For now, the accessors have been underscored as `_read` and `_modify`.
I'll prepare an evolution proposal for this feature which should allow
us to remove the underscores or, y'know, rename them to `purple` and
`lettuce`.
`_read` accessors do not make any effort yet to avoid copying the
value being yielded. I'll work on it in follow-up patches.
Opaque accesses to properties and subscripts defined with `_modify`
accessors will use an inefficient `materializeForSet` pattern that
materializes the value to a temporary instead of accessing it in-place.
That will be fixed by migrating to `modify` over `materializeForSet`,
which is next up after the `read` optimizations.
SIL ownership verification doesn't pass yet for the test cases here
because of a general fault in SILGen where borrows can outlive their
borrowed value due to being cleaned up on the general cleanup stack
when the borrowed value is cleaned up on the formal-access stack.
Michael, Andy, and I discussed various ways to fix this, but it seems
clear to me that it's not in any way specific to coroutine accesses.
rdar://35399664
This also fixes several issues where attribute arguments could not be
parsed as a TokenList since some of its arguments already had structure
and were not tokens
This is our first statement attribute, made more complicated by the
fact that a 'case'/'default' isn't really a normal statement. I've
chosen /not/ to implement a general statement attribute logic like we
have for types and decls at this time, but I did get the compiler
parsing arbitrary attributes before 'case' and 'default'. As a bonus,
we now treat all cases within functions as being switch-like rather
than enum-like, which is better for recovery when not in a switch.
Swift syntax APIs lack an abstract way of accessing children. The client has to
down-cast a syntax node to the leaf type to access any of its children. However,
some children are common among different syntax kinds, e.g.
DeclAttributeSyntax and DeclMembers. We should allow an abstract way to
access and modify them, so that clients can avoid logic duplication.
This patch adds a mechanism to define new traits and specify satisfied
traits in specific syntax nodes. A trait is a set of common children
and implemented in Swift as a protocol for syntax nodes to conform to.
As a proof-of-concept, we added two traits for now including DeclGroupSyntax
and BracedSyntax.
Resolves: SR-6931 and SR-6916
* Create Swift libSyntax API
This patch is an initial implementation of the Swift libSyntax API. It
aims to provide all features of the C++ API but exposed to Swift.
It currently resides in SwiftExperimental and will likely exist in a
molten state for a while.
* Only build SwiftSyntax on macOS
* Generate libSyntax API
This patch removes the hand-rolled libSyntax API and replaces it with an
API that's entirely automatically generated. This means the API is
guaranteed to be internally stylistically and functionally consistent.