2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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//===--- Overload.h - C++ Overloading ---------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
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//
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// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
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// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// This file defines the data structures and types used in C++
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// overload resolution.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#ifndef LLVM_CLANG_SEMA_OVERLOAD_H
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#define LLVM_CLANG_SEMA_OVERLOAD_H
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#include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h"
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namespace clang {
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2008-11-04 03:09:14 +08:00
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class CXXConstructorDecl;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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class FunctionDecl;
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/// ImplicitConversionKind - The kind of implicit conversion used to
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/// convert an argument to a parameter's type. The enumerator values
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/// match with Table 9 of (C++ 13.3.3.1.1) and are listed such that
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/// better conversion kinds have smaller values.
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enum ImplicitConversionKind {
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Initial implementation of function overloading in C.
This commit adds a new attribute, "overloadable", that enables C++
function overloading in C. The attribute can only be added to function
declarations, e.g.,
int *f(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
If the "overloadable" attribute exists on a function with a given
name, *all* functions with that name (and in that scope) must have the
"overloadable" attribute. Sets of overloaded functions with the
"overloadable" attribute then follow the normal C++ rules for
overloaded functions, e.g., overloads must have different
parameter-type-lists from each other.
When calling an overloaded function in C, we follow the same
overloading rules as C++, with three extensions to the set of standard
conversions:
- A value of a given struct or union type T can be converted to the
type T. This is just the identity conversion. (In C++, this would
go through a copy constructor).
- A value of pointer type T* can be converted to a value of type U*
if T and U are compatible types. This conversion has Conversion
rank (it's considered a pointer conversion in C).
- A value of type T can be converted to a value of type U if T and U
are compatible (and are not both pointer types). This conversion
has Conversion rank (it's considered to be a new kind of
conversion unique to C, a "compatible" conversion).
Known defects (and, therefore, next steps):
1) The standard-conversion handling does not understand conversions
involving _Complex or vector extensions, so it is likely to get
these wrong. We need to add these conversions.
2) All overloadable functions with the same name will have the same
linkage name, which means we'll get a collision in the linker (if
not sooner). We'll need to mangle the names of these functions.
llvm-svn: 64336
2009-02-12 07:02:49 +08:00
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ICK_Identity = 0, ///< Identity conversion (no conversion)
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ICK_Lvalue_To_Rvalue, ///< Lvalue-to-rvalue conversion (C++ 4.1)
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ICK_Array_To_Pointer, ///< Array-to-pointer conversion (C++ 4.2)
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ICK_Function_To_Pointer, ///< Function-to-pointer (C++ 4.3)
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ICK_Qualification, ///< Qualification conversions (C++ 4.4)
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ICK_Integral_Promotion, ///< Integral promotions (C++ 4.5)
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ICK_Floating_Promotion, ///< Floating point promotions (C++ 4.6)
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2009-02-12 08:15:05 +08:00
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ICK_Complex_Promotion, ///< Complex promotions (Clang extension)
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Initial implementation of function overloading in C.
This commit adds a new attribute, "overloadable", that enables C++
function overloading in C. The attribute can only be added to function
declarations, e.g.,
int *f(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
If the "overloadable" attribute exists on a function with a given
name, *all* functions with that name (and in that scope) must have the
"overloadable" attribute. Sets of overloaded functions with the
"overloadable" attribute then follow the normal C++ rules for
overloaded functions, e.g., overloads must have different
parameter-type-lists from each other.
When calling an overloaded function in C, we follow the same
overloading rules as C++, with three extensions to the set of standard
conversions:
- A value of a given struct or union type T can be converted to the
type T. This is just the identity conversion. (In C++, this would
go through a copy constructor).
- A value of pointer type T* can be converted to a value of type U*
if T and U are compatible types. This conversion has Conversion
rank (it's considered a pointer conversion in C).
- A value of type T can be converted to a value of type U if T and U
are compatible (and are not both pointer types). This conversion
has Conversion rank (it's considered to be a new kind of
conversion unique to C, a "compatible" conversion).
