This came out of today's language review meeting.
The intent is to match #available with the attribute
that describes availability.
This is a divergence from Objective-C.
Swift SVN r28484
On OS X 10.10 and earlier, CoreImage is a sub-framework of QuartzCore.
Users of CoreImage use "import QuartzCore" and link against QuartzCore.
On OS X 10.11 (and in the OS X 10.11 SDK), CoreImage is a top-level
framework. Users of CoreImage use "import CoreImage" and would link against
CoreImage. Of course, QuartzCore continues to re-export CoreImage's API.
When backwards-deploying, we need to continue linking against QuartzCore,
but still need to bring in the overlay if you import CoreImage. That's
what this patch does.
rdar://problem/20196610
Swift SVN r28449
The rule changes are as follows:
* All functions (introduced with the 'func' keyword) have argument
labels for arguments beyond the first, by default. Methods are no
longer special in this regard.
* The presence of a default argument no longer implies an argument
label.
The actual changes to the parser and printer are fairly simple; the
rest of the noise is updating the standard library, overlays, tests,
etc.
With the standard library, this change is intended to be API neutral:
I've added/removed #'s and _'s as appropriate to keep the user
interface the same. If we want to separately consider using argument
labels for more free functions now that the defaults in the language
have shifted, we can tackle that separately.
Fixes rdar://problem/17218256.
Swift SVN r27704
This change depends on a coordinated SceneKit change which makes the
original method unavailable to avoid ambiguity. The API also requires a
data file, so no tests yet.
rdar://20384835
Swift SVN r27319
Enable checking for uses of potentially unavailable APIs. There is
a frontend option to disable it: -disable-availability-checking.
This commit updates the SDK overlays with @availability() annotations for the
declarations where the overlay refers to potentially unavailable APIs. It also changes
several tests that refer to potentially unavailable APIs to use either #available()
or @availability annotations.
Swift SVN r27272