Commit Graph

80 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris Lattner
79563ff700 Several conflated changes:
- Enhance subscript diagnostics to chase into the constraint system to find
   overload candidates that failed to match so we can rank and diagnose 
   subscript ambiguities using the same mechanics we have for operators.
 - Implement a copy of suggestPotentialOverloads based on the new mechanics
   for overload set resolution.  This allows us to diagnose these in a more
   detailed way, but for now we're keeping it as similar to the old system as
   possible.  The old version to be removed once the last client moves off it.
 - Add a bunch of testcases to decl/subscript/subscripting.swift where we are
   doing unfortunate things still.



Swift SVN r29810
2015-06-30 21:50:36 +00:00
Chris Lattner
f25e14ecc9 fix <rdar://problem/14096697> QoI: Diagnostics for trying to return values from void functions
by propagating the 'is return expr' bit more carefully in sequence folding, and by
adding another path for handling the return diagnostics better.

This probably improves a number of cases where we complain about "this argument list 
is invalid" when the call is in the context of a return.



Swift SVN r29565
2015-06-23 05:53:24 +00:00
Joe Groff
5e0361647d Sema: Admit partial applications of non-'mutating' methods.
Our implementation of partial_apply and currying is robust enough to handle these cases now. Mutating methods are still problematic since capturing would violate 'inout' semantics. (Maybe we could support 'mutating' partial applications as @noescape closures, some day.)

Swift SVN r28992
2015-05-24 19:39:07 +00:00
Chris Lattner
d5f68b478f Teach the recursive part of the diagnostics to handle the various things
that make vardecls and subscripts immutable.  This makes the indirect cases
a lot more specific ("this is a get-only property" instead of "this is 
immutable") and allows us to consolidate a bunch of code:

 2 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 119 deletions(-)




Swift SVN r28954
2015-05-23 04:53:08 +00:00
Chris Lattner
f31c58d8fd unify the constraint solver path for assignment lvalue failure with
the CSGen path for assignment lvalue failure.  No significant win other
than simplifcation.


Swift SVN r28942
2015-05-23 01:26:12 +00:00
Chris Lattner
7d881f8440 - Switch "&x", "++x" and "x+=1" onto the new style mutability diagnostics,
which tell you what the problem is, not just that you have one.
- Enhance diagnostics to be more specific about function calls producing 
  rvalues.



Swift SVN r28939
2015-05-23 00:17:12 +00:00
Chris Lattner
e4b6afb9ae Start moving the testsuite to the "_ = foo()" idiom for evaluating an
expression but ignoring its value.  This is the right canonical way to do
this.  NFC, just testsuite changes.



Swift SVN r28638
2015-05-15 20:15:54 +00:00
Chris Lattner
4366da9250 more testcase updates for upcoming diagnostics change.
Swift SVN r28409
2015-05-11 06:05:00 +00:00
Roman Levenstein
984fcef576 Produce an error for generic parameters of functions if those parameters are not used in function signature.
If a generic parameter is not referred to from a function signature, it can never be inferred and thus such a function can never be invoked.

We now produce the following error:

generic parameter 'T' is not used in function signature
func f8<T> (x: Int) {}

This commit takes Jordan't comments on r28181 into account:
- it produces a shorter error message
- it does not change the compiler_crashers_fixed test and add a new expected error instead

Swift SVN r28194
2015-05-06 02:20:39 +00:00
Roman Levenstein
a3a25000ff Revert "Produce an error for generic parameters of functions if those parameters are not used in function signature."
This reverts commit r28181. I'll change it according to Jordan's comments and re-commit.

Swift SVN r28193
2015-05-06 02:20:36 +00:00
Roman Levenstein
ebe3fddbe6 Produce an error for generic parameters of functions if those parameters are not used in function signature.
If a generic parameter is not referred to from a function signature, it can never be inferred and thus such a function can never be invoked.

We now produce the following error:

There is no way to infer the generic parameter 'T' if it is not used in function signature
func f8<T> (x: Int) {}
             ^

Swift SVN r28181
2015-05-05 21:02:11 +00:00
Doug Gregor
8322b06ce6 Revert "Suggest '==' when trying to constraint a generic type by a concrete type."
This reverts r27834, which toggled some compiler crashers.

Swift SVN r27847
2015-04-28 00:03:16 +00:00
Doug Gregor
95fe505b89 Suggest '==' when trying to constraint a generic type by a concrete type.
Fixes rdar://problem/20636279.

