In order to make range-shifting for semantic highlighting testable,
disable returning semantic information during an "open" request. This
has no real value anyway, since it only happens very rarely, and it
makes testing range shifting impossible to do deterministically.
rdar://problem/66386179
In order to avoid accidentally implicitly loading modules that are expected but were not provided as explicit inputs.
- Use either SerializedModuleLoader or ExplicitSwiftModuleLoader for loading of partial modules, depending on whether we are in Explicit Module Build or Implicit Module Build mode.
When performing an insertion (replacement length = 0) inside an existing
annotation, we were forming a closed range instead of a half-open range,
causing us to shift the effected token instead of throwing it out. There
were also no tests for this functionality, so add a bunch of annotations
tests.
One area thing that is not tested is what if there have been multiple
edits since the tokens were created. This is difficult to engineer,
because right now making an edit immediately removes the semantic tokens
and returns them. It could happen if the AST build takes longer than the
edits, but there is no way to guarantee that in the current API.
rdar://65748892
Return type in the closure signature is often redundant when expanding
placeholders, because the type of the clossures are usually inferred
from the context (i.e. calling function), users don't need to write the
return type explicitly.
They are not only redundant, but also sometimes harmful when the return
type is a generic parameter or its requirement. Actually, there is no
correct spelling in such cases.
So omit the return type and the parentheses around the parameter clause.
rdar://problem/63607976
Do not remove semantic annotations, so that if a client sends multiple
magic replacetext 0, 0, "" requests they will all return the same
result. This makes sourcekitd more robust around providing semantic
highlighting if the editor may make multiple queries for document
update.
rdar://64904029
We weren't printing memberwise inits, shorthand arguments (e.g. $0, $1), and
other implicit decls, so cursor info would give empty annotated decl and fully
annotated decl fields for them.
Resolves rdar://problem/58929991
This makes it easier to specify OptionSet arguments.
Also modify appropriate uses of ModuleDecl::ImportFilter to take
advantage of the new constructor.
Most clients were only using it to populate the
main module with files, which is now done by
`getMainModule`. Instead, they can now just rely
on parsing happening lazily.
Lift the `DisablePoundIfEvaluation` parsing option
into `LangOptions` to subsume the need for the
`EvaluateConditionals` parameter, and sink the
computation of `CanDelayBodies` down into
`createSourceFileForMainModule`.
Single-expression closures have always been traversed differently
from multi-statement closures. The former were traversed as if the
expression was their only child, skipping the BraceStmt and implicit
return, while the later was traversed as a normal BraceStmt.
Unify on the latter treatment, so that traversal
There are a few places where we unintentionally relied on this
expression-as-child behavior. Clean those up to work with arbitrary
closures, which is an overall simplification in the logic.
Currently when parsing a SourceFile, the parser
gets handed pointers so that it can write the
interface hash and collected tokens directly into
the file. It can also call `setSyntaxRoot` at
the end of parsing to set the syntax tree.
In preparation for the removal of
`performParseOnly`, this commit formalizes these
values as outputs of `ParseSourceFileRequest`,
ensuring that the file gets parsed when the
interface hash, collected tokens, or syntax tree
is queried.
We would previously hide the protocol, its extensions and members, but the '_'
prefix really just means the protocol itself isn't intended for clients, rather
than its members.
This also adds support for 'fully_annotated_decl' entries in doc-info for
extensions to be consistent with every other decl, and removes the
'fully_annotated_generic_signature' entry we supplied as a fallback.
Also fixes several bugs with the synthesized extensions mechanism:
- The type sustitutions applied to the extension's requirements were computed
using the extension itself as the decl context rather than the extension's
nominal. The meant the extension's requirements themselves were assumed to
hold when determining the substitutions, so equality constraints were always
met. Because of this extension members were incorrectly merged with the base
nominal or its extensions despite having additional constraints.
- Types within the requirements weren't being transformed when printed (e.g.
'Self.Element' was printed rather than 'T') both in the interface output and
in the requirements list. We were also incorrectly printing requirements
that were already satisfied once the base type was subsituted in.
- If both the protocol extension and 'enabling' extension of the base nominal
that added the protocol conformance had conditional requirements, we were
only printing the protocol extension's requirements in the synthesized
extension.
- The USR and annotated decl output embedded in the 'key.doc.full_as_xml'
string for synthesized members were printed to match their original context, rather than
the synthesized one.
Resolves rdar://problem/57121937