templates within class templates, producing a member function template
of a class template specialization. If you can parse that, I'm
sorry. Example:
template<typename T>
struct X {
template<typename U> void f(T, U);
};
When we instantiate X<int>, we now instantiate the declaration
X<int>::f, which looks like this:
template<typename U> void X<int>::f(int, U);
The path this takes through
TemplateDeclInstantiator::VisitCXXMethodDecl is convoluted and
ugly, but I don't know how to improve it yet. I'm resting my hopes on
the multi-level substitution required to instantiate definitions of
nested templates, which may simplify this code as well.
More testing to come...
llvm-svn: 80252
name, e.g.,
x->Base::f()
retain the qualifier (and its source range information) in a new
subclass of MemberExpr called CXXQualifiedMemberExpr. Provide
construction, transformation, profiling, printing, etc., for this new
expression type.
When a virtual function is called via a qualified name, don't emit a
virtual call. Instead, call that function directly. Mike, could you
add a CodeGen test for this, too?
llvm-svn: 80167
Issue reported on cfe-dev.
Also fixed the code to use isConstant to determine whether to generate a
constant global, to be consistent with CodeGenModule. This probably
needs to be refactored to deal with C++, though.
llvm-svn: 80131
TypenameType if getTypeName is looking at a member of an unknown
specialization. This allows us to properly parse class templates that
derived from type that could only otherwise be described by a typename type,
e.g.,
template<class T> struct X {};
template<typename T> struct Y : public X<T>::X { };
Fixes PR4381.
llvm-svn: 80123
qualified name does not actually refer into a class/class
template/class template partial specialization.
Improve printing of nested-name-specifiers to eliminate redudant
qualifiers. Also, make it possible to output a nested-name-specifier
through a DiagnosticBuilder, although there are relatively few places
that will use this leeway.
llvm-svn: 80056
their members, including member class template, member function
templates, and member classes and functions of member templates.
To actually parse the nested-name-specifiers that qualify the name of
an out-of-line definition of a member template, e.g.,
template<typename X> template<typename Y>
