Commit Graph

240 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hamish Knight
37f16520e6 Prototype regex literal AST and emission
With `-enable-experimental-string-processing`,
start lexing `'` delimiters as regex literals (this
is just a placeholder delimiter for now). The
contents of which gets passed to the libswift
library, which can return an error string to be
emitted, or null for success.

The libswift side isn't yet hooked up to the Swift
regex parser, so for now just emit a dummy
diagnostic for regexes starting with quantifiers.

If successful, build an AST node which will be
emitted as an implicit call to an
`init(_regexString:)` initializer of an in-scope
`Regex` decl (which will eventually be a known
stdlib decl).
2021-12-06 21:16:14 +00:00
Hamish Knight
100ad3d474 [AST] Remove ImplicitlyUnwrappedFunctionConversionExpr
This was a hack needed to let CSApply re-write
IUO-returning applies, and is no longer needed now
that we can directly perform the unwrapping when
needed.
2021-10-12 14:14:33 +01:00
Alex Hoppen
8f16139a8b Revert "Sema: Remove some unreachable code from CSApply"
This reverts commit 9d3c8ca396.
2021-03-19 19:38:52 +01:00
Holly Borla
b821c8d76b [Sema] Add an implicit applied property wrapper expression and a new
dedicated initializer context for this expressions.
2021-02-25 18:35:14 -08:00
Slava Pestov
9d3c8ca396 Sema: Remove some unreachable code from CSApply
I believe these code paths could only be reached by re-typechecking
invalid code in the old CSDiag implementation.
2021-02-17 18:27:08 -05:00
Alexey Komnin
4fa17bf597 SR-12022: refactor LiteralExpr to combine common initializer code 2020-10-01 15:45:16 +03:00
Frederick Kellison-Linn
f5845666e6 [AST] Introduce UnresolvedMemberChainResultExpr
Introduce a new expression type for representing the result of an unresolved member chain. Use this expression type instead of an implicit ParenExpr for giving unresolved member chain result types representation in the AST during type checking.
2020-08-26 22:42:29 -04:00
Chris Lattner
8bde04cc14 [Concurrency] Implement parsing and semantic analysis of await operator
Similar to `try`, await expressions have no specific semantics of their
own except to indicate that the subexpression contains calls to `async`
functions, which are suspension points. In this design, there can be
multiple such calls within the subexpression of a given `await`.

Note that we currently use the keyword `__await` because `await` in
this position introduces grammatical ambiguities. We'll wait until
later to sort out the specific grammar we want and evaluate
source-compatibility tradeoffs. It's possible that this kind of prefix
operator isn't what we want anyway.
2020-07-29 22:08:09 -07:00
Holly Borla
65105f3a26 [Property Wrappers] Introduce a new Expr node for the property wrapper
wrapped value placeholder in an init(wrappedValue:) call that was previously
injected as an OpaqueValueExpr. This commit also restores the old design of
OpaqueValueExpr.
2020-04-09 16:00:57 -07:00
marcrasi
f6562d3a67 [AutoDiff upstream] differentiable function conversion pipeline (#30660)
Add the `@differentiable` function conversion pipeline:

- New expressions that convert between `@differentiable`,
  `@differentiable(linear)`, and non-`@differentiable` functions:
  - `DifferentiableFunction`
  - `LinearFunction`
  - `DifferentiableFunctionExtractOriginal`
  - `LinearFunctionExtractOriginal`
  - `LinearToDifferentiableFunction`
- All the AST handling (e.g. printing) necessary for those expressions.
- SILGen for those expressions.
- CSApply code that inserts these expressions to implicitly convert between
  the various function types.
- Sema tests for the implicit conversions.
- SILGen tests for the SILGen of these expressions.

Resolves TF-833.
2020-03-27 01:27:39 -07:00
Hamish Knight
7e788b8ab9 [AST] Remove CallerDefaultArgumentExpr
Now that we use DefaultArgumentExpr for both kinds
of default arguments, this is no longer needed.
2019-11-20 15:07:33 -08:00
Doug Gregor
3c69f6a305 [Constraint solver] Introduce one-way constraints.
Introduce the notion of "one-way" binding constraints of the form

  $T0 one-way bind to $T1

which treats the type variables $T0 and $T1 as independent up until
the point where $T1 simplifies down to a concrete type, at which point
$T0 will be bound to that concrete type. $T0 won't be bound in any
other way, so type information ends up being propagated right-to-left,
only. This allows a constraint system to be broken up in more
components that are solved independently. Specifically, the connected
components algorithm now proceeds as follows:

1. Compute connected components, excluding one-way constraints from
consideration.
2. Compute a directed graph amongst the components using only the
one-way constraints, where an edge A -> B indicates that the type
variables in component A need to be solved before those in component
B.
3. Using the directed graph, compute the set of components that need
to be solved before a given component.

