that type. Note that we do not produce a diagnostic if the type is
incomplete; rather, we just don't look for conversion functions. Fixes PR4660.
llvm-svn: 79919
- Allowing one to name a member function template within a class
template and on the right-hand side of a member access expression.
- Template argument deduction for calls to member function templates.
- Registering specializations of member function templates (and
finding them later).
llvm-svn: 79581
where sizeof(short) == sizeof(int). Move UsualArithmeticConversionsType
out of Sema, since it was only there as a historical artifact. Patch by
Enea Zaffanella.
llvm-svn: 79412
This is a Type subclass that can hold a DeclaratorInfo* when we have type source info coming
out of a declarator that we want to preserve. This is used only at the "border" of Parser/Sema for
passing/getting QualTypes, it does not participate in the type system semantics in any way.
llvm-svn: 79394
DeclaratorDecl contains a DeclaratorInfo* to keep type source info.
Subclasses of DeclaratorDecl are FieldDecl, FunctionDecl, and VarDecl.
EnumConstantDecl still inherits from ValueDecl since it has no need for DeclaratorInfo.
Decl/Sema interfaces accept a DeclaratorInfo as parameter but no DeclaratorInfo is created yet.
llvm-svn: 79392
FriendFunctionDecl, and create instances as appropriate.
The design of FriendFunctionDecl is still somewhat up in the air; you can
befriend arbitrary types of functions --- methods, constructors, etc. ---
and it's not clear that this representation captures that very well.
We'll have a better picture when we start consuming this data in access
control.
llvm-svn: 78653
Fixes PR4704 problems
Addresses Eli's patch feedback re: ugly cast code
Updates all postfix operators to remove ParenListExprs. While this is awful,
no better solution (say, in the parser) is obvious to me. Better solutions
welcome.
llvm-svn: 78621
--- Reverse-merging r78535 into '.':
D test/Sema/altivec-init.c
U include/clang/Basic/DiagnosticSemaKinds.td
U include/clang/AST/Expr.h
U include/clang/AST/StmtNodes.def
U include/clang/Parse/Parser.h
U include/clang/Parse/Action.h
U tools/clang-cc/clang-cc.cpp
U lib/Frontend/PrintParserCallbacks.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/CGExprScalar.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaInit.cpp
U lib/Sema/Sema.h
U lib/Sema/SemaExpr.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaTemplateInstantiateExpr.cpp
U lib/AST/StmtProfile.cpp
U lib/AST/Expr.cpp
U lib/AST/StmtPrinter.cpp
U lib/Parse/ParseExpr.cpp
U lib/Parse/ParseExprCXX.cpp
llvm-svn: 78551
In addition to being defined by the AltiVec PIM, this is also the vector
initializer syntax used by OpenCL, so that vector literals are compatible
with macro arguments.
llvm-svn: 78535
we were going to enter into the scope of a class template or class
template partial specialization, rebuild that type so that it can
refer to members of the current instantiation, as in code like
template<typename T>
struct X {
typedef T* pointer;
pointer data();
};
template<typename T>
typename X<T>::pointer X<T>::data() { ... }
Without rebuilding the return type of this out-of-line definition, the
canonical return type of the out-of-line definition (a TypenameType)
will not match the canonical return type of the declaration (the
canonical type of T*).
llvm-svn: 78316
implementation of '#pragma unused' by not constructing intermediate
DeclRefExprs, but instead do the name lookup directly. The
implementation is greatly simplified.
Along the way, degrade '#pragma unused(undeclaredvariable)' to a
warning instead of being a hard error. This implements:
<rdar://problem/6761874> [sema] allow #pragma unused to reference undefined variable (with warning)
llvm-svn: 78019
Note that this also fixes a bug that affects non-template code, where we
were not treating out-of-line static data members are "file-scope" variables,
and therefore not checking their initializers.
llvm-svn: 77002
point that covers templates and non-templates. This should eliminate
the flood of warnings I introduced yesterday.