Known defects (and, therefore, next steps):
1) The standard-conversion handling does not understand conversions
involving _Complex or vector extensions, so it is likely to get
these wrong. We need to add these conversions.
2) All overloadable functions with the same name will have the same
linkage name, which means we'll get a collision in the linker (if
not sooner). We'll need to mangle the names of these functions.
llvm-svn: 64336
2009-02-12 07:02:49 +08:00
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ICK_Integral_Conversion, ///< Integral conversions (C++ 4.7)
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ICK_Floating_Conversion, ///< Floating point conversions (C++ 4.8)
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2009-02-12 08:15:05 +08:00
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ICK_Complex_Conversion, ///< Complex conversions (C99 6.3.1.6)
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Initial implementation of function overloading in C.
This commit adds a new attribute, "overloadable", that enables C++
function overloading in C. The attribute can only be added to function
declarations, e.g.,
int *f(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
If the "overloadable" attribute exists on a function with a given
name, *all* functions with that name (and in that scope) must have the
"overloadable" attribute. Sets of overloaded functions with the
"overloadable" attribute then follow the normal C++ rules for
overloaded functions, e.g., overloads must have different
parameter-type-lists from each other.
When calling an overloaded function in C, we follow the same
overloading rules as C++, with three extensions to the set of standard
conversions:
- A value of a given struct or union type T can be converted to the
type T. This is just the identity conversion. (In C++, this would
go through a copy constructor).
- A value of pointer type T* can be converted to a value of type U*
if T and U are compatible types. This conversion has Conversion
rank (it's considered a pointer conversion in C).
- A value of type T can be converted to a value of type U if T and U
are compatible (and are not both pointer types). This conversion
has Conversion rank (it's considered to be a new kind of
conversion unique to C, a "compatible" conversion).
Known defects (and, therefore, next steps):
1) The standard-conversion handling does not understand conversions
involving _Complex or vector extensions, so it is likely to get
these wrong. We need to add these conversions.
2) All overloadable functions with the same name will have the same
linkage name, which means we'll get a collision in the linker (if
not sooner). We'll need to mangle the names of these functions.
llvm-svn: 64336
2009-02-12 07:02:49 +08:00
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ICK_Floating_Integral, ///< Floating-integral conversions (C++ 4.9)
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2009-02-12 08:15:05 +08:00
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ICK_Complex_Real, ///< Complex-real conversions (C99 6.3.1.7)
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Initial implementation of function overloading in C.
This commit adds a new attribute, "overloadable", that enables C++
function overloading in C. The attribute can only be added to function
declarations, e.g.,
int *f(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
If the "overloadable" attribute exists on a function with a given
name, *all* functions with that name (and in that scope) must have the
"overloadable" attribute. Sets of overloaded functions with the
"overloadable" attribute then follow the normal C++ rules for
overloaded functions, e.g., overloads must have different
parameter-type-lists from each other.
When calling an overloaded function in C, we follow the same
overloading rules as C++, with three extensions to the set of standard
conversions:
- A value of a given struct or union type T can be converted to the
type T. This is just the identity conversion. (In C++, this would
go through a copy constructor).
- A value of pointer type T* can be converted to a value of type U*
if T and U are compatible types. This conversion has Conversion
rank (it's considered a pointer conversion in C).
- A value of type T can be converted to a value of type U if T and U
are compatible (and are not both pointer types). This conversion
has Conversion rank (it's considered to be a new kind of
conversion unique to C, a "compatible" conversion).
Known defects (and, therefore, next steps):
1) The standard-conversion handling does not understand conversions
involving _Complex or vector extensions, so it is likely to get
these wrong. We need to add these conversions.
2) All overloadable functions with the same name will have the same
linkage name, which means we'll get a collision in the linker (if
not sooner). We'll need to mangle the names of these functions.
llvm-svn: 64336
2009-02-12 07:02:49 +08:00
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ICK_Pointer_Conversion, ///< Pointer conversions (C++ 4.10)
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ICK_Pointer_Member, ///< Pointer-to-member conversions (C++ 4.11)
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ICK_Boolean_Conversion, ///< Boolean conversions (C++ 4.12)
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ICK_Compatible_Conversion, ///< Conversions between compatible types in C99
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ICK_Derived_To_Base, ///< Derived-to-base (C++ [over.best.ics])
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ICK_Num_Conversion_Kinds ///< The number of conversion kinds
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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};
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/// ImplicitConversionCategory - The category of an implicit
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/// conversion kind. The enumerator values match with Table 9 of
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/// (C++ 13.3.3.1.1) and are listed such that better conversion
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/// categories have smaller values.