To utilize this, implement a new kind of solver step that handles the
propagation of partial solutions across one-way constraints. This
introduces a new kind of "split" within a connected component, where
we collect each combination of partial solutions for the input
components and (separately) try to solve the constraints in this
component. Any correct solution from any of these attempts will then
be recorded as a (partial) solution for this component.

For example, consider:

  let _: Int8 = b ? Builtin.one_way(int8Or16(17)) :
  Builtin.one_way(int8Or16(42\
))

where int8Or16 is overloaded with types `(Int8) -> Int8` and
`(Int16) -> Int16`. There are two one-way components (`int8Or16(17)`)
and (`int8Or16(42)`), each of which can produce a value of type `Int8`
or `Int16`. Those two components will be solved independently, and the
partial solutions for each will be fed into the component that
evaluates the ternary operator. There are four ways to attempt that
evaluation:

```
  [Int8, Int8]
  [Int8, Int16]
  [Int16, Int8]
  [Int16, Int16]

To test this, introduce a new expression builtin `Builtin.one_way(x)` that
introduces a one-way expression constraint binding the result of the
expression 'x'. The builtin is meant to be used for testing purposes,
and the one-way constraint expression itself can be synthesized by the
type checker to introduce one-way constraints later on.

Of these two, there are only two (partial) solutions that can work at
all, because the types in the ternary operator need a common
supertype:

  [Int8, Int8]
  [Int16, Int16]

Therefore, these are the partial solutions that will be considered the
results of the component containing the ternary expression. Note that
only one of them meets the final constraint (convertibility to
`Int8`), so the expression is well-formed.

Part of rdar://problem/50150793.
2019-08-13 11:48:42 -07:00
Joe Groff
f008019bda Sema: Infer the underlying type for opaque return types from function bodies. 2019-04-17 14:43:32 -07:00
Slava Pestov
1467f554f5 AST: Remove ArgumentShuffleExpr 2019-03-31 01:36:19 -04:00
Slava Pestov
e212d4567f Sema: Collect varargs into an ArrayExpr and use DefaultArgumentExpr
Instead of building ArgumentShuffleExprs, lets just build a TupleExpr,
with explicit representation of collected varargs and default
arguments.

This isn't quite as elegant as it should be, because when re-typechecking,
SanitizeExpr needs to restore the 'old' parameter list by stripping out
the nodes inserted by type checking. However that hackery is all isolated
in one place and will go away soon.

Note that there's a minor change the generated SIL. Caller default
arguments (#file, #line, etc) are no longer delayed and are instead
evaluated in their usual argument position. I don't believe this actually
results in an observable change in behavior, but if it turns out to be
a problem, we can pretty easily change it back to the old behavior with a
bit of extra work.
2019-03-31 01:36:19 -04:00
Slava Pestov
e2c9c52c93 AST/Sema/SILGen: Implement tuple conversions
TupleShuffleExpr could not express the full range of tuple conversions that
were accepted by the constraint solver; in particular, while it could re-order
elements or introduce and eliminate labels, it could not convert the tuple
element types to their supertypes.

This was the source of the annoying "cannot express tuple conversion"
diagnostic.

Replace TupleShuffleExpr with DestructureTupleExpr, which evaluates a
source expression of tuple type and binds its elements to OpaqueValueExprs.

The DestructureTupleExpr's result expression can then produce an arbitrary
value written in terms of these OpaqueValueExprs, as long as each
OpaqueValueExpr is used exactly once.

This is sufficient to express conversions such as (Int, Float) => (Int?, Any),
as well as the various cases that were already supported, such as
(x: Int, y: Float) => (y: Float, x: Int).

https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-2672, rdar://problem/12340004
2019-03-27 18:12:05 -04:00
Slava Pestov
d470e9df4d AST: Split off ArgumentShuffleExpr from TupleShuffleExpr
Right now we use TupleShuffleExpr for two completely different things:

- Tuple conversions, where elements can be re-ordered and labels can be
  introduced/eliminated
- Complex argument lists, involving default arguments or varargs

The first case does not allow default arguments or varargs, and the
second case does not allow re-ordering or introduction/elimination
of labels. Furthermore, the first case has a representation limitation
that prevents us from expressing tuple conversions that change the
