Storing this separately is unnecessary since we already
serialize the enum element's interface type. Also, this
eliminates one of the few remaining cases where we serialize
archetypes during AST serialization.
Add diagnostics to fix decls with consecutive identifiers. This applies to
types, properties, variables, and enum cases. The diagnostic adds a camel-cased option if it is different than the first option.
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-3599
The new `@_specialize` attribute has a syntax like this:
```swift
@_specialize(exported: true, kind: full, where K == Int, V == Int)
@_specialize(exported: false, kind: partial, where K: _Trivial64)
func dictFunction<K, V>(dict: Dictionary<K, V>) {
}
```
If `exported` is set, the corresponding specialization would have a public visibility and can be used by clients.
If `exported` is omitted, it's value is assumed to be `false`.
If `kind` is `full` it means a full specialization.
If `kind` is `partial` it means a partial specialization.
If `kind` is omitted, its value is assumed to be `full`.
Add a diagnostic to remove the name of an initializer, deinitializer, or subscript. The identifier token is consumed and skipped to prevent the parser from emitting additional error messages.
Add tests to verify that the name is removed from initializers, deinitializers, and subscripts declared with a name.
Parsing declaration list (e.g. member list of nominal decl) is very
different from comma separated list, because it's elements are separated with
new-line or semi-colon. There's no good reason to consolidate them.
Also, declaration list in 'extension' or inside of decl '#if' didn't
emit diagnostics for consecutive declarations on a line.
class C {
#if true
var value: Int = 42 func foo() {}
#endif
}
extension C {
func bar() {} subscript(i: Int) -> Int {
return 24
}
}
This change consolidates declaration list parsing for
members of nominal decls, extensions, and inside of '#if'.
In addition, removed unnecessary property 'TrailingSemiLoc' from decl.
This is dead code and can be re-added if it is needed. Right now though there
really isnt a ValueOwnershipKind that corresponds to deallocating and I do not
want to add a new ValueOwnershipKind for dead code.
The typedef `swift::Module` was a temporary solution that allowed
`swift::Module` to be renamed to `swift::ModuleDecl` without requiring
every single callsite to be modified.
Modify all the callsites, and get rid of the typedef.
This reverts the contents of #5778 and replaces it with a far simpler
implementation of condition resolution along with canImport. When
combined with the optimizations in #6279 we get the best of both worlds
with a performance win and a simpler implementation.
Changes:
* Terminate all namespaces with the correct closing comment.
* Make sure argument names in comments match the corresponding parameter name.
* Remove redundant get() calls on smart pointers.
* Prefer using "override" or "final" instead of "virtual". Remove "virtual" where appropriate.
- TypeAliasDecl::getAliasType() is gone. Now, getDeclaredInterfaceType()
always returns the NameAliasType.
- NameAliasTypes now always desugar to the underlying type as an
interface type.
- The NameAliasType of a generic type alias no longer desugars to an
UnboundGenericType; call TypeAliasDecl::getUnboundGenericType() if you
want that.
- The "lazy mapTypeOutOfContext()" hack for deserialized TypeAliasDecls
is gone.
- The process of constructing a synthesized TypeAliasDecl is much simpler
now; instead of calling computeType(), setInterfaceType() and then
setting the recursive properties in the right order, just call
setUnderlyingType(), passing it either an interface type or a
contextual type.
In particular, many places weren't setting the recursive properties,
such as the ClangImporter and deserialization. This meant that queries
such as hasArchetype() or hasTypeParameter() would return incorrect
results on NameAliasTypes, which caused various subtle problems.
- Finally, add some more tests for generic typealiases, most of which
fail because they're still pretty broken.
This completely removes Parse’s ability to make any judgement calls
about compilation conditions, instead the parser-relevant parts of
‘evaluateConditionalCompilationExpr’ have been moved into
‘classifyConditionalCompilationExpr’ where they exist to make sure only
decls that we want to parse actually parse later.
The condition-evaluation parts have been moved into NameBinding in the
form of a Walker that evaluates and collapses IfConfigs. This walker
is meant as an homage to PlaygroundLogger. It should probably be
factored out into a common walker at some point in the future.
Instead of the simple "expected identifier in declaration", the error will now read "keyword '%' cannot be used as an identifier here", and will be accompanied by a note suggesting escaping the keyword with backticks, as well as a fixit.
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-3167
* Removed `parseConstructorArguments()`, unified with
`parseSingleParameterClause()`.
* Use `parseSingleParameterClause()` from `parseFunctionSignature()`, so
that we can share the recovery code.
* Removed `isFirstParameterClause` parameter from `mapParsedParameters`,
because it's predictable from `paramContext`.
We cannot properly determine the context type of any parameter
(including 'self') until after we have determined the generic
environment for the enclosing function.
Previously, getInterfaceType() would return getType() if no
interface type was set. Instead, always set an interface type
explicitly.
Eventually we want to remove getType() altogether, and this
brings us one step closer to this goal.
Note that ParamDecls are excempt from this treatment, because
they don't have a proper interface type yet. Cleaning this up
requires more effort.
Previously, '@' token was unconditionally considered as isStartOfDecl()
Since canParseTypeTupleBody() fails at isStartOfDecl(),
generics arguments containing attributes, e.g.
Array<(@convention(block) () -> Int) -> Void>
failed to be parsed.