Allow freestanding macros to be used at top-level.
- Parse top-level `#…` as `MacroExpansionDecl` when we are not in scripting mode.
- Add macro expansion decls to the source lookup cache with name-driven lazy expansion. Not supporting arbitrary name yet.
- Experimental support for script mode and brace-level declaration macro expansions: When type-checking a `MacroExpansionExpr`, assign it a substitute `MacroExpansionDecl` if the macro reference resolves to a declaration macro. This doesn’t work quite fully yet and will be enabled in a future fix.
Rather than editing the macro buffer in refactoring, add appropriate
padding and braces when creating the macro.
Don't edit the insertion location - we should update this in a later PR
as well.
This adds a new `primary_file` key, which defaults to `sourcefile`. For
nested expansions, `primary_file` should be set to the containing file
and `sourcefile` to the name of the macro expansion buffer.
And adjust contextual parameter modifier parsing in general to be more
properly contextual, so we don't have to reserve `__shared` or `__owned`,
or their successor spellings, as argument labels anymore.
And do a first pass of auditing existing uses of the parameter specifiers to
make sure that we look at the ValueOwnership mapping in most cases instead of
individual modifiers.
This fixes an issue if the range ends with a string literal that contains the IDE inspection target. In that case the end of the range will point to the start of the string literal but the IDE inspection target is inside the string literal and thus after the range’s end.
- Use the name lookup table instead of adding members from a macro expansion to the parent decl context.
- Require declaration macros to specify introduced names and used the declared names to guide macro expansions lazily.
We can get into a situation where the C++ parser has emitted a warning but no error and thus `hadAnyError()` is still `false`. Suppress warnings from SwiftParser to avoid emitting the same warning that we already emitted from the C++ parser from SwiftParser.
The attached and freestanding macro attributes use the same parsing
logic and representation, so generalize the "attached" attribute into
a more general "macro role" attribute.
call it from parseExpandedAttributeList.
In the future, it would be much better to requestify computing exportedSourceFile,
so the new Swift parser is invoked on-demand rather than making sure it's
invoked in all of the appropriate parser entry points.
Describe attached macros with the `@attached` attribute, providing the
macro role and affected names as arguments to the macro. The form of
this macro will remain the same as it gains other kinds of attached
macro roles beyond "accessor".
Remove the "accessors" role from `@declaration`, which will be going
away.
Once an accessor macro has produced accessors, parse them and wire them
into the AST so the rest of the compiler will see them. First
end-to-end test case!
Add support for freestanding declaration macros.
- Parse `@declaration` attribute.
- Type check and expand `MacroExpansionDecl`.
Known issues:
- Generic macros are not yet handled.
- Expansion does not work when the parent decl context is `BraceStmt`. Need to parse freestanding declaration macro expansions in `BraceStmt` as `MacroExpansionDecl`, and add expanded decls to name lookup.