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
Introduce the new BooleanLiteralConvertible protocol for Boolean
literals. Take "true" and "false" as real keywords (which is most of the
reason for the testsuite churn). Make Bool BooleanLiteralConvertible
and the default Boolean literal type, and ObjCBool
BooleanLiteralConvertible. Fixes <rdar://problem/17405310> and the
recent regression that made ObjCBool not work with true/false.
Swift SVN r19728
There's a regression here because we can no longer use "true" or
"false" with ObjCBool. We'll get that back when true and false become
literals.
Swift SVN r19694
There is some follow-up work remaining:
- test/stdlib/UnicodeTrie test kills the type checker without manual type annotations. <rdar://problem/17539704>
- test/Sema/availability test raises a type error on 'a: String == nil', which we want, but probably not as a side effect of string-to-pointer conversions. I'll fix this next.
Swift SVN r19477
...unless the type has less accessibility than the protocol, in which case
they must be as accessible as the type.
This restriction applies even with access control checking disabled, but
shouldn't affect any decls not already marked with access control modifiers.
Swift SVN r19382
Keep calm: remember that the standard library has many more public exports
than the average target, and that this contains ALL of them at once.
I also deliberately tried to tag nearly every top-level decl, even if that
was just to explicitly mark things @internal, to make sure I didn't miss
something.
This does export more than we might want to, mostly for protocol conformance
reasons, along with our simple-but-limiting typealias rule. I tried to also
mark things private where possible, but it's really going to be up to the
standard library owners to get this right. This is also only validated
against top-level access control; I haven't fully tested against member-level
access control yet, and none of our semantic restrictions are in place.
Along the way I also noticed bits of stdlib cruft; to keep this patch
understandable, I didn't change any of them.
Swift SVN r19145
In UTF-8 decoder:
- implement U+FFFD insertion according to the recommendation given in the
Unicode spec. This required changing the decoder to become stateful, which
significantly increased complexity due to the need to maintain an internal
buffer.
- reject invalid code unit sequences properly instead of crashing rdar://16767868
- reject overlong sequences rdar://16767911
In stdlib:
- change APIs that assume that UTF decoding can never fail to account for
possibility of errors
- fix a bug in UnicodeScalarView that could cause a crash during backward
iteration if U+8000 is present in the string
- allow noncharacters in UnicodeScalar. They are explicitly allowed in the
definition of "Unicode scalar" in the specification. Disallowing noncharacters
in UnicodeScalar prevents actually using these scalar values as internal
special values during string processing, which is exactly the reason why they
are reserved in the first place.
- fix a crash in String.fromCString() that could happen if it was passed a null
pointer
In Lexer:
- allow noncharacters in string literals. These Unicode scalar values are not
allowed to be exchanged externally, but it is totally reasonable to have them
in literals as long as they don't escape the program. For example, using
U+FFFF as a delimiter and then calling str.split("\uffff") is completely
reasonable.
This is a lot of changes in a single commit; the primary reason why they are
lumped together is the need to change stdlib APIs to account for the
possibility of UTF decoding failure, and this has long-reaching effects
throughout stdlib where these APIs are used.
Swift SVN r19045
This is all goodness, and eliminates a major source of implicit conversions.
One thing this regresses on though, is that we now reject "x == nil" where
x is an option type and the element of the optional is not Equtatable. If
this is important, there are ways to enable this, but directly testing it as
a logic value is more straight-forward.
This does not include support for pattern matching against nil, that will be
a follow on patch.
Swift SVN r18918
It is replaced by debugPrint() family of functions, that are called by REPL.
There is a regression in printing types that don't conform to Printable, this
is tracked by rdar://16898708
Swift SVN r18006