Note that host objects that do so will *not* have access to their standard representation from within member functions - you will need to extend the interface to accomodate for them. This is due to long-standing limitations with type IDs and downcasting with types that bear lifetimes - it's entirely an unsafe operation and exposing such a facility to safe Rust is unsound. However, this will at least let us separate out several things from ScriptObject that don't need to be there for the time being.
`Object::function` now returns a pre-allocated function object. You may supply it an explicit prototype to have it linked into the function object (which is why we have to return a cell).
The previous behavior had an oversight: if you tried to set a variable with the same name as an in-scope property, it would always try to overwrite that property. This can fail silently and doesn't match with Flash Player behavior. Now, an attempt to overwrite a read-only property is instead correctly rejected so that it can be defined in local scope.
This type explicitly signals if an immediate value is to be returned, if a value is to be returned on the stack, or if no return value is to be generated. Holders of a `ReturnValue` can also use `and_then` to schedule a `StackContinuation` to be executed when and if that value is ready.
`StackContinuations` now yield `ReturnValues` as well, so they have a moderate level of composability. For example, if you need to get a property from an object and push it on the stack, you can return the result of calling `get` directly and the machinery ensures it eventually gets there.
This involved yet another macro, `and_then!`, to avoid a ridiculous amount of duplicate code. It calls a continuation whenever it's value is ready, even if the value resolved on the Rust stack.
`locals_into_form_values` does not currently support this. It skips any property that does not resolve on the Rust stack. Future work is required to resolve this.