type of tuple elements.

For all these reasons, it is better if we use two separate Expr kinds
for these purposes. For now, just make an identical copy of
TupleShuffleExpr and call it ArgumentShuffleExpr. In CSApply, use
ArgumentShuffleExpr when forming the arguments to a call, and keep
using TupleShuffleExpr for tuple conversions. Each usage of
TupleShuffleExpr has been audited to see if it should instead look at
ArgumentShuffleExpr.

In sequent commits I plan on redesigning TupleShuffleExpr to correctly
represent all tuple conversions without any unnecessary baggage.

Longer term, we actually want to change the representation of CallExpr
to directly store an argument list; then instead of a single child
expression that must be a ParenExpr, TupleExpr or ArgumentShuffleExpr,
all CallExprs will have a uniform representation and ArgumentShuffleExpr
will go away altogether. This should reduce memory usage and radically
simplify parts of SILGen.
2019-03-21 02:18:41 -04:00
Brent Royal-Gordon
9bd1a26089 Implementation for SE-0228: Fix ExpressibleByStringInterpolation (#20214)
* [CodeCompletion] Restrict ancestor search to brace

This change allows ExprParentFinder to restrict certain searches for parents to just AST nodes within the nearest surrounding BraceStmt. In the string interpolation rework, BraceStmts can appear in new places in the AST; this keeps code completion from looking at irrelevant context.

NFC in this commit, but keeps code completion from crashing once TapExpr is introduced.

* Remove test relying on ExpressibleByStringInterpolation being deprecated

Since soon enough, it won’t be anymore.

* [AST] Introduce TapExpr

TapExpr allows a block of code to to be inserted between two expressions, accessing and potentially mutating the result of its subexpression before giving it to its parent expression. It’s roughly equivalent to this function:

  func _tap<T>(_ value: T, do body: (inout T) throws -> Void) rethrows -> T {
    var copy = value
    try body(&copy)
    return copy
  }

Except that it doesn’t use a closure, so no variables are captured and no call frame is (even notionally) added.

This commit does not include tests because nothing in it actually uses TapExpr yet. It will be used by string interpolation.

* SE-0228: Fix ExpressibleByStringInterpolation

This is the bulk of the implementation of the string interpolation rework. It includes a redesigned AST node, new parsing logic, new constraints and post-typechecking code generation, and new standard library types and members.

* [Sema] Rip out typeCheckExpressionShallow()

With new string interpolation in place, it is no longer used by anything in the compiler.

* [Sema] Diagnose invalid StringInterpolationProtocols

StringInterpolationProtocol informally requires conforming types to provide at least one method with the base name “appendInterpolation” with no (or a discardable) return value and visibility at least as broad as the conforming type’s. This change diagnoses an error when a conforming type does not have a method that meets those criteria.

* [Stdlib] Fix map(String.init) source break

Some users, including some in the source compatibility suite, accidentally used init(stringInterpolationSegment:) by writing code like `map(String.init)`. Now that these intializers have been removed, the remaining initializers often end up tying during overload resolution. This change adds several overloads of `String.init(describing:)` which will break these ties in cases where the compiler previously selected `String.init(stringInterpolationSegment:)`.

* [Sema] Make callWitness() take non-mutable arrays

It doesn’t actually need to mutate them.

* [Stdlib] Improve floating-point interpolation performance

This change avoids constructing a String when interpolating a Float, Double, or Float80. Instead, we write the characters to a fixed-size buffer and then append them directly to the string’s storage.

This seems to improve performance for all three types, but especially for Double and Float80, which cannot always fit into a small string when stringified.

* [NameLookup] Improve MemberLookupTable invalidation

In rare cases usually involving generated code, an overload added by an extension in the middle of a file would not be visible below it if the type had lazy members and the same base name had already been referenced above the extension. This change essentially dirties a type’s member lookup table whenever an extension is added to it, ensuring the entries in it will be updated.

This change also includes some debugging improvements for NameLookup.

