Files
swift-mirror/validation-test/compiler_crashers/1395-swift-parser-skipsingle.swift
Jordan Rose 0a9d60485f Don't look into a type context to resolve types in the inheritance clause.
Instead, just check the generic parameters, then do a lookup as usual in the
enclosing context.

Fixes crash suite #58 and quite a few others (~200). This looks way more
impressive than it is; in most of these test cases it's the exact same
pattern causing the crash, and that pattern was just the last outstanding
crash trigger in a sea of garbage. (The few deleted tests were identical
to #58.)

Swift SVN r24748
2015-01-27 02:45:29 +00:00

32 lines
772 B
Swift

// RUN: not %target-swift-frontend %s -parse
// Distributed under the terms of the MIT license
// Test case submitted to project by https://github.com/practicalswift (practicalswift)
// Test case found by fuzzing
protocol A : d {
func d
self.a: A> Any) {
}
}
class A {
}
var b((AnyObject, AnyObject> {
override func b(e!.<T>(Any) {
public subscript () -> ("
var b, g = c(T, c>]() -> S(f()] as [unowned self.b.g = A? = B
enum b where g(e> (A> Self {
typealias f == A) {
class a(() -> {
println((h: (.B
protocol A {
func a(A.f : T, x in a {
typealias A {
typealias F>? = b, AnyObject, T>) {
func x) {
public var b {
assert(range: Array<T> T, () {
class func d() -> T) {
f: B<D> (c<T>(T: T) -> e(c: Any) -> : ExtensibleCollectionType>() { c, Any) {
init(self.advance(#obje