Rather than setting an "Unwrap" field on the existing TemplateExpr, we'll
instead use a separate, simpler AST node.
There is very little in common between these two cases, so overloading the
TemplateExpr node doesn't buy much. A separate node is needed here,
rather than just returning the wrapped node directly, to give us somewhere
to capture the full source range extent of the wrapping template, whereas
the inner expression only captures the range of itself. This is important
both for good diagnostics and for transforming zclsyntax AST into
zclwrite AST.
This can either be a traversal or a first-class node depending on whether
the given expression is a literal. This exception is made to allow
applications to conditionally populate only part of a potentially-large
collection if the config is only requesting one or two distinct indices.
In particular, it allows the following to be considered a single traversal
from the scope:
foo.bar[0].baz
Conditional expression parsing is ostensibly implemented, but since it
depends on the rest of the expression parsers -- not yet implemented --
it cannot be tested in isolation.
Also includes an initial implementation of the conditional expression
node, but this is also not yet tested and so may need further revisions
once we're in a better position to test it.
The implementation of Variables will be identical for every Expression
implementation since we just wrap our AST-walk-based "Variables" function
to do the work.
Rather than manually copy-pasting the declaration for each expression
type, instead we'll generate this programmatically using "go generate".
This will need to be re-run each time a new expression node type is
added, in order to make it actually implement the Expression interface.