Removed the ActOnClassTemplate action, which is no longer used.
llvm-svn: 76881
- Move Sema::ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible(), Sema::QualifiedIdConformsQualifiedId(), and a couple helper functions to ASTContext.
- Change ASTContext::canAssignObjCInterfaces() to use ASTContext:: ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible().
- Tweak several test cases to accommodate the new/improved type checking.
llvm-svn: 76830
value. This is on by default, and controlled by -Wreturn-type (-Wmost
-Wall). I believe there should be very few false positives, though
the most interesting case would be:
int() { bar(); }
when bar does:
bar() { while (1) ; }
Here, we assume functions return, unless they are marked with the
noreturn attribute. I can envision a fixit note for functions that
never return normally that don't have a noreturn attribute to add a
noreturn attribute.
If anyone spots other false positives, let me know!
llvm-svn: 76821
templates, e.g.,
template<typename T>
struct Outer {
struct Inner;
};
template<typename T>
struct Outer<T>::Inner {
// ...
};
Implementing this feature required some extensions to ActOnTag, which
now takes a set of template parameter lists, and is the precursor to
removing the ActOnClassTemplate function from the parser Action
interface. The reason for this approach is simple: the parser cannot
tell the difference between a class template definition and the
definition of a member of a class template; both have template
parameter lists, and semantic analysis determines what that template
parameter list means.
There is still some cleanup to do with ActOnTag and
ActOnClassTemplate. This commit provides the basic functionality we
need, however.
llvm-svn: 76820
- Remove Sema::CheckPointeeTypesForAssignment(), a temporary API I added to ease migration to ObjCObjectPointerType. Convert Sema::CheckAssignmentConstraints() to no longer depend on the temporary API.
- Sema::ConvertDeclSpecToType(): Replace a couple FIXME's with an important comment/example.
- Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(): Get the protocol's from the interface, NOT the declspec (to support the following C typedef idiom: "typedef C<P> T; T *obj").
- Sema::ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible(): Removed some dead code.
- ASTContext::getObjCEncodingForTypeImpl(): Some minor cleanups.
llvm-svn: 76443
Note: One day, it might be useful to consider adding this info to DeclGroup (as the comments in FunctionDecl/VarDecl suggest). For now, I think this works fine. I considered moving this to ValueDecl (a common ancestor of FunctionDecl/VarDecl/FieldDecl), however this would add overhead to EnumConstantDecl (which would burn memory and isn't necessary).
llvm-svn: 75635
The idea is to segregate Objective-C "object" pointers from general C pointers (utilizing the recently added ObjCObjectPointerType). The fun starts in Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(), where "SomeInterface *" is now represented by a single AST node (rather than a PointerType whose Pointee is an ObjCInterfaceType). Since a significant amount of code assumed ObjC object pointers where based on C pointers/structs, this patch is very tedious. It should also explain why it is hard to accomplish this in smaller, self-contained patches.
This patch does most of the "heavy lifting" related to moving from PointerType->ObjCObjectPointerType. It doesn't include all potential "cleanups". The good news is additional cleanups can be done later (some are noted in the code). This patch is so large that I didn't want to include any changes that are purely aesthetic.
By making the ObjC types truly built-in, they are much easier to work with (and require fewer "hacks"). For example, there is no need for ASTContext::isObjCIdStructType() or ASTContext::isObjCClassStructType()! We believe this change (and the follow-up cleanups) will pay dividends over time.
Given the amount of code change, I do expect some fallout from this change (though it does pass all of the clang tests). If you notice any problems, please let us know asap! Thanks.
llvm-svn: 75314
function template. Most of the change here is in factoring out the
common bits used for template argument deduction from a function call
and when taking the address of a function template.
llvm-svn: 75044
implement C++ [temp.deduct.call]p3b3, which allows a template-id
parameter to match a derived class of the argument, while deducing
template arguments.
llvm-svn: 74965
declaration in the AST.
