...to value types. Do continue bridging BOOL to Bool and such.
If the Objective-C API author went out of their way to indicate
ownership, they're probably using the reference semantics for
something. Give them the benefit of the doubt and leave the properties
declared using reference types. (It's not that they wouldn't work
correctly using Any, but that it's obscuring the intended interface.
And any /specific/ bridged value types /might/ actually cause issues
by causing copies.)
There is one wrinkle here involving declarations in the "accessibility
protocols" on Apple platforms, which sometimes use methods and
sometimes properties. The Swift compiler already deals with these by
always importing these as methods, so treat these like any other
methods and use value types when relevant.
rdar://problem/27526957
One minor revision: this lifts the proposed restriction against
overriding a non-open method with an open one. On reflection,
that was inconsistent with the existing rule permitting non-public
methods to be overridden with public ones. The restriction on
subclassing a non-open class with an open class remains, and is
in fact consistent with the existing access rule.
This flips the switch to have @noescape be the default semantics for
function types in argument positions, for everything except property
setters. Property setters are naturally escaping, so they keep their
escaping-by-default behavior.
Adds contentual printing, and updates the test cases.
There is some further (non-source-breaking) work to be done for
SE-0103:
- We need the withoutActuallyEscaping function
- Improve diagnostics and QoI to at least @noescape's standards
- Deprecate / drop @noescape, right now we allow it
- Update internal code completion printing to be contextual
- Add more tests to explore tricky corner cases
- Small regressions in fixits in attr/attr_availability.swift
Error domain enums are imported with synthesizing something like this:
struct MyError {
enum Code : Int32 {
case errFirst
case errSecond
}
static var errFirst: MyError.Code { get }
static var errSecond: MyError.Code { get }
}
The clang enum and enum constants are associated with both the
struct/nested enum, and the static vars/enum cases.
But we want unique USRs for the above symbols, so use the clang USR
for the enum and enum cases, and the Swift USR for the struct and vars.
rdar://27550967
What I've implemented here deviates from the current proposal text
in the following ways:
- I had to introduce a FunctionArrowPrecedence to capture the parsing
of -> in expression contexts.
- I found it convenient to continue to model the assignment property
explicitly.
- The comparison and casting operators have historically been
non-associative; I have chosen to preserve that, since I don't
think this proposal intended to change it.
- This uses the precedence group names and higherThan/lowerThan
as agreed in discussion.
and provide a fix-it to move it to the new location as referenced
in SE-0081.
Fix up a few stray places in the standard library that is still using
the old syntax.
Update any ./test files that aren't expecting the new warning/fix-it
in -verify mode.
While investigating what I thought was a new crash due to this new
diagnostic, I discovered two sources of quite a few compiler crashers
related to unterminated generic parameter lists, where the right
angle bracket source location was getting unconditionally set to
the current token, even though it wasn't actually a '>'.
'fileprivate' is considered a broader level of access than 'private',
but for now both of them are still available to the entire file. This
is intended as a migration aid.
One interesting fallout of the "access scope" model described in
758cf64 is that something declared 'private' at file scope is actually
treated as 'fileprivate' for diagnostic purposes. This is something
we can fix later, once the full model is in place. (It's not really
/wrong/ in that they have identical behavior, but diagnostics still
shouldn't refer to a type explicitly declared 'private' as
'fileprivate'.)
As a note, ValueDecl::getEffectiveAccess will always return 'FilePrivate'
rather than 'Private'; for purposes of optimization and code generation,
we should never try to distinguish these two cases.
This should have essentially no effect on code that's /not/ using
'fileprivate' other than altered diagnostics.
Progress on SE-0025 ('fileprivate' and 'private')
The high weight on semantic context turns out to give a lot of
unreasonable completions on common types. For example
[0].ma<here>
was suggesting withUnsafeMutable... over map.
rdar://problem/27393776
Allow 'static' (or, in classes, final 'class') operators to be
declared within types and extensions thereof. Within protocols,
require operators to be marked 'static'. Use a warning with a Fix-It
to stage this in, so we don't break the world's code.
Protocol conformance checking already seems to work, so add some tests
for that. Update a pile of tests and the standard library to include
the required 'static' keywords.
There is an amusing name-mangling change here. Global operators were
getting marked as 'static' (for silly reasons), so their mangled names
had the 'Z' modifier for static methods, even though this doesn't make
sense. Now, operators within types and extensions need to be 'static'
as written.
This patch allows SourceKit to generate the interface for a given type specified by its mangled name.
Type interface is refined decl printing with type parameters localized and unusable members hidden.
Required field:
"key.request": "source.request.editor.open.interface.swifttype"
"key.usr": the mangled name of the given type.
Cursor info requires access to the underlying AST, which is not
thread-safe. This manifest as crashes when performing concurrent
cursor-info requests on the same generated interface. We already
prevented concurrent cursor-infos on regular Swift files by using the
ASTManager, but generated interfaces use the InterfaceGenContext which
may use either an ASTUnit or its own internal CompilerInstance.
rdar://problem/27311624
This resolves a number of failing tests caused by availability attributes
not getting imported for macOS.
(cherry picked from commit 4b566df9f3)
I've also reverted a bunch of master-next-only commits related to this issue
that disabled tests and made availability changes:
Revert "Disable test harder by fixing typo. REQUIRE => REQUIRES. = /."
This reverts commit 4dc1be4b95.
Revert "Disable more tests that are hit by upstream availability issues until Devin looks at them."
This reverts commit 8e0fcda35c.
Revert "[SourceKit] Narrow the test-disabling in cursor_info.swift"
This reverts commit 79f6d1d492.
Revert "[upstream-update] Work around availability issue."
This reverts commit f140a62cfb.
Typically, users jump to type-specific interface from a member of that type, for
instance, a.getSomething(). To generate the interface, we need to report the USR
of the container type of "getSomething()", which is the USR for the type of a,
when cursor info is requested for this function call.
change includes both the necessary protocol updates and the deprecation
warnings
suitable for migration. A future patch will remove the renamings and
make this
a hard error.
The mangled name of the type is identical to those for debugger. These
mangled names allow us to reconstruct the type from AST and generate interface
specifically for that type.
Related rdar://27306890
SourceKit invariantly expands the last argument in a function call as trailing closure,
if it is of function type. However, there are situations when inline closures
are preferred; for example, when the last argument is not the only closure in the function
call. This patch modifies SourceKit so that when the argument contains multiple closures,
the last argument is expanded as inline closure.
Showing only the conforming associated types provides
little information to doc viewers. This patch digs the
underlying type of an associated type to report the
conformance info of those.
Right now 'fileprivate' is parsed as an alias for 'private' (or
perhaps vice versa, since the semantics of 'private' haven't changed
yet). This allows us to migrate code to 'fileprivate' without waiting
for the full implementation.