexation cannot be at the level
of register-components.
Mathematical operations must be used instead.
Currently, the compiler requires that dereferences be HLSL_IR_CONSTANT, so that
it can compute the offset at compile time. However, scenarios such as this test
will produce a dereference with HLSL_IR_EXPR, which will generate an error.
Passing this test in particular will require adding support for SM4 relative
addressing, as well as support for non-constant indexing in general.
Signed-off-by: Ethan Lee <flibitijibibo@gmail.com>