My previous commit here didn’t work correctly for nested tuples, both
because it didn’t recurse into them to propagate access kind correctly
and because an outer TupleIndex overload (when indexing into the nested
tuple) could still be expecting an lvalue type.
This fix is much better. ConstraintSystem::resolveOverload now
correctly always expects rvalue types from rvalue tuples. And during
applyMemberRefExpr, if the overload expects an rvalue but the tuple
contains lvalues, coerceToType() correctly does any recursive munging
of the tuple expr required.
The issue here is that the constraint solver was deciding on
FixKind::RelabelCallTuple as the fix for the problem and emitting the
diagnostic, even though there were two different fixes possible.
CSDiags has the infrastructure to support doing doing the right thing
here, but is only being used for ApplyExprs, not SubscriptExprs.
The solution is to fix both problems: remove FixKind::RelabelCallTuple,
to let CSDiags handle the problem, and enhance CSDiags to treat
SubscriptExpr more commonly with ApplyExpr. This improves several cases
where the solver was picking one solution randomly and suggesting that
as a fix, instead of listing that there are multiple different solutions.
There's a group of methods in `DeclContext` with names that start with *is*,
such as `isClassOrClassExtensionContext()`. These names suggests a boolean
return value, while the methods actually return a type declaration. This
patch replaces the *is* prefix with *getAs* to better reflect their interface.
_BridgedNSError conformances can affect the runtime behavior of
dynamic casts (e.g. 'is'). Unfortunately, the conformance is not
always emitted, in an effort to save space when not used. This change
forces the conformance witness tables to be emitted when we can detect
a dynamic cast to an _BridgedNSError conforming enum.
Test cases included, as well as a note about a potentially erroneous
path that is not currently handled: when the dynamic cast occurs in a
generic function to a generic type (and thus we are unsure which
conformances we need to pull in).
In SR-628 in particular, the problem was an assert that an AccessKind
was being set on a non-lvalue, but there were lots of asserts here in
various scenarios, the most common other ones being an AccessKind not
being set assertion by the ASTVerifier or lvalue-ness not matching
between tuple expr and tuple element expr.
This checks for lvalues in the tuple when a tuple indexing expr is built,
and if there are any, inserts load exprs into the lvalue elements to make all rvalues.
When one spells a compound declaration name in the source (e.g.,
insertSubview(_:aboveSubview:), keep track of the locations of the
base name, parentheses, and argument labels.
UnresolvedConstructorExpr is not providing any value here; it's
essentially just UnresolvedDotExpr where the name refers to an
initializer, so use that instead. NFC
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.
closures which have already been transformed into void conversion closures.
This fixes 28213-swift-expr-walk.swift/28187-llvm-foldingset-swift-constraints-constraintlocator.swift
a constraint system in "allowFreeTypeVariables" mode. Previously, we
only allowed a few specific constraints, now we allow any relational and
member constraints. The later one is a big deal because it means that we
can allow ".Foo" expressions as ambiguous solutions, which CSDiags can
handle well.
This unblocks solving 23942743 and enables some minor improvements across
the board, including diagnosing things like this better:
Optional(.none) // now: generic parameter 'T' could not be inferred
That said, it also just permutes some non-awesome diagnostics.
As part of this, use a different enum for parsed generic requirements.
NFC except that I noticed that ASTWalker wasn't visiting the second
type in a conformance constraint; fixing this seems to have no effect
beyond producing better IDE annotations.
This eliminates some minor overheads, but mostly it eliminates
a lot of conceptual complexity due to the overhead basically
appearing outside of its context.
The main idea here is that we really, really want to be
able to recover the protocol requirement of a conformance
reference even if it's abstract due to the conforming type
being abstract (e.g. an archetype). I've made the conversion
from ProtocolConformance* explicit to discourage casual
contamination of the Ref with a null value.
As part of this change, always make conformance arrays in
Substitutions fully parallel to the requirements, as opposed
to occasionally being empty when the conformances are abstract.
As another part of this, I've tried to proactively fix
prospective bugs with partially-concrete conformances, which I
believe can happen with concretely-bound archetypes.
In addition to just giving us stronger invariants, this is
progress towards the removal of the archetype from Substitution.
Under -enable-infer-default-arguments, the Clang importer infers some
default arguments for imported declarations. Rather than jumping
through awful hoops to make sure that we create default argument
generators (which will likely imply eager type checking), simply
handle these cases as callee-side expansions.
This makes -enable-infer-default-arguments usable, fixing
rdar://problem/24049927.
This reverts commit 420bedaae1 because it
appears to have unintentionally made some previously accepted code
involving casts of variadic parameters to closures no longer compile.
that it is specific to ClosureExprs. Also, consolidate some logic
in CSDiags into the now shared coerceParameterListToType, which
makes a bit more sense and simplifies things a lot. NFC.
There are still unanswered questions. It isn't clear to me why
we support API names on closures, when we don't implement proper
semantic analysis for them. This seems like an accidentally supported
feature that should be removed.
Parameters (to methods, initializers, accessors, subscripts, etc) have always been represented
as Pattern's (of a particular sort), stemming from an early design direction that was abandoned.
Being built on top of patterns leads to patterns being overly complicated (e.g. tuple patterns
have to have varargs and default parameters) and make working on parameter lists complicated
and error prone. This might have been ok in 2015, but there is no way we can live like this in
2016.
Instead of using Patterns, carve out a new ParameterList and Parameter type to represent all the
parameter specific stuff. This simplifies many things and allows a lot of simplifications.
Unfortunately, I wasn't able to do this very incrementally, so this is a huge patch. The good
news is that it erases a ton of code, and the technical debt that went with it. Ignoring test
suite changes, we have:
77 files changed, 2359 insertions(+), 3221 deletions(-)
This patch also makes a bunch of wierd things dead, but I'll sweep those out in follow-on
patches.
Fixes <rdar://problem/22846558> No code completions in Foo( when Foo has error type
Fixes <rdar://problem/24026538> Slight regression in generated header, which I filed to go with 3a23d75.
Fixes an overloading bug involving default arguments and curried functions (see the diff to
Constraints/diagnostics.swift, which we now correctly accept).
Fixes cases where problems with parameters would get emitted multiple times, e.g. in the
test/Parse/subscripting.swift testcase.
The source range for ParamDecl now includes its type, which permutes some of the IDE / SourceModel tests
(for the better, I think).
Eliminates the bogus "type annotation missing in pattern" error message when a type isn't
specified for a parameter (see test/decl/func/functions.swift).
This now consistently parenthesizes argument lists in function types, which leads to many diffs in the
SILGen tests among others.
This does break the "sibling indentation" test in SourceKit/CodeFormat/indent-sibling.swift, and
I haven't been able to figure it out. Given that this is experimental functionality anyway,
I'm just XFAILing the test for now. i'll look at it separately from this mongo diff.