Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nate Cook
355fa4d064 Mark true as code in documentation comments. 2016-02-12 04:21:57 -06:00
Zach Panzarino
e3a4147ac9 Update copyright date 2015-12-31 23:28:40 +00:00
Slava Pestov
36ddea64ae Merge pull request #729 from ken0nek/fix-can-not
Convert [Cc]an not -> [Cc]annot
2015-12-22 16:06:20 -08:00
practicalswift
6e3b700b44 Fix typos. 2015-12-23 00:31:13 +01:00
ken0nek
fcd8fcee91 Convert [Cc]an not -> [Cc]annot 2015-12-23 00:55:48 +09:00
Chris Lattner
e9a2e1e128 Eliminate all of the uses of ++/-- from stdlib/public/core.
At DaveA's suggestion, I took a mostly mechanical approach to this:
pointers and numeric types start using += 1, and indexes use
i = i.successor().  The index model is likely to be revised in
Swift 3 anyway, so micro-optimizing this code syntactically isn't
super important.

There is some performance concern of this patch, since some
in-place succesor operations are more efficient than
i = i.successor().  The one that seems particularly at issue is the
instance in the implementation of partition(), which I changed to
use i._successorInPlace().  If other instances lead to a perf issue,
they can be changed to use that as well.
2015-12-15 23:21:55 -08:00
Patrick Pijnappel
95622c435b [stdlib] Replace .Some(x) and .None by x and nil, respectively 2015-12-13 12:10:43 +11:00
David Farler
8f2fbdc93a Make function parameters and refutable patterns always immutable
All refutable patterns and function parameters marked with 'var'
is now an error.

- Using explicit 'let' keyword on function parameters causes a warning.
- Don't suggest making function parameters mutable
- Remove uses in the standard library
- Update tests

rdar://problem/23378003
2015-11-09 16:56:13 -08:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
6536edd68c stdlib: fix coding style
Swift SVN r32425
2015-10-03 21:13:15 +00:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
dd3194a18c stdlib: adopt @warn_unused_result
rdar://20957486

Swift SVN r31048
2015-08-06 14:53:18 +00:00
David Farler
4d17bf0691 Remove SinkType and SinkOf
Remove these standard library types in favor of (T) -> () closures.

It was originally believed that generic optimizations would make these
types profitable, however:

// FIXME: Insert benchmarks here.

rdar://problem/21663799

Swift SVN r29927
2015-07-07 00:36:12 +00:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
d4baf3fadb stdlib: comments: Don't use markup in code listings in comments
Patch by Brian Lanier.

Swift SVN r28893
2015-05-21 23:17:37 +00:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
313701286b stdlib: Various punctuation and markup improvements to the comments.
Patch by Brian Lanier.

Swift SVN r28659
2015-05-16 03:04:51 +00:00
Chris Lattner
c1df892d47 improve stdlib hygiene a bit.
Swift SVN r28392
2015-05-10 02:55:18 +00:00
Chris Lattner
37f5452d15 require -> guard.
Swift SVN r28223
2015-05-06 22:53:38 +00:00
Chris Lattner
079e8b982b move stdlib from let/else to require.
Swift SVN r28098
2015-05-03 21:45:06 +00:00
David Farler
9e28dc777a Update standard library doc comments to Markdown
rdar://problem/20180478

Swift SVN r27726
2015-04-26 00:07:11 +00:00
Chris Lattner
3ec09eec8e force adopt let/else and the Swift 1.2 if/let extensions in the stdlib a bit, for dogfooding
and cleanup.

I changes cases that had a non-trivial "then" body but a trivial else.  Most of the cases in
the stdlib have a trivial "then" clause, so I didn't change them.




Swift SVN r27567
2015-04-22 06:24:06 +00:00
Chris Lattner
20f8f09ea8 Land: <rdar://problem/19382905> improve 'if let' to support refutable patterns and untie it from optionals
This changes 'if let' conditions to take general refutable patterns, instead of
taking a irrefutable pattern and implicitly matching against an optional.

Where before you might have written:
  if let x = foo() {

you now need to write:
  if let x? = foo() {
    
The upshot of this is that you can write anything in an 'if let' that you can
write in a 'case let' in a switch statement, which is pretty general.

To aid with migration, this special cases certain really common patterns like
the above (and any other irrefutable cases, like "if let (a,b) = foo()", and
tells you where to insert the ?.  It also special cases type annotations like
"if let x : AnyObject = " since they are no longer allowed.

For transitional purposes, I have intentionally downgraded the most common
diagnostic into a warning instead of an error.  This means that you'll get:

t.swift:26:10: warning: condition requires a refutable pattern match; did you mean to match an optional?
if let a = f() {
       ^
        ?

I think this is important to stage in, because this is a pretty significant
source breaking change and not everyone internally may want to deal with it
at the same time.  I filed 20166013 to remember to upgrade this to an error.

In addition to being a nice user feature, this is a nice cleanup of the guts
of the compiler, since it eliminates the "isConditional()" bit from
PatternBindingDecl, along with the special case logic in the compiler to handle
it (which variously added and removed Optional around these things).




Swift SVN r26150
2015-03-15 07:06:22 +00:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
350248dae5 Reorganize the directory structure under 'stdlib'
The standard library has grown significantly, and we need a new
directory structure that clearly reflects the role of the APIs, and
allows future growth.

See stdlib/{public,internal,private}/README.txt for more information.

Swift SVN r25876
2015-03-09 05:26:05 +00:00