Now that IUOs are supported for compound function
references, we can properly set the compound bit
here.
This is a source breaking change since this used
to be legal:
```swift
struct S {
static func foo(x: Int) -> Self { .init() }
}
let _: S = .foo(x:)(x: 0)
```
However I somewhat doubt anyone is intentionally
writing code like that.
Update error messages to mention the invalid character.
Improve the diagnostic of floating point exponents.
Add tests for error messages when parsing floating point exponents.
Update existing tests for new error messages.
Rephrased error message to indicate which character is unexpected.
Provide error message variations when parsing binary, octal, decimal (default), and hexadecimal integer literals.
Look for unexpected digits in binary and octal integer literals.
Look for unexpected letters in hex integer literals.
Resolves: SR-5236 rdar://problem/32858684
In Swift 3, unqualified lookup would skip static methods
when performing a lookup from instance context.
In Swift 4 mode, if a module method is shadowed by a static
method, you will need to qualify the module method with the
module name.
It would have been nice to isolate the quirk in Sema and
not AST, but unfortunately UnqualifiedLookup only proceeds
to lookup in the module if scope-based lookup failed to find
anything, and I don't want to change that since it risks
introducing performance regressions.
Fixes <rdar://problem/29961715>.
Suggest a fix-it for unqualified references to all static members
from instance context, not just enum elements.
Also, fix a small problem with the fix-it for replacing protocol
names with 'Self' inside extension bodies -- we didn't handle nested
functions properly.
We do this in a more general way higher up in the constraint
solver. Filtering out methods in name lookup only hurts
diagnostics.
In fact I don't think this behavior was intentional at all,
since the code in question was originally written in 2013
before a lot of the more recent member lookup and diagnostic
code was added.
This does break source compatibility though, but in a minor
way. See the change to the CoreGraphics overlay. Again,
though, I think this was an accident and not intentional.
Basic implementatation of SE-0021, naming functions with argument
labels. Handle parsing of compound function names in various
unqualified-identifier productions, updating the AST representation of
various expressions from Identifiers to DeclNames. The result doesn't
capture all of the source locations we want; more on that later.
As part of this, remove the parsing code for the "selector-style"
method names, since we now have a replacement. The feature was never
publicized and doesn't make sense in Swift, so zap it outright.