The new ASTContext::getCommentForDecl function searches for a comment
that is attached to the given declaration, and returns that comment,
which may be composed of several comment blocks.
Comments are always available in an AST. However, to avoid harming
performance, we don't actually parse the comments. Rather, we keep the
source ranges of all of the comments within a large, sorted vector,
then lazily extract comments via a binary search in that vector only
when needed (which never occurs in a "normal" compile).
Comments are written to a precompiled header/AST file as a blob of
source ranges. That blob is only lazily loaded when one requests a
comment for a declaration (this never occurs in a "normal" compile).
The indexer testbed now supports comment extraction. When the
-point-at location points to a declaration with a Doxygen-style
comment, the indexer testbed prints the associated comment
block(s). See test/Index/comments.c for an example.
Some notes:
- We don't actually attempt to parse the comment blocks themselves,
beyond identifying them as Doxygen comment blocks to associate them
with a declaration.
- We won't find comment blocks that aren't adjacent to the
declaration, because we start our search based on the location of
the declaration.
- We don't go through the necessary hops to find, for example,
whether some redeclaration of a declaration has comments when our
current declaration does not. Similarly, we don't attempt to
associate a \param Foo marker in a function body comment with the
parameter named Foo (although that is certainly possible).
- Verification of my "no performance impact" claims is still "to be
done".
llvm-svn: 74704
by distinguishing between substitution that occurs for template
argument deduction vs. explicitly-specifiad template arguments. This
is used both to improve diagnostics and to make sure we only provide
SFINAE in those cases where SFINAE should apply.
In addition, deal with the sticky issue where SFINAE only considers
substitution of template arguments into the *type* of a function
template; we need to issue hard errors beyond this point, as
test/SemaTemplate/operator-template.cpp illustrates.
llvm-svn: 74651
substitute those template arguments into the function parameter types
prior to template argument deduction. There's still a bit of work to
do to make this work properly when only some of the template arguments
are specified.
llvm-svn: 74576
instantiation stack so that we provide a full instantiation
backtrace. Previously, we performed all of the instantiations implied
by the recursion, but each looked like a "top-level" instantiation.
The included test case tests the previous fix for the instantiation of
DeclRefExprs. Note that the "instantiated from" diagnostics still
don't tell us which template arguments we're instantiating with.
llvm-svn: 74540
"semantic analysis" part. Use the "semantic analysis" part when
performing template instantiation on a DeclRefExpr, rather than an ad
hoc list of rules to construct DeclRefExprs from the instantiation.
A test case for this change will come in with a large commit, which
illustrates what I was actually trying to work on.
llvm-svn: 74528
The implementations of these methods can Use Decl::getASTContext() to get the ASTContext.
This commit touches a lot of files since call sites for these methods are everywhere.
I used pre-tokenized "carbon.h" and "cocoa.h" headers to do some timings, and there was no real time difference between before the commit and after it.
llvm-svn: 74501
templates.
For example, this now type-checks (but does not instantiate the body
of deref<int>):
template<typename T> T& deref(T* t) { return *t; }
void test(int *ip) {
int &ir = deref(ip);
}
Specific changes/additions:
* Template argument deduction from a call to a function template.
* Instantiation of a function template specializations (just the
declarations) from the template arguments deduced from a call.
* FunctionTemplateDecls are stored directly in declaration contexts
and found via name lookup (all forms), rather than finding the
FunctionDecl and then realizing it is a template. This is
responsible for most of the churn, since some of the core
declaration matching and lookup code assumes that all functions are
FunctionDecls.
llvm-svn: 74213
compilation, and (hopefully) introduce RAII objects for changing the
"potentially evaluated" state at all of the necessary places within
Sema and Parser. Other changes:
- Set the unevaluated/potentially-evaluated context appropriately
during template instantiation.
- We now recognize three different states while parsing or
instantiating expressions: unevaluated, potentially evaluated, and
potentially potentially evaluated (for C++'s typeid).