Swift SVN r27834
2015-04-27 23:15:33 +00:00
Chris Lattner
227e676b4b clean up diagnoseFailureForAssignExpr, no significant win though.
Swift SVN r27793
2015-04-27 00:45:10 +00:00
Doug Gregor
793b3326af Implement the new rules for argument label defaults.
The rule changes are as follows:
  * All functions (introduced with the 'func' keyword) have argument
  labels for arguments beyond the first, by default. Methods are no
  longer special in this regard.
  * The presence of a default argument no longer implies an argument
  label.

The actual changes to the parser and printer are fairly simple; the
rest of the noise is updating the standard library, overlays, tests,
etc.

With the standard library, this change is intended to be API neutral:
I've added/removed #'s and _'s as appropriate to keep the user
interface the same. If we want to separately consider using argument
labels for more free functions now that the defaults in the language
have shifted, we can tackle that separately.

Fixes rdar://problem/17218256.

Swift SVN r27704
2015-04-24 19:03:30 +00:00
Chris Willmore
6c21a6414a <rdar://problem/19421148> Calling init with a missing label doesn't provide a descriptive error when overloaded inits differ only by label
Swift SVN r24624
2015-01-22 01:12:45 +00:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
3b04d1b013 tests: reorganize tests so that they actually use the target platform
Most tests were using %swift or similar substitutions, which did not
include the target triple and SDK.  The driver was defaulting to the
host OS.  Thus, we could not run the tests when the standard library was
not built for OS X.

Swift SVN r24504
2015-01-19 06:52:49 +00:00
David Farler
87c3d7421f Refine static func and var syntax
rdar://problem/17198298

- Allow 'static' in protocol property and func requirements, but not 'class'.
- Allow 'static' methods in classes - they are 'class final'.
- Only allow 'class' methods in classes (or extensions of classes)
- Remove now unneeded diagnostics related to finding 'static' in previously banned places.
- Update relevant diagnostics to make the new rules clear.

Swift SVN r24260
2015-01-08 03:03:29 +00:00
Chris Lattner
d844671de5 Revise our AST to represent the self argument of a non-mutating protocol method
as passing self by value, not by inout.  This is the correct representation at
the AST level, and we now lower self references as the new @in_guaranteed
parameter convention.  This allows SIL clients (like DI) to know that a nonmutating
protocol method does not mutate the pointee passed into the method.

This fixes:
<rdar://problem/19215313> let properties don't work with protocol method dispatch
<rdar://problem/15821762> Self argument of generic curried nonmutating instance methods is inout



Swift SVN r23864
2014-12-11 20:41:37 +00:00
Joe Pamer
dc338c2a71 Update wording of some new diagnostics.
Swift SVN r23783
2014-12-08 21:56:52 +00:00
Joe Pamer
2912159776 Improve diagnostics for expression typecheck errors
These changes make the following improvements to how we generate diagnostics for expression typecheck failure:
- Customizing a diagnostic for a specific expression kind is as easy as adding a new method to the FailureDiagnosis class,
  and does not require intimate knowledge of the constraint solver’s inner workings.
    - As part of this patch, I’ve introduced specialized diagnostics for call, binop, unop, subscript, assignment and inout
      expressions, but we can go pretty far with this.
    - This also opens up the possibility to customize diagnostics not just for the expression kind, but for the specific types
      involved as well.
- For the purpose of presenting accurate type info, partially-specialized subexpressions are individually re-typechecked
  free of any contextual types. This allows us to:
    - Properly surface subexpression errors.
    - Almost completely avoid any type variables in our diagnostics. In cases where they could not be eliminated, we now
      substitute in "_".
    - More accurately indicate the sources of errors.
- We do a much better job of diagnosing disjunction failures. (So no more nonsensical ‘UInt8’ error messages.)
- We now present reasonable error messages for overload resolution failures, informing the user of partially-matching
  parameter lists when possible.

