Children were kept in a per-node doubly-linked list with the slot accessors
layered over it as a view. Storage now is the slot model: each node stores its
children in generated backing fields, AstNodeCollection<T> is backed by a
List<T>, and the flattened child-index space is owned by generated
GetChildCount/GetChild/SetChild/GetChildSlot members, with sibling navigation,
the role API and Clone re-expressed over them and indices renumbered lazily. A
DEBUG CheckInvariant runs after each transform, the analog of the IL
pipeline's per-transform check, so a transform that corrupts the tree fails at
that transform. Output is unchanged.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-8:Claude Code
Comments and preprocessor directives were positional children interleaved
into the child list, and punctuation, keywords and operators were token-node
children. Add a leading/trailing trivia side-channel for comments and
directives, emit it from the output visitor, and re-home every comment
receiver onto it (including inside-block comments as comment-only empty
statements and undecodable attribute arguments as an ErrorExpression). With
locations and sequence points no longer sourced from token nodes, stop
reconstructing them on the locations path and delete CSharpTokenNode,
CSharpModifierToken and InsertSpecialsDecorator. The AST no longer carries
token children or positional comments; output is byte-identical.
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-8:Claude Code
Various improvements regarding primary constructor decompilation, including:
- introduce `HasPrimaryConstructor` property in the AST, as there is a difference between no primary constructor and a parameterless primary constructor
- improved support for inherited records and forwarded ctor calls
- exclude non-public fields and properties in IsPrintedMember
- introduce an option to always make the decompiler emit primary constructors, when possible
This way we avoid having to extract later, as we will never inline if the `isinst` argument if this could result in it being unrepresentable in C#.
This commit also refactors inlining restrictions to avoid requiring special cases in ILInlining itself.
But when making this change, I discovered that this broke our pattern-matching tests, and that the weird IL with double `isinst` is indeed generated by the C# compiler for `if (genericParam is StringComparison.Ordinal)` style code. So instead we also allow `isinst` with a `box(expr-without-side-effects)` argument to be represented with the `expr is T ? (T)expr : null` emulation.