Type annotations for instruction operands are omitted, e.g.
```
%3 = struct $S(%1, %2)
```
Operand types are redundant anyway and were only used for sanity checking in the SIL parser.
But: operand types _are_ printed if the definition of the operand value was not printed yet.
This happens:
* if the block with the definition appears after the block where the operand's instruction is located
* if a block or instruction is printed in isolation, e.g. in a debugger
The old behavior can be restored with `-Xllvm -sil-print-types`.
This option is added to many existing test files which check for operand types in their check-lines.
Actor initializers have a flow-sensitive property where they are isolated
to the actor being initialized only after the actor instance itself is
fully-initialized. However, this behavior was not being reflected in
the expansion of `#isolation`, which was always expanding to `self`,
even before `self` is fully formed.
This led to a source compatibility issue with code that used the async
for..in loop within an actor initializer *prior* to the point where the
actor was fully initialized, because the type checker is introducing
the `#isolation` (SE-0421) but Definite Initialization properly rejects
the use of `self` before it is initialized.
Address this issue by delaying the expansion of `#isolation` until
after the actor is fully initialized. In SILGen, we introduce a new
builtin for this case (and *just* this case) called
`flowSensitiveSelfIsolation`, which takes in `self` as its argument
and produces an `(any Actor)?`. Definite initialization does not treat
this as a use of `self`. Rather, it tracks these builtins and
replaces them either with `self` (if it is fully-initialized at this
point) or `nil` (if it is not fully-initialized at this point),
mirroring the flow-sensitive isolation semantics described in SE-0327.
Fixes rdar://127080037.