- When we're in a potentially potentially-evaluated context, queue
up MarkDeclarationReferenced calls in a stack. For C++ typeid
expressions that are potentially evaluated, we will play back
these MarkDeclarationReferenced calls when we exit the
corresponding potentially potentially-evaluated context.
- Non-type template arguments are now parsed as constant
expressions, so they are not potentially-evaluated.
llvm-svn: 73899
C++. This logic is required to trigger implicit instantiation of
function templates and member functions of class templates, which will
be implemented separately.
This commit includes support for -Wunused-parameter, printing warnings
for named parameters that are not used within a function/Objective-C
method/block. Fixes <rdar://problem/6505209>.
llvm-svn: 73797
that were suppressed due to SFINAE. By checking whether any errors
occur at the end of template argument deduction, we avoid the
possibility of suppressing an error (due to SFINAE) and then
recovering so well that template argument deduction never detects that
there was a problem. Thanks to Eli for the push in this direction.
llvm-svn: 73336
Implement support for C++ Substitution Failure Is Not An Error
(SFINAE), which says that errors that occur during template argument
deduction do *not* produce diagnostics and do not necessarily make a
program ill-formed. Instead, template argument deduction silently
fails. This is currently implemented for template argument deduction
during matching of class template partial specializations, although
the mechanism will also apply to template argument deduction for
function templates. The scheme is simple:
- If we are in a template argument deduction context, any diagnostic
that is considered a SFINAE error (or warning) will be
suppressed. The error will be propagated up the call stack via the
normal means.
- By default, all warnings and errors are SFINAE errors. Add the
NoSFINAE class to a diagnostic in the .td file to make it a hard
error (e.g., for access-control violations).
Note that, to make this fully work, every place in Sema that emits an
error *and then immediately recovers* will need to check
Sema::isSFINAEContext() to determine whether it must immediately
return an error rather than recovering.
llvm-svn: 73332
specialization's arguments are identical to the implicit template
arguments of the primary template. Typically, this is meant to be a
declaration/definition of the primary template, so we give that
advice.
llvm-svn: 73259
argument deduction failed. For example, given
template<typename T> struct is_same<T, T> { ... };
template argument deduction will fail for is_same<int, float>, and now
reports enough information
Right now, we don't do anything with this extra information, but it
can be used for informative diagnostics that say, e.g., "template
argument deduction failed because T was deduced to 'int' in one
context and 'float' in another".
llvm-svn: 73237
partial specialization, substitute those template arguments back into
the template arguments of the class template partial specialization to
see if the results still match the original template arguments.
This code is more general than it needs to be, since we don't yet
diagnose C++ [temp.class.spec]p9. However, it's likely to be needed
for function templates.
llvm-svn: 73196
- Once we have deduced template arguments for a class template partial
specialization, we use exactly those template arguments for instantiating
the definition of the class template partial specialization.
- Added template argument deduction for non-type template parameters.
- Added template argument deduction for dependently-sized array types.
With these changes, we can now implement, e.g., the remove_reference
type trait. Also, Daniel's Ackermann template metaprogram now compiles
properly.
llvm-svn: 72909
deductions of the same template parameter are equivalent. This allows
us to implement the is_same type trait (!).
Also, move template argument deduction into its own file and update a
few build systems with this change (grrrr).
llvm-svn: 72819
we have the basics of declaring and storing class template partial
specializations, matching class template partial specializations at
instantiation time via (limited) template argument deduction, and
using the class template partial specialization's pattern for
instantiation.
This patch is enough to make a simple is_pointer type trait work, but
not much else.
llvm-svn: 72662
specifier resulted in the creation of a new TagDecl node, which
happens either when the tag specifier was a definition or when the tag
specifier was the first declaration of that tag type. This information
has several uses, the first of which is implemented in this commit:
1) In C++, one is not allowed to define tag types within a type
specifier (e.g., static_cast<struct S { int x; } *>(0) is
ill-formed) or within the result or parameter types of a
function. We now diagnose this.