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enum ImplicitConversionCategory {
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ICC_Identity = 0, ///< Identity
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ICC_Lvalue_Transformation, ///< Lvalue transformation
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ICC_Qualification_Adjustment, ///< Qualification adjustment
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ICC_Promotion, ///< Promotion
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ICC_Conversion ///< Conversion
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};
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ImplicitConversionCategory
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GetConversionCategory(ImplicitConversionKind Kind);
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/// ImplicitConversionRank - The rank of an implicit conversion
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/// kind. The enumerator values match with Table 9 of (C++
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/// 13.3.3.1.1) and are listed such that better conversion ranks
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/// have smaller values.
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enum ImplicitConversionRank {
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ICR_Exact_Match = 0, ///< Exact Match
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ICR_Promotion, ///< Promotion
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ICR_Conversion ///< Conversion
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};
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ImplicitConversionRank GetConversionRank(ImplicitConversionKind Kind);
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/// StandardConversionSequence - represents a standard conversion
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/// sequence (C++ 13.3.3.1.1). A standard conversion sequence
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/// contains between zero and three conversions. If a particular
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/// conversion is not needed, it will be set to the identity conversion
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/// (ICK_Identity). Note that the three conversions are
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/// specified as separate members (rather than in an array) so that
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/// we can keep the size of a standard conversion sequence to a
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/// single word.
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struct StandardConversionSequence {
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/// First -- The first conversion can be an lvalue-to-rvalue
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/// conversion, array-to-pointer conversion, or
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/// function-to-pointer conversion.
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ImplicitConversionKind First : 8;
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/// Second - The second conversion can be an integral promotion,
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/// floating point promotion, integral conversion, floating point
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/// conversion, floating-integral conversion, pointer conversion,
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/// pointer-to-member conversion, or boolean conversion.
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ImplicitConversionKind Second : 8;
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/// Third - The third conversion can be a qualification conversion.
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ImplicitConversionKind Third : 8;
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2008-10-29 10:00:59 +08:00
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/// Deprecated - Whether this the deprecated conversion of a
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/// string literal to a pointer to non-const character data
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/// (C++ 4.2p2).
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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bool Deprecated : 1;
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2008-12-20 01:40:08 +08:00
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/// IncompatibleObjC - Whether this is an Objective-C conversion
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/// that we should warn about (if we actually use it).
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bool IncompatibleObjC : 1;
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2008-10-29 22:50:44 +08:00
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/// ReferenceBinding - True when this is a reference binding
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/// (C++ [over.ics.ref]).
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bool ReferenceBinding : 1;
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/// DirectBinding - True when this is a reference binding that is a
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/// direct binding (C++ [dcl.init.ref]).
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bool DirectBinding : 1;
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2009-03-29 23:27:50 +08:00
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/// RRefBinding - True when this is a reference binding of an rvalue
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/// reference to an rvalue (C++0x [over.ics.rank]p3b4).
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bool RRefBinding : 1;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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/// FromType - The type that this conversion is converting
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2008-10-23 08:40:37 +08:00
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/// from. This is an opaque pointer that can be translated into a
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/// QualType.
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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void *FromTypePtr;
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/// ToType - The type that this conversion is converting to. This
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2008-10-23 08:40:37 +08:00
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/// is an opaque pointer that can be translated into a QualType.
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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void *ToTypePtr;
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2008-11-04 03:09:14 +08:00
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/// CopyConstructor - The copy constructor that is used to perform
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/// this conversion, when the conversion is actually just the
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/// initialization of an object via copy constructor. Such
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/// conversions are either identity conversions or derived-to-base
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/// conversions.
