- Introduce a generic requirements opening function for type resolution,
which is used by the constraint system in cases where we need to
impose requirements on opened type variables.
- Refactor `replaceInferableTypesWithTypeVars` to use this function
when opening generic types that contain either placeholder or unbound
generic types.
Together these changes ensure that we don't drop generic requirements
when an unbound generic or placeholder type is used as a generic
argument.
Instead of checking `EnableConstraintSolverPerformanceHacks`
directly, let's use an option which is easier to set i.e.
when a block list is implemented.
We need to have a notion of "complete" binding set before
we can allow inference from generic parameters and ternary,
otherwise we'd make a favoring decision that might not be
correct i.e. `v ?? (<<cond>> ? nil : o)` where `o` is `Int`.
`getBindingsFor` doesn't currently infer transitive bindings
which means that for a ternary we'd only have a single
binding - `Int` which could lead to favoring overload of
`??` and has non-optional parameter on the right-hand side.
Don't attempt this optimization if call has number literals.
This is intended to narrowly fix situations like:
```swift
func test<T: FloatingPoint>(_: T) { ... }
func test<T: Numeric>(_: T) { ... }
test(42)
```
The call should use `<T: Numeric>` overload even though the
`<T: FloatingPoint>` is a more specialized version because
selecting `<T: Numeric>` doesn't introduce non-default literal
types.
(cherry picked from commit 8d5cb112ef)
This is currently unused because current mechanism set favored choices
directly but it would be utilized by the disjunction optimizer.
(cherry picked from commit e404ed722a)
My change 983b75e1cf broke
-warn-long-expression-type-checking because now the
ExpressionTimer is not instantiated by default and that
entire code path is skipped.
Change it so that if -warn-long-expression-type-checking
is passed in, we still start the timer, we just don't
ever consider it to have 'expired'.
Fixes rdar://problem/152998878.
Package the flag into `performanceHacksEnabled()` method on
`ConstraintSystem` and start using it to wrap all of the hacks
in constraint generator and the solver.
Without contextual information it won't be possible to bind a missing
member to a concrete type later, so let's bind them eagerly and propagate
placeholders outward.
Resolves: rdar://152021264
Resolves: https://github.com/swiftlang/swift/issues/81770
Factor out `ConstraintSystem::getExplicitCaughtErrorType` from
`getCaughtErrorType`. Then use this for the contextual
type for a `throw` syntactic element.
rdar://139000351
Previously key path type didn't have any requirements on their
root and value types but now that they do, we need a dedicated
place to perform an assignment and open/record all of the requirements.
Within the constraint system, introduce a new kind of conformance constraint,
a "nonisolated conforms-to" constraint, which can only be satisfied by
nonisolated conformances. Introduce this constraint instead of the normal
conforms-to constraint whenever the subject type is a type parameter that
has either a `Sendable` or `SendableMetatype` constraint, i.e., when the type
or its values can escape the current isolation domain.
First problem - the logic used constraint system, which shouldn't
be required, second - it expects the type to be always present in
`ContextualTypeInfo` but that's not the case for some patterns.
Resolves: rdar://131819800