Some editors use diagnostics from SourceKit to replace build issues. This causes issues if the diagnostics from SourceKit are formatted differently than the build issues. Make sure they are rendered the same way, removing most uses of `DiagnosticsEditorMode`.
To do so, always emit the `add stubs for conformance` note (which previously was only emitted in editor mode) and remove all `; add <something>` suffixes from notes that state which requirements are missing.
rdar://129283608
Previously, if a request R evaluated itself N times, we would emit N
"circular reference" diagnostics. These add no value, so instead let's
cache the user-provided default value on the first circular evaluation.
This changes things slightly so that instead of returning an
llvm::Expected<Request::OutputType>, various evaluator methods take
a callback which can produce the default value.
The existing evaluateOrDefault() interface is unchanged, and a new
evaluateOrFatal() entry point replaces
llvm::cantFail(ctx.evaluator(...)).
Direct callers of the evaluator's operator() were updated to pass in
the callback. The benefit of the callback over evaluateOrDefault() is
that if the default value is expensive to constuct, like a dummy
generic signature, we will only construct it in the case where a
cycle actually happened, otherwise we just delete the callback.
(cherry picked from commit b8fcf1c709efa6cd28e1217bd0efe876f7c0d2b7)
This commit changes fixit messages from a question/suggestion to an
imperative message for protocol conformances and switch-case. Addresses
https://github.com/apple/swift/issues/67510.