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CXXConstructorDecl *CopyConstructor;
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2008-11-01 00:23:19 +08:00
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void setAsIdentityConversion();
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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ImplicitConversionRank getRank() const;
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bool isPointerConversionToBool() const;
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2008-10-23 08:40:37 +08:00
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bool isPointerConversionToVoidPointer(ASTContext& Context) const;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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void DebugPrint() const;
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};
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/// UserDefinedConversionSequence - Represents a user-defined
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/// conversion sequence (C++ 13.3.3.1.2).
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struct UserDefinedConversionSequence {
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/// Before - Represents the standard conversion that occurs before
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/// the actual user-defined conversion. (C++ 13.3.3.1.2p1):
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///
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/// If the user-defined conversion is specified by a constructor
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/// (12.3.1), the initial standard conversion sequence converts
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/// the source type to the type required by the argument of the
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/// constructor. If the user-defined conversion is specified by
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/// a conversion function (12.3.2), the initial standard
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/// conversion sequence converts the source type to the implicit
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/// object parameter of the conversion function.
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StandardConversionSequence Before;
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/// After - Represents the standard conversion that occurs after
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/// the actual user-defined conversion.
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StandardConversionSequence After;
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/// ConversionFunction - The function that will perform the
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/// user-defined conversion.
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FunctionDecl* ConversionFunction;
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void DebugPrint() const;
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};
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/// ImplicitConversionSequence - Represents an implicit conversion
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/// sequence, which may be a standard conversion sequence
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2009-04-17 01:51:27 +08:00
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/// (C++ 13.3.3.1.1), user-defined conversion sequence (C++ 13.3.3.1.2),
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/// or an ellipsis conversion sequence (C++ 13.3.3.1.3).
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struct ImplicitConversionSequence {
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/// Kind - The kind of implicit conversion sequence. BadConversion
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/// specifies that there is no conversion from the source type to
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/// the target type. The enumerator values are ordered such that
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/// better implicit conversions have smaller values.
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enum Kind {
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StandardConversion = 0,
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UserDefinedConversion,
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EllipsisConversion,
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BadConversion
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};
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/// ConversionKind - The kind of implicit conversion sequence.
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2008-10-29 22:50:44 +08:00
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Kind ConversionKind;
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union {
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/// When ConversionKind == StandardConversion, provides the
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/// details of the standard conversion sequence.
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StandardConversionSequence Standard;
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/// When ConversionKind == UserDefinedConversion, provides the
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/// details of the user-defined conversion sequence.
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UserDefinedConversionSequence UserDefined;
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};
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// The result of a comparison between implicit conversion
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// sequences. Use Sema::CompareImplicitConversionSequences to
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// actually perform the comparison.
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enum CompareKind {
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2008-10-22 22:17:15 +08:00
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Better = -1,
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Indistinguishable = 0,
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Worse = 1
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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};
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void DebugPrint() const;
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};
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/// OverloadCandidate - A single candidate in an overload set (C++ 13.3).
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struct OverloadCandidate {
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Implement support for operator overloading using candidate operator
functions for built-in operators, e.g., the builtin
bool operator==(int const*, int const*)
can be used for the expression "x1 == x2" given:
struct X {
operator int const*();
} x1, x2;
The scheme for handling these built-in operators is relatively simple:
for each candidate required by the standard, create a special kind of
candidate function for the built-in. If overload resolution picks the
built-in operator, we perform the appropriate conversions on the
arguments and then let the normal built-in operator take care of it.
There may be some optimization opportunity left: if we can reduce the
number of built-in operator overloads we generate, overload resolution
for these cases will go faster. However, one must be careful when
doing this: GCC generates too few operator overloads in our little
test program, and fails to compile it because none of the overloads it
generates match.
Note that we only support operator overload for non-member binary
operators at the moment. The other operators will follow.
As part of this change, ImplicitCastExpr can now be an lvalue.
llvm-svn: 59148
2008-11-13 01:17:38 +08:00
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/// Function - The actual function that this candidate
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2008-11-20 06:57:39 +08:00
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/// represents. When NULL, this is a built-in candidate
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/// (C++ [over.oper]) or a surrogate for a conversion to a
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/// function pointer or reference (C++ [over.call.object]).