2) We can extend DeclGroups to contain information about any tags
that are declared/defined within the declaration specifiers of a
variable, e.g.,
struct Point { int x, y, z; } p;
This will help improve AST printing and template instantiation,
among other things.
3) For C99, we can keep track of whether a tag type is defined
within the type of a parameter, to properly cope with cases like,
e.g.,
int bar(struct T2 { int x; } y) {
struct T2 z;
}
We can also do similar things wherever there is a type specifier,
e.g., to keep track of where the definition of S occurs in this
legal C99 code:
(struct S { int x, y; } *)0
llvm-svn: 72555
parser. Rather than placing all of the delayed member function
declarations and inline definitions into a single bucket corresponding
to the top-level class, we instead mirror the nesting structure of the
nested classes and place the delayed member functions into their
appropriate place. Then, when we actually parse the delayed member
function declarations, set up the scope stack the same way as it was
when we originally saw the declaration, so that we can find, e.g.,
template parameters that are in scope.
llvm-svn: 72502
declaration references. The key realization is that dependent Decls,
which actually require instantiation, can only refer to the current
instantiation or members thereof. And, since the current context
during instantiation contains all of those members of the current
instantiation, we can simply find the real instantiate that matches up
with the "current instantiation" template.
llvm-svn: 72486
instantiation of a declaration from the template version (or version
that lives in a template) and a given set of template arguments. This
needs much, much more testing, but it suffices for simple examples
like
typedef T* iterator;
iterator begin();
llvm-svn: 72461
llvm::SmallVector that owns all of the AST nodes inside of it. This
RAII class is used to ensure proper destruction of AST nodes when
template instantiation fails.
llvm-svn: 72186
template, introduce that member function into the template
instantiation stack. Also, add diagnostics showing the member function
within the instantiation stack and clean up the qualified-name
printing so that we get something like:
note: in instantiation of member function 'Switch1<int, 2, 2>::f'
requested here
in the template instantiation backtrace.
llvm-svn: 72015
template<typename T>
struct X {
struct Inner;
};
template struct X<int>::Inner;
This change is larger than it looks because it also fixes some
a problem with nested-name-specifiers and tags. We weren't requiring
the DeclContext associated with the scope specifier of a tag to be
complete. Therefore, when looking for something like "struct
X<int>::Inner", we weren't instantiating X<int>.
This, naturally, uncovered a problem with member pointers, where we
were requiring the left-hand side of a member pointer access
expression (e.g., x->*) to be a complete type. However, this is wrong:
the semantics of this expression does not require a complete type (EDG
agrees).
Stuart vouched for me. Blame him.
llvm-svn: 71756
of class members (recursively). Only member classes are actually
instantiated; the instantiation logic for member functions and
variables are just stubs.
llvm-svn: 71713
templates. In particular:
- An explicit instantiation can follow an implicit instantiation (we
were improperly diagnosing this as an error, previously).
- In C++0x, an explicit instantiation that follows an explicit
specialization of the same template specialization is ignored. In
C++98, we just emit an extension warning.
- In C++0x, an explicit instantiation must be in a namespace
enclosing the original template. C++98 has no such requirement.
Also, fixed a longstanding FIXME regarding the integral type that is
used for the size of a constant array type when it is being instantiated.
llvm-svn: 71689
still aren't instantiating the definitions of class template members,
and core issues 275 and 259 will both affect the checking that we do
for explicit instantiations (but are not yet implemented).
llvm-svn: 71613
TemplateArgumentList. This avoids the need to pass around
pointer/length pairs of template arguments lists, and will eventually
make it easier to introduce member templates and variadic templates.
llvm-svn: 71517
specialization" within a C++ template, and permit name lookup into the
current instantiation. For example, given:
template<typename T, typename U>
struct X {
typedef T type;
X* x1; // current instantiation
X<T, U> *x2; // current instantiation
X<U, T> *x3; // not current instantiation
::X<type, U> *x4; // current instantiation
X<typename X<type, U>::type, U>: *x5; // current instantiation
};
llvm-svn: 71471
semantic rules that gcc and icc use. This implements the variadic
and concrete versions as builtins and has sema do the
disambiguation. There are probably a bunch of details to finish up
but this seems like a large monotonic step forward :)
llvm-svn: 71212
return type and the selector. This is inconsistent with C functions
(where such attributes would be placed on the return type, not the the
FunctionDecl), and is inconsistent with what people are use to seeing.
llvm-svn: 70878
in C++, taking into account conversions to the "composite pointer
type" so that we can compare, e.g., a pointer to a derived class to a
pointer to a base class.
