A variety of enhancements from SE-154 and SE-165:
- Custom Keys and Values collections for Dictionary
- Two sequence-based Dictionary initializers
- Merging methods for Dictionary
- Capacity checking and reserving for Dictionary and Set
- Type-specific filter(_:) methods for Dictionary and Set
- A mapValues(_:) method for Dictionary
- A grouping Dictionary initializer
Swift 3 unintentionally allowed collection casts from, e.g.,
Set<AnyHashable> to Set<NSObject>, when in fact the object
representation of the AnyHashable might not be an NSObject. Fix up our
tests and overlays that ran afoul of this rule.
The test was verifying that two independently constructed
empty cocoa sets somehow had the same identity. Not sure why this used
to hold, but it's definitely not something we guarantee.
Some of these are kinda dubious, but I think this would be better
addressed as part of eager bridging, which will invalidate the concept
most of these are checking for.
Changes:
- Native dictionary and set indices no longer hold references to storage
- Cocoa-based dictionary and set indices no longer hold references to storage
- Removed double indirection trick from hashed collections
- Rewrote storage types to reflect simpler model
- Updated unit tests
This reverts commit dc0ae675bc. The
change here (presumably the change to Foundation) caused a regression
in several of the bridging-related benchmarks, e.g.,
ObjectiveCBridgeFromNSSetAnyObjectToString, DictionaryBridge,
ObjectiveCBridgeFromNSDictionaryAnyObjectToString.
Remove the functions
_(set|dictionary)Bridge(From|To)ObjectiveC(Conditional) from the
standard library. These entrypoints are no longer used by the compiler
(thanks to generalized collection up/downcasting), so stop using them
in Foundation and in tests.
One last bit of SE-0072. We shouldn't fall back to bridged classes in the absence of type context for literals anymore. By itself, this kind of hoses the use of literals with NS types, but I think we can get most of the QoI back with overlay changes I plan to propose following this.
Previously it assumed that if we succeed in looking up the method in the current
module we must be able to request a definition (vs a declaration).
This is not true. It could be that we had declared the type in a different
module. Always ask for a declaration.
rdar://27547957
Swift's Dictionary and Set are typed, but when bridged to NSDictionary
and NSSet they should behave accordingly, that is, allow querying for
keys of arbitrary types.
rdar://problem/23679193
Implements SE-0055: https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution/blob/master/proposals/0055-optional-unsafe-pointers.md
- Add NULL as an extra inhabitant of Builtin.RawPointer (currently
hardcoded to 0 rather than being target-dependent).
- Import non-object pointers as Optional/IUO when nullable/null_unspecified
(like everything else).
- Change the type checker's *-to-pointer conversions to handle a layer of
optional.
- Use 'AutoreleasingUnsafeMutablePointer<NSError?>?' as the type of error
parameters exported to Objective-C.
- Drop NilLiteralConvertible conformance for all pointer types.
- Update the standard library and then all the tests.
I've decided to leave this commit only updating existing tests; any new
tests will come in the following commits. (That may mean some additional
implementation work to follow.)
The other major piece that's missing here is migration. I'm hoping we get
a lot of that with Swift 1.1's work for optional object references, but
I still need to investigate.
Generalized bridging has fully subsumed most of these. NSError is
still special, and _convertStringToNSString remains for the the
runtime's implementation of SwiftObject's -description method.
...and then because of a compiler bug (SR-806), rename the helper
properties to 'asNative' and 'asCocoa'.
None of this is API, so there is no migration information.