... for the fully annotated declarations. More substructure more better.
This has to go through a callback mechanism similar to printDeclLoc and
printDeclPre since it should be scheduled after both of those are
printed.
rdar://problem/24292226
For decls it can be interesting to know when a decl is a parameter vs. a
local. This will be needed for the new fully annotated decls. For refs
it's usually not interesting.
rdar://problem/24292226
We already know to print one before printing the body brace (if we're
printing function bodies), and it certainly doesn't belong in the
*name* portion of the decl.
Also add a cursor info test with a deinit.
This splits the printDeclNamEndLoc callback into NameEndLoc and
NameOrSignatureEndLoc variants to differentiate whether or not
signatures are included. All existing clients move to
NameOrSignatureEndLoc to maintain the current behaviour. I'm still not
completely happy with how these are named, but I dont' have any better
ideas right now.
rdar://problem/24292226
This will eventually replace the existing annoteded_decl for cursor
info, and be added to doc info as well. For now put in under a
different field name to not break existing clients.
For now, just reimplement the existing annotations but put in tag names
that are specific to the kind of type/decl. The goal is to fill in a
lot more substructure/detail over time.
Incidentally flesh out some cursor info tests.
rdar://problem/24292226
Revert "Make function parameters and refutable patterns always
immutable"
This reverts commit 8f2fbdc93a.
Once we have finally merged master into the Swift 2.2 branch to be, we
should revert this commit to turn the errors back on for Swift 3.0.
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
The code goes into its own sub-tree under 'tools' but tests go under 'test',
so that running 'check-swift' will also run all the SourceKit tests.
SourceKit is disabled on non-darwin platforms.