Also, upgrade the "comparing distinct pointer types" from a warning to
an error for C++, since this is clearly an error. Turns out that we
hadn't gone through and audited this code for C++, ever.
Fixes <rdar://problem/6816420>.
llvm-svn: 70829
reason for adding these is to error out in CodeGen when trying to generate
them instead of silently emitting a call to a non-existent function.
(Note that it is not valid to lower these to setjmp/longjmp; in addition
to that lowering being different from the intent, setjmp and longjmp
require a larger buffer.)
llvm-svn: 70658
appear between the return type and the selector. This is a separate code path
from regular attribute processing, as we only want to (a) accept only a specific
set of attributes in this place and (b) want to distinguish to clients the
context in which an attribute was added to an ObjCMethodDecl.
Currently, the attribute 'objc_ownership_returns' is the only attribute that
uses this new feature. Shortly I will add a warning for 'objc_ownership_returns'
to be placed at the end of a method declaration.
llvm-svn: 70504
This gets rid of a bunch of random InvalidDecl bools in sema, changing
us to use the following approach:
1. When analyzing a declspec or declarator, if an error is found, we
set a bit in Declarator saying that it is invalid.
2. Once the Decl is created by sema, we immediately set the isInvalid
bit on it from what is in the declarator. From this point on, sema
consistently looks at and sets the bit on the decl.
This gives a very clear separation of concerns and simplifies a bunch
of code. In addition to this, this patch makes these changes:
1. it renames DeclSpec::getInvalidType() -> isInvalidType().
2. various "merge" functions no longer return bools: they just set the
invalid bit on the dest decl if invalid.
3. The ActOnTypedefDeclarator/ActOnFunctionDeclarator/ActOnVariableDeclarator
methods now set invalid on the decl returned instead of returning an
invalid bit byref.
4. In SemaType, refering to a typedef that was invalid now propagates the
bit into the resultant type. Stuff declared with the invalid typedef
will now be marked invalid.
5. Various methods like CheckVariableDeclaration now return void and set the
invalid bit on the decl they check.
There are a few minor changes to tests with this, but the only major bad
result is test/SemaCXX/constructor-recovery.cpp. I'll take a look at this
next.
llvm-svn: 70020
pools, combined). The methods in the global method pool are lazily
loaded from an on-disk hash table when Sema looks into its version of
the hash tables.
llvm-svn: 69989
As part of this, make ObjCImplDecl inherit from NamedDecl (since
ObjCImplementationDecls now need to have names so that they can be
found). This brings ObjCImplDecl very, very close to
ObjCContainerDecl; we may be able to merge them soon.
llvm-svn: 69941
their own namespace (IDNS_Protocol) and use the normal name-lookup
routines to find them. Aside from the simplification this provides
(one less DenseMap!), it means that protocols will be lazily
deserialized from PCH files.
Make the code size of the selector table block match the code size of
the type and decl blocks.
llvm-svn: 69939
in a bunch of declarations from the PCH file. We're down to loading
very few declarations in Carbon-prefixed "Hello, World!":
*** PCH Statistics:
6/20693 types read (0.028995%)
7/59230 declarations read (0.011818%)
50/44914 identifiers read (0.111324%)
0/32954 statements read (0.000000%)
5/6187 macros read (0.080815%)
llvm-svn: 69825
start of the declspec. The fixit still goes there, and we underline
the declspec. This helps when the start of the declspec came from a
macro that expanded from a system header. For example, we now produce:
t.c:2:8: warning: type specifier missing, defaults to 'int' [-Wimplicit-int]
static x;
~~~~~~ ^
llvm-svn: 69777
tentative definitions off to the ASTConsumer at the end of the
translation unit.