At the very least, these changes address the following bugs:

<rdar://problem/15863738> More information needed in type-checking error messages
<rdar://problem/16306600> QoI: passing a 'let' value as an inout results in an unfriendly diagnostic
<rdar://problem/16449805> Wrong error for struct-to-protocol downcast
<rdar://problem/16699932> improve type checker diagnostic when passing Double to function taking a Float
<rdar://problem/16707914> fatal error: Can't unwrap Optional.None…Optional.swift, line 75 running Master-Detail Swift app built from template
<rdar://problem/16785829> Inout parameter fixit
<rdar://problem/16900438> We shouldn't leak the internal type placeholder
<rdar://problem/16909379> confusing type check diagnostics
<rdar://problem/16951521> Extra arguments to functions result in an unhelpful error
<rdar://problem/16971025> Two Terrible Diagnostics
<rdar://problem/17007804> $T2 in compiler error string
<rdar://problem/17027483> Terrible diagnostic
<rdar://problem/17083239> Mysterious error using find() with Foundation types
<rdar://problem/17149771> Diagnostic for closure with no inferred return value leaks type variables
<rdar://problem/17212371> Swift poorly-worded error message when overload resolution fails on return type
<rdar://problem/17236976> QoI: Swift error for incorrectly typed parameter is confusing/misleading
<rdar://problem/17304200> Wrong error for non-self-conforming protocols
<rdar://problem/17321369> better error message for inout protocols
<rdar://problem/17539380> Swift error seems wrong
<rdar://problem/17559593> Bogus locationless "treating a forced downcast to 'NSData' as optional will never produce 'nil'" warning
<rdar://problem/17567973> 32-bit error message is really far from the mark: error: missing argument for parameter 'withFont' in call
<rdar://problem/17671058> Wrong error message: "Missing argument for parameter 'completion' in call"
<rdar://problem/17704609> Float is not convertible to UInt8
<rdar://problem/17705424> Poor error reporting for passing Doubles to NSColor: extra argument 'red' in call
<rdar://problem/17743603> Swift compiler gives misleading error message in "NSLayoutConstraint.constraintsWithVisualFormat("x", options: 123, metrics: nil, views: views)"
<rdar://problem/17784167> application of operator to generic type results in odd diagnostic
<rdar://problem/17801696> Awful diagnostic trying to construct an Int when .Int is around
<rdar://problem/17863882> cannot convert the expression's type '()' to type 'Seq'
<rdar://problem/17865869> "has different argument names" diagnostic when parameter defaulted-ness differs
<rdar://problem/17937593> Unclear error message for empty array literal without type context
<rdar://problem/17943023> QoI: compiler displays wrong error when a float is provided to a Int16 parameter in init method
<rdar://problem/17951148> Improve error messages for expressions inside if statements by pre-evaluating outside the 'if'
<rdar://problem/18057815> Unhelpful Swift error message
<rdar://problem/18077468> Incorrect argument label for insertSubview(...)
<rdar://problem/18079213> 'T1' is not identical to 'T2' lacks directionality
<rdar://problem/18086470> Confusing Swift error message: error: 'T' is not convertible to 'MirrorDisposition'
<rdar://problem/18098995> QoI: Unhelpful compiler error when leaving off an & on an inout parameter
<rdar://problem/18104379> Terrible error message
<rdar://problem/18121897> unexpected low-level error on assignment to immutable value through array writeback
<rdar://problem/18123596> unexpected error on self. capture inside class method
<rdar://problem/18152074> QoI: Improve diagnostic for type mismatch in dictionary subscripting
<rdar://problem/18242160> There could be a better error message when using [] instead of [:]
<rdar://problem/18242812> 6A1021a : Type variable leaked
<rdar://problem/18331819> Unclear error message when trying to set an element of an array constant (Swift)
<rdar://problem/18414834> Bad diagnostics example
<rdar://problem/18422468> Calculation of constant value yields unexplainable error
<rdar://problem/18427217> Misleading error message makes debugging difficult
<rdar://problem/18439742> Misleading error: "cannot invoke" mentions completely unrelated types as arguments
<rdar://problem/18535804> Wrong compiler error from swift compiler
<rdar://problem/18567914> Xcode 6.1. GM, Swift, assignment from Int64 to NSNumber. Warning shown as problem with UInt8
<rdar://problem/18784027> Negating Int? Yields Float
<rdar://problem/17691565> attempt to modify a 'let' variable with ++ results in typecheck error about @lvalue Float
<rdar://problem/17164001> "++" on let value could give a better error message

Swift SVN r23782
2014-12-08 21:56:47 +00:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis
628567bfe5 [Frontend] Make it erroneous if no frontend action is specified when invoking the frontend, and update tests.
Swift SVN r21584
2014-08-29 19:17:37 +00:00
Joe Pamer
0896a12197 Further improve type checker diagnostics through a variety of means.
Start capitalizing on some of the new diagnostic machinery in a few different ways:
- When mining constraints for type information, utilize constraints "favored" by the overload resolution process.
- When printing type variables, if the variable was created by opening a literal expression, utilize the literal
  default type or conformance if possible.
- Utilize syntactic information when crafting diagnostics:
	- If the constraint miner can produce a better diagnostic than the recorded failure, diagnose via constraints.
	- Factor in the expression kind when choosing which types to include in a diagnostic message.
- Start customizing diagnostics based on the amount of type data available.

