Returning `Self` was probably a hack from when shifts were required to be homogenous and we didn't have good generic inits between integer types. Returning Int is more natural, because:
1. Dimensional analysis says that we shouldn't expect the logarithm to have the same type.
2. Int is guaranteed to be able to represent any object size, and BinaryInteger does not admit sparse representations, so the logarithm of the value cannot exceed allocated storage size.
3. Every single use case in the stdlib and tests is either unchanged or simplified by this change.
* Update std lib to Swift 5.0
* Disable Unicode.* warnings for now
* Slow path to resiliently handle the case where an unknown rounding rule is passed
* Remove resilience from Encoding/DecodingError (which should only happen on slow paths anyway)
* internal typealiases now need @usableFromInline
* Force inlining on Array._owner.get
* Make _sanityCheck internal
* Make _debugPrecondition internal
* Make Optional._unsafelyUnwrappedUnchecked internal.
* Make _precondition internal
* Switch Foundation _sanityChecks to assertions
* Update file check tests
* Remove one more _debugPrecondition
* Update Optimization-with-check tests
* [stdlib] Update complexity docs for seq/collection algorithms
This corrects and standardizes the complexity documentation for Sequence
and Collection methods. The use of constants is more consistent, with `n`
equal to the length of the target collection, `m` equal to the length of
a collection passed in as a parameter, and `k` equal to any other passed
or calculated constant.
* Apply notes from @brentdax about complexity nomenclature
* Change `n` to `distance` in `index(_:offsetBy:)`
* Use equivalency language more places; sync across array types
* Use k instead of n for parameter names
* Slight changes to index(_:offsetBy:) discussion.
* Update tests with new parameter names
* Remove case destructuring to _
* Remove some Iterator.Element
* Which idiot wrote this? Oh.
* Switch NibbleSort to just use default impls... shouldn't change perf
If a type conditionally conforms to BidirectionalCollection, suffix's (and the
others) use of `index` ends up dispatching through `Collection.index` seemingly
because it is a protocol requirement. The intended function is
BidirectionalCollection's overloaded `index` (which _isn't_ connected to a
protocol requirement), which is called for non-conditional conformances. As
such, this is a work-around to stop code crashing.
Noticed in SR-8022, rdar://problem/41216424.
- Revise Bool.toggle() discussion and fix attribute placement
- Revise to Hasher abstracts and discussions
- Correct the name of the remainder operator
- Clean up deprecations and paste-os w/in UnsafePointer
Improvements from SE-0213 made constant propagation more
precise but, as a side-effect, resulted in more false positives,
to mitigate that `magnitude` has marked as `@inline(__always)`
but it could be made transparent again by using `&+` operator.
Implementation is as follows: In `preCheckExpression` try to
detect if there is `T(literal)` call in the AST, replace it with
implicit `literal as T`, while trying to form type-checked AST,
after constraint solving, restore source information and drop
unnecessary coercion expression.
Resolves: rdar://problem/17088188
Resolves: rdar://problem/39120081
Resolves: rdar://problem/23672697
Resolves: rdar://problem/40379985
This allows Set’s internal types not to define Key, Value, SequenceElement & SequenceElementWithoutLabels typealiases.
Splitting the protocol on the mutable/immutable axis allows us to remove some obsolete method definitions.