Eliminate CodeGen's internal tracking of tentative definitions, and
instead hook into ASTConsumer::CompleteTentativeDefinition. Also,
tweak the definition-deferal logic for C++, where there are no
tentative definitions.
Fixes <rdar://problem/6808352>, and will make it much easier for
precompiled headers to cope with tentative definitions in the future.
llvm-svn: 69681
Remove an atrocious amount of trailing whitespace in the overloaded operator mangler. Sorry, couldn't help myself.
Change the DeclType parameter of Sema::CheckReferenceInit to be passed by value instead of reference. It wasn't changed anywhere.
Let the parser handle C++'s irregular grammar around assignment-expression and conditional-expression.
And finally, the reason for all this stuff: implement C++ semantics for the conditional operator. The implementation is complete except for determining lvalueness.
llvm-svn: 69299
wrap-up (e.g., turning tentative definitions into definitions). Also,
very that, when we actually use the PCH file, we get the ride code
generation for tentative definitions and definitions that show up in
the PCH file.
llvm-svn: 69043
struct xyz { int y; };
enum abc { ZZZ };
static xyz b;
abc c;
we used to produce:
t2.c:4:8: error: unknown type name 'xyz'
static xyz b;
^
t2.c:5:1: error: unknown type name 'abc'
abc c;
^
we now produce:
t2.c:4:8: error: use of tagged type 'xyz' without 'struct' tag
static xyz b;
^
struct
t2.c:5:1: error: use of tagged type 'abc' without 'enum' tag
abc c;
^
enum
GCC produces the normal:
t2.c:4: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘b’
t2.c:5: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘c’
rdar://6783347
llvm-svn: 68914
Implement the rvalue reference overload dance for returning local objects. Returning a local object first tries to find a move constructor now.
The error message when no move constructor is defined (or is not applicable) and the copy constructor is deleted is quite ugly, though.
llvm-svn: 68902
failures that involve malformed types, e.g., "typename X::foo" where
"foo" isn't a type, or "std::vector<void>" that doens't instantiate
properly.
Similarly, be a bit smarter in our handling of ambiguities that occur
in Sema::getTypeName, to eliminate duplicate error messages about
ambiguous name lookup.
This eliminates two XFAILs in test/SemaCXX, one of which was crying
out to us, trying to tell us that we were producing repeated error
messages.
llvm-svn: 68251
template template parameters and dependent template names. For
example, the oft-mentioned
typename MetaFun::template apply<T1, T2>::type
can now be instantiated, with the appropriate name lookup for "apply".
llvm-svn: 68128
within nested-name-specifiers, e.g., for the "apply" in
typename MetaFun::template apply<T1, T2>::type
At present, we can't instantiate these nested-name-specifiers, so our
testing is sketchy.
llvm-svn: 68081
representation handles the various ways in which one can name a
template, including unqualified references ("vector"), qualified
references ("std::vector"), and dependent template names
("MetaFun::template apply").
One immediate effect of this change is that the representation of
nested-name-specifiers in type names for class template
specializations (e.g., std::vector<int>) is more accurate. Rather than
representing std::vector<int> as
std::(vector<int>)
we represent it as
(std::vector)<int>
which more closely follows the C++ grammar.
Additionally, templates are no longer represented as declarations
(DeclPtrTy) in Parse-Sema interactions. Instead, I've introduced a new
OpaquePtr type (TemplateTy) that holds the representation of a
TemplateName. This will simplify the handling of dependent
template-names, once we get there.
llvm-svn: 68074
productions (except the already broken ObjC cases like @class X,Y;) in
the parser that can produce more than one Decl return a DeclGroup instead
of a Decl, etc.