What does all this mean?
- Fewer type variables leaking into diagnostic messages.
- Far better diagnostics for overload resolution failures. Specifically, we now print proper argument type data
  for failed function calls.
- No more "'Foo' is not convertible to 'Foo'" error messages
- A greater emphasis on type data means less dependence on the ordering of failed constraints. This means fewer
  inscrutable diagnostics complaining about 'UInt8' when all the constituent expressions are of type Float.

So we still have a ways to go, but these changes should greatly improve the number of head-scratchers served up
by the type checker.

These changes address the following radars:
rdar://problem/17618403
rdar://problem/17559042
rdar://problem/17007456
rdar://problem/17559042
rdar://problem/17590992
rdar://problem/17646988
rdar://problem/16979859
rdar://problem/16922560
rdar://problem/17144902
rdar://problem/16616948
rdar://problem/16756363
rdar://problem/16338509

Swift SVN r20927
2014-08-01 23:32:19 +00:00
Chris Lattner
8991456ff2 Switch infix/postfix/prefix to be declaration modifiers instead of attributes,
eliminating the @'s from them when used on func's.  This is progress towards
<rdar://problem/17527000> change operator declarations from "operator prefix" to "prefix operator" & make operator a keyword

This also consolidates rejection of custom operator definitions into one
place and makes it consistent, and adds postfix "?" to the list of rejected
operators.

This also changes the demangler to demangle weak/inout/postfix and related things
without the @.



Swift SVN r19929
2014-07-14 15:51:49 +00:00
Dave Abrahams
6d1095f44e Protocol names end in "Type," "ible," or "able"
Mechanically add "Type" to the end of any protocol names that don't end
in "Type," "ible," or "able."  Also, drop "Type" from the end of any
associated type names, except for those of the *LiteralConvertible
protocols.

There are obvious improvements to make in some of these names, which can
be handled with separate commits.

Fixes <rdar://problem/17165920> Protocols `Integer` etc should get
uglier names.

Swift SVN r19883
2014-07-12 17:29:57 +00:00
Joe Pamer
a314db950e Remove another point of non-determinism while tracking failed constraints, and use this as an opportunity to improve certain diagnostics. (rdar://problem/16808495)
Swift SVN r19244
2014-06-26 19:48:48 +00:00
Joe Groff
a87e9fa40c Make the diagnostic for unsupported existentials more accurate and helpful.
Better to describe how the protocol can be used than how it can't. Also include a mention of Self type requirements as a source of non-existentiability.

Swift SVN r19207
2014-06-26 01:02:03 +00:00
Joe Groff
5c09ca5ee5 Sema: Don't allow protocols to be used as non-self-conforming existential types.
These types are often useless and confusing to users who expect to be able to use Sequence or Generator as types in their own right like in C# or Java. While we're here, relax the rules for self-conformance to admit methods returning 'Self'. Covariant return types should not actually prevent a protocol type from conforming to itself, and the stdlib makes particular use of protocols with 'init' requirements which implicitly return Self.

Swift SVN r18989
2014-06-18 23:01:55 +00:00
Ted Kremenek
fad874708e Adjust test cases.
Swift SVN r17964
2014-05-12 22:01:52 +00:00
Doug Gregor
f847fe4a22 Introduce basic support for type-checking the definitions of generic
functions. This involves a few steps:

  - When assigning archetypes to type parameters, also walk all of the
  protocols to which the type parameter conforms and assign archetypes
  to each of the associated types.
  - When performing name lookup into an archetype, look into all of
  the protocols to which it conforms. If we find something, it can be
  referenced via the new ArchetypeMemberRefExpr.
  - When type-checking ArchetypeMemberRefExpr, substitute the values
  of the various associated types into the type of the member, so the
  resulting expression involves the archetypes for the enclosing
  generic method.

The rest of the type checking essentially follows from the fact that
archetypes are unique types which (therefore) have no behavior beyond
what is provided via the protocols they conform to. However, there is
still much work to do to ensure that we get the archetypes set up
correctly.



Swift SVN r2201
2012-06-19 21:16:14 +00:00