* [SILOptimizer] XFAIL dead object removal failure

The DeadObjectRemoval pass in SILOptimizer does not currently remove reworked string interpolations as well as the old design because their effects cannot be described by @_effects(readonly). That causes a test failure on Linux. This change temporarily silences that test. The SILOptimizer issue has been filed as SR-9008.

* Confess string interpolation’s source stability sins

* [Parser] Parse empty interpolations

Previously, the parser had an odd asymmetry which caused the same function to accept foo(), but reject “\()”. This change fixes the issue.

Already tested by test/Parse/try.swift, which uses this construct in one of its throwing interpolation tests.

* [Sema] Fix batch-mode-only lazy var bug

The temporary variable used by string interpolation needs to be recontextualized when it’s inserted into a synthesized getter. Fixes a compilation failure in Alamofire.

I’ll probably follow up on this bug a bit more after merging.
2018-11-02 19:16:03 -07:00
John McCall
a30d91e3cb Implement vararg expansion well enough to support argument forwarding.
I needed this for materializeForSet remission, but it makes inherited
variadic initializers work, too.

I tried to make this a reasonable starting point for a real language
feature.  Here's what's still missing:

- syntax
- semantic restrictions to ensure that the expression isn't written in
  invalid places or arbitrarily converted
- SILGen support for expansions that aren't the only variadic argument

rdar://16331406
2018-08-22 06:46:08 -04:00
John McCall
9bee3cac5a Generalize storage implementations to support generalized accessors.
The storage kind has been replaced with three separate "impl kinds",
one for each of the basic access kinds (read, write, and read/write).
This makes it far easier to mix-and-match implementations of different
accessors, as well as subtleties like implementing both a setter
and an independent read/write operation.

AccessStrategy has become a bit more explicit about how exactly the
access should be implemented.  For example, the accessor-based kinds
now carry the exact accessor intended to be used.  Also, I've shifted
responsibilities slightly between AccessStrategy and AccessSemantics
so that AccessSemantics::Ordinary can be used except in the sorts of
semantic-bypasses that accessor synthesis wants.  This requires
knowing the correct DC of the access when computing the access strategy;
the upshot is that SILGenFunction now needs a DC.

Accessor synthesis has been reworked so that only the declarations are
built immediately; body synthesis can be safely delayed out of the main
decl-checking path.  This caused a large number of ramifications,
especially for lazy properties, and greatly inflated the size of this
patch.  That is... really regrettable.  The impetus for changing this
was necessity: I needed to rework accessor synthesis to end its reliance
on distinctions like Stored vs. StoredWithTrivialAccessors, and those
fixes were exposing serious re-entrancy problems, and fixing that... well.
Breaking the fixes apart at this point would be a serious endeavor.
2018-06-30 05:19:03 -04:00
David Zarzycki
6d52f434af [AST] NFC: Create abstract class for MemberRefExpr/SubscriptExpr
This consolidation includes two examples of where this useful. There are
probably more.
2018-05-19 12:33:35 -04:00
David Zarzycki
e9b643026b [AST] NFC: Stop over aligning DeclContexts
DeclContexts as they exist today are "over aligned" when compared to
their natural alignment boundary and therefore they can easily cause
adjacent padding when dropped into the middle of objects via C++
inheritance, or when the clang importer prefaces Swift AST allocations
with a pointer to the corresponding clang AST node.

With this change, we move DeclContexts to the front of the memory layout
of AST nodes. This allows us to restore natural alignment, save memory,
and as a side effect: more easily avoid "over alignment" in the future
because DeclContexts now only need to directly track which AST node
hierarchy they're associated with, not specific AST nodes within each
hierarchy.

Finally, as a word of caution, after this change one can no longer
assume that AST nodes safely convert back and forth with "void*". For
example, WitnessTableEntry needed fixing with this change.
2018-01-08 12:21:14 -05:00
Mark Lacey
b6430d0644 IUO: Add ImplicitlyUnwrappedFunctionConversionExpr.
This expression node is only used when applying the results of
expression type checking. It initially appears above the function