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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FunctionDecl *Function;
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2008-11-20 06:57:39 +08:00
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Implement support for operator overloading using candidate operator
functions for built-in operators, e.g., the builtin
bool operator==(int const*, int const*)
can be used for the expression "x1 == x2" given:
struct X {
operator int const*();
} x1, x2;
The scheme for handling these built-in operators is relatively simple:
for each candidate required by the standard, create a special kind of
candidate function for the built-in. If overload resolution picks the
built-in operator, we perform the appropriate conversions on the
arguments and then let the normal built-in operator take care of it.
There may be some optimization opportunity left: if we can reduce the
number of built-in operator overloads we generate, overload resolution
for these cases will go faster. However, one must be careful when
doing this: GCC generates too few operator overloads in our little
test program, and fails to compile it because none of the overloads it
generates match.
Note that we only support operator overload for non-member binary
operators at the moment. The other operators will follow.
As part of this change, ImplicitCastExpr can now be an lvalue.
llvm-svn: 59148
2008-11-13 01:17:38 +08:00
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// BuiltinTypes - Provides the return and parameter types of a
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// built-in overload candidate. Only valid when Function is NULL.
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struct {
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QualType ResultTy;
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QualType ParamTypes[3];
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} BuiltinTypes;
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2008-11-20 06:57:39 +08:00
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/// Surrogate - The conversion function for which this candidate
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/// is a surrogate, but only if IsSurrogate is true.
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CXXConversionDecl *Surrogate;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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/// Conversions - The conversion sequences used to convert the
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/// function arguments to the function parameters.
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llvm::SmallVector<ImplicitConversionSequence, 4> Conversions;
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/// Viable - True to indicate that this overload candidate is viable.
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bool Viable;
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2008-11-08 06:36:19 +08:00
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2008-11-20 06:57:39 +08:00
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/// IsSurrogate - True to indicate that this candidate is a
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/// surrogate for a conversion to a function pointer or reference
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/// (C++ [over.call.object]).
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bool IsSurrogate;
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2008-12-22 13:46:06 +08:00
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/// IgnoreObjectArgument - True to indicate that the first
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/// argument's conversion, which for this function represents the
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/// implicit object argument, should be ignored. This will be true
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/// when the candidate is a static member function (where the
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/// implicit object argument is just a placeholder) or a
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/// non-static member function when the call doesn't have an
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/// object argument.
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bool IgnoreObjectArgument;
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2008-11-08 06:36:19 +08:00
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/// FinalConversion - For a conversion function (where Function is
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/// a CXXConversionDecl), the standard conversion that occurs
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/// after the call to the overload candidate to convert the result
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/// of calling the conversion function to the required type.
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StandardConversionSequence FinalConversion;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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};
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/// OverloadCandidateSet - A set of overload candidates, used in C++
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/// overload resolution (C++ 13.3).
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Implement support for operator overloading using candidate operator
functions for built-in operators, e.g., the builtin
bool operator==(int const*, int const*)
can be used for the expression "x1 == x2" given:
struct X {
operator int const*();
} x1, x2;
The scheme for handling these built-in operators is relatively simple:
for each candidate required by the standard, create a special kind of
candidate function for the built-in. If overload resolution picks the
built-in operator, we perform the appropriate conversions on the
arguments and then let the normal built-in operator take care of it.
There may be some optimization opportunity left: if we can reduce the
number of built-in operator overloads we generate, overload resolution
for these cases will go faster. However, one must be careful when
doing this: GCC generates too few operator overloads in our little
test program, and fails to compile it because none of the overloads it
generates match.
Note that we only support operator overload for non-member binary
operators at the moment. The other operators will follow.
As part of this change, ImplicitCastExpr can now be an lvalue.
llvm-svn: 59148
2008-11-13 01:17:38 +08:00
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typedef llvm::SmallVector<OverloadCandidate, 16> OverloadCandidateSet;
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2008-10-22 00:13:35 +08:00
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} // end namespace clang
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#endif // LLVM_CLANG_SEMA_OVERLOAD_H
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