This allows elimination of the Decl::NextDeclarator field, and exposes
various clients that should look at all decls in a group, but which were
only looking at one (such as the dumper, printer, etc). These have been
fixed.
Still TODO:
1) there are some FIXME's in the code about potentially using
DeclGroup for better location info.
2) ParseObjCAtDirectives should return a DeclGroup due to @class etc.
3) I'm not sure what is going on with StmtIterator.cpp, or if it can
be radically simplified now.
4) I put a truly horrible hack in ParseTemplate.cpp.
I plan to bring up #3/4 on the mailing list, but don't plan to tackle
#1/2 in the short term.
llvm-svn: 68002
pointer. Its purpose in life is to be a glorified void*, but which does not
implicitly convert to void* or other OpaquePtr's with a different UID.
Introduce Action::DeclPtrTy which is a typedef for OpaquePtr<0>. Change the
entire parser/sema interface to use DeclPtrTy instead of DeclTy*. This
makes the C++ compiler enforce that these aren't convertible to other opaque
types.
We should also convert ExprTy, StmtTy, TypeTy, AttrTy, BaseTy, etc,
but I don't plan to do that in the short term.
The one outstanding known problem with this patch is that we lose the
bitmangling optimization where ActionResult<DeclPtrTy> doesn't know how to
bitmangle the success bit into the low bit of DeclPtrTy. I will rectify
this with a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 67952
LHS type and the computation result type; this encodes information into
the AST which is otherwise non-obvious. Fix Sema to always come up with the
right answer for both of these types. Fix IRGen and the analyzer to
account for these changes. This fixes PR2601. The approach is inspired
by PR2601 comment 2.
Note that this changes real *= complex in CodeGen from a silent
miscompilation to an explicit error.
I'm not really sure that the analyzer changes are correct, or how to
test them... someone more familiar with the analyzer should check those
changes.
llvm-svn: 67889
instantiation for C++ typename-specifiers such as
typename T::type
The parsing of typename-specifiers is relatively easy thanks to
annotation tokens. When we see the "typename", we parse the
typename-specifier and produce a typename annotation token. There are
only a few places where we need to handle this. We currently parse the
typename-specifier form that terminates in an identifier, but not the
simple-template-id form, e.g.,
typename T::template apply<U, V>
Parsing of nested-name-specifiers has a similar problem, since at this
point we don't have any representation of a class template
specialization whose template-name is unknown.
Semantic analysis is only partially complete, with some support for
template instantiation that works for simple examples.
llvm-svn: 67875
uniqued representation that should both save some memory and make it
far easier to properly build canonical types for types involving
dependent nested-name-specifiers, e.g., "typename T::Nested::type".
This approach will greatly simplify the representation of
CXXScopeSpec. That'll be next.
llvm-svn: 67799
templates, including in-class initializers. For example:
template<typename T, T Divisor>
class X {
public:
static const T value = 10 / Divisor;
};
instantiated with, e.g.,
X<int, 5>::value
to get the value '2'.
llvm-svn: 67715
the declarations of member classes are instantiated when the owning
class template is instantiated. The definitions of such member classes
are instantiated when a complete type is required.
This change also introduces the injected-class-name into a class
template specialization.
llvm-svn: 67707
class C {
C() { }
int a;
};
C::C() : a(10) { }
We also diagnose when initializers are used on declarations that aren't constructors:
t.cpp:1:10: error: only constructors take base initializers
void f() : a(10) { }
^
Doug and/or Sebastian: I'd appreciate a review, especially the nested-name-spec test results (from the looks of it we now match gcc in that test.)
llvm-svn: 67672
failure to perform a declaration. Instead, explicitly note semantic
failures that occur during template parsing with a DeclResult. Fixes
PR3872.
llvm-svn: 67659
class C {
void g(C c);
virtual void f() = 0;
};
In this case, C is not known to be abstract when doing semantic analysis on g. This is done by recursively traversing the abstract class and checking the types of member functions.
llvm-svn: 67594