reference that returns an optional that needs to be unwrapped, and
then when dealing with function application we remove this and insert
a node to force-unwrap the result of the function application.
2018-01-04 11:40:45 -08:00
David Zarzycki
68a846e761 [AST] NFC: Do not hard code bit size of 'Kind' field
Also, give each class hierarchy at least 8 bits for the 'Kind' field.
In practice, no class hierarchy has more than 256 nodes, so this
optimizees code generation to make isa/dyn_cast faster.
2017-12-15 14:45:38 -05:00
John McCall
b542c75cb1 Use abstract implicit-conversion expressions for bridging cases instead of
expanding the conversion calls in Sema.
2017-06-11 01:39:51 -04:00
Huon Wilson
07c5ab8fb2 Implement \ syntax for Swift key paths.
This introduces a few unfortunate things because the syntax is awkward.
In particular, the period and following token in \.[a], \.? and \.! are
token sequences that don't appear anywhere else in Swift, and so need
special handling. This is somewhat compounded by \foo.bar.baz possibly
being \(foo).bar.baz or \(foo.bar).baz (parens around the type), and,
furthermore, needing to distinguish \Foo?.bar from \Foo.?bar.

rdar://problem/31724243
2017-05-01 16:06:15 -07:00
John McCall
e6d52d8808 LValueToPointerExpr is dead code. RIP LValueToPointerExpr. 2017-04-25 03:01:16 -04:00
Joe Groff
964dc0e174 Sema: (wip) Overload resolution for keypath subscripts.
TODO: Some diagnostic regressions:
test-macosx-x86_64/Compatibility/tuple_arguments.swift
test-macosx-x86_64/Constraints/diagnostics.swift
test-macosx-x86_64/Constraints/tuple_arguments.swift
test-macosx-x86_64/expr/unary/keypath/keypath.swift
test-macosx-x86_64/expr/unary/selector/selector.swift
2017-04-09 16:38:02 -07:00
Joe Groff
eb5d006e40 Rename ObjCKeyPathExpr -> KeyPathExpr.
We can use the same general shape of expression for native key paths.
2017-04-04 11:31:15 -07:00
practicalswift
95e47eceb7 [gardening] Fix a vs an typos. 2017-01-21 10:47:25 +01:00
Jacob Bandes-Storch
4a16880103 [QoI] Add diagnostic for unused literal values
Fixes SR-3522.
2017-01-10 20:42:36 -08:00
practicalswift
6d1ae2a39c [gardening] 2016 → 2017 2017-01-06 16:41:22 +01:00
Joe Groff
0c9297862f Sema: Handle type-checking for withoutActuallyEscaping.
withoutActuallyEscaping has a signature like `<T..., U, V, W> (@nonescaping (T...) throws<U> -> V, (@escaping (T...) throws<U> -> V) -> W) -> W, but our type system for functions unfortunately isn't quite that expressive yet, so we need to special-case it. Set up the necessary type system when resolving an overload set to reference withoutActuallyEscaping, and if a type check succeeds, build a MakeTemporarilyEscapableExpr to represent it in the type-checked AST.
2016-12-22 17:51:26 -08:00
practicalswift
797b80765f [gardening] Use the correct base URL (https://swift.org) in references to the Swift website
Remove all references to the old non-TLS enabled base URL (http://swift.org)
2016-11-20 17:36:03 +01:00
Rintaro Ishizaki
339387e95b [AST] Remove DefaultValueExpr type (#4713)
The last instantiation of this type was removed in 68bcb0d2af
2016-09-12 16:50:02 +09:00
John McCall
a6e1e87585 Add implicit conversions and casts from T:Hashable <-> AnyHashable.
rdar://27615802
2016-08-04 23:13:27 -07:00
Doug Gregor
8c7e75afa0 [AST] Eliminate OverloadedMemberRefExpr.
This expression kind was introduced in exactly one place, and only
with one member. That place can use MemberRefExpr instead.
2016-07-28 14:44:23 -07:00
Joe Groff
e72af82f04 Remove the unused isSome Optional intrinsics.
We already have detailed knowledge of Optional's layout in SILGen, so these intrinsics were almost unused. They were only used in a few obscure places by some optional-to-bool conversions, used by 'is [A]' collection tests and the codegen for 'lazy' properties. Change these over to generate an EnumIsCaseExpr that we can directly lower to a 'select_enum' instruction in SILGen, leading to better codegen and obviating the need for these intrinsic functions.
2016-06-08 09:31:47 -07:00
Doug Gregor
9f0cec4984 SE-0062: Implement #keyPath expression.
Implement the Objective-C #keyPath expression, which maps a sequence
of @objc property accesses to a key-path suitable for use with
Cocoa[Touch]. The implementation handles @objc properties of types
that are either @objc or can be bridged to Objective-C, including the
collections that work with key-value coding (Array/NSArray,
Dictionary/NSDictionary, Set/NSSet).

Still to come: code completion support and Fix-Its to migrate string
literal keypaths to #keyPath.

Implements the bulk of SR-1237 / rdar://problem/25710611.
