Introduce ExtensionDecl::getExtendedNominal() to provide the nominal
type declaration that the extension declaration extends. Move most
of the existing callers of the callers to getExtendedType() over to
getExtendedNominal(), because they don’t need the full type information.
ExtensionDecl::getExtendedNominal() is itself not very interesting yet,
because it depends on getExtendedType().
ClassDecl::getSuperclass() produces a complete interface type describing the
superclass of a class, including any generic arguments (for a generic type).
Most callers only need the referenced ClassDecl, which is (now) cheaper
to compute: switch those callers over to ClassDecl::getSuperclassDecl().
Fixes an existing test for SR-5993.
More groundwork for protocols with superclass constraints.
In several places we need to distinguish between existential
types that have a superclass term (MyClass & Proto) and
existential types containing a protocol with a superclass
constraint.
This is similar to how I can write 'AnyObject & Proto', or
write 'Proto1 & Proto2' where Proto1 has an ': AnyObject'
in its inheritance clause.
Note that some of the usages will be revisited later as
I do more refactoring and testing. This is just a first pass.
This ensures that 'Foo' always gets imported before 'Foo_Private'.
This shouldn't strictly be necessary but does end up with more
reliable results in practice.
rdar://problem/36159006
This doesn't have a specific effect now, because all of these places
are likely to only see NameAliasType, but it is refactoring with the
intent of eliminating NameAliasType entirely.
Previously (a03c40cb2c) we assumed all Swift enums were non-frozen in
ObjC, a weird choice in retrospect. Now that we actually distinguish
frozen and non-frozen enums in Swift, we can use the
'enum_extensibility' attribute to mark them as open or closed in ObjC.
Note that this only matters for Swift libraries compiled with
-enable-resilience, i.e. those that might get a new implementation at
runtime. Everyone else is now declaring a "closed" enum, matching the
behavior in Swift.
This has three principal advantages:
- It gives some additional type-safety when working
with known accessors.
- It makes it significantly easier to test whether a declaration
is an accessor and encourages the use of a common idiom.
- It saves a small amount of memory in both FuncDecl and its
serialized form.
Use the attribute to update the OptionalTypeKind used for various
decls that we print.
I added test cases to make sure we were exercising all the modified
code paths.
1) Move existing SyntaxSugarTypes under a new subclass called UnarySyntaxSugarType.
2) Make DictionaryType subclass SyntaxSugarType.
This helps improve getDesugaredType() performance by ensuring that
ImplOrContext is stored at the same field offset in memory.
This also de-boilerplates some AST walking.