2016-05-18 23:30:15 -07:00
Alex Hoppen
d2e045c8b5 Implement SE-0064 / SR-1239: #selector for property getters and setters
Implements the core functionality of SE-0064 / SR-1239, which
introduces support for accessing the Objective-C selectors of the
getter and setter of an @objc property via #selector(getter:
propertyName) and #selector(setter: propertyName).

Introduce a bunch of QoI around mistakes using #selector to refer to a
property without the "getter:" or "setter:", using Fix-Its to help the
user get it right. There is more to do in this area, still, but we
have an end-to-end feature working.

Much of the implementation and nearly all of the test cases are from
Alex Hoppen (@ahoppen). I've done a bit of refactoring, simplified the
AST representation, and replaced Alex's custom
expression-to-declaration logic with an extension to the constraint
solver. The last bit might be short-lived, based on swift-evolution
PR280, which narrows the syntax of #selector considerably.
2016-05-11 16:51:27 -07:00
Chris Willmore
02a6be6d01 Allow parsing of function types in expr position (#2273)
Previously it was not possible to parse expressions of the form

    [Int -> Int]()

because no Expr could represent the '->' token and be converted later
into a FunctionTypeRepr. This commit introduces ArrowExpr which exists
solely to be converted to FunctionTypeRepr later by simplifyTypeExpr.

https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-502
2016-04-22 21:53:26 -07:00
Doug Gregor
dccf3155f1 SE-0022: Implement parsing, AST, and semantic analysis for #selector. 2016-01-26 21:12:04 -08:00
Doug Gregor
fd3f03f3be Remove UnresolvedConstructorExpr.
UnresolvedConstructorExpr is not providing any value here; it's
essentially just UnresolvedDotExpr where the name refers to an
initializer, so use that instead. NFC
2016-01-20 17:09:02 -08:00
Doug Gregor
5f07f6b12f Remove all vestiges of UnresolvedSelectorExpr. NFC 2016-01-20 17:09:01 -08:00
Zach Panzarino
e3a4147ac9 Update copyright date 2015-12-31 23:28:40 +00:00
Chris Willmore
c99c02b5a6 Transform EditorPlaceholderExpr into trap if executed in playground
mode (take 2)

Allow untyped placeholder to take arbitrary type, but default to Void.
Add _undefined<T>() function, which is like fatalError() but has
arbitrary return type. In playground mode, merely warn about outstanding
placeholders instead of erroring out, and transform placeholders into
calls to _undefined(). This way, code with outstanding placeholders will
only crash when it attempts to evaluate such placeholders.

When generating constraints for an iterated sequence of type T, emit

    T convertible to $T1
    $T1 conforms to SequenceType

instead of

    T convertible to SequenceType

This ensures that an untyped placeholder in for-each sequence position
doesn't get inferred to have type SequenceType. (The conversion is still
necessary because the sequence may have IUO type.) The new constraint
system precipitates changes in CSSimplify and CSDiag, and ends up fixing
18741539 along the way.

(NOTE: There is a small regression in diagnosis of issues like the
following:

    class C {}
    class D: C {}
    func f(a: [C]!) { for _: D in a {} }

It complains that [C]! doesn't conform to SequenceType when it should be
complaining that C is not convertible to D.)

<rdar://problem/21167372>

(Originally Swift SVN r31481)
2015-12-10 22:05:16 -08:00
Dmitri Hrybenko
2e51d23875 Un-ifdef object literals
Swift SVN r32880
2015-10-25 07:50:53 +00:00
Xi Ge
ec4e469062 [CodeComplete] Introduce code completion expr to better preserve the context of the code completion token in ASTs.
Swift SVN r31908
2015-09-11 22:59:12 +00:00
Chris Willmore
9c1f3e907a Revert "Transform EditorPlaceholderExpr into trap if executed in playground mode."
This reverts commit r31481, which apparently needed some parallel
changes to SourceKit and broke the build as a result.

Swift SVN r31483
2015-08-26 05:28:04 +00:00
Chris Willmore
0addd80bb3 Transform EditorPlaceholderExpr into trap if executed in playground mode.
Allow untyped placeholder to take arbitrary type, but default to Void.
Add _undefined<T>() function, which is like fatalError() but has
arbitrary return type. In playground mode, merely warn about outstanding
placeholders instead of erroring out, and transform placeholders into
calls to _undefined(). This way, code with outstanding placeholders will
only crash when it attempts to evaluate such placeholders.

<rdar://problem/21167372> transform EditorPlaceholderExpr into fatalError()

Swift SVN r31481
2015-08-26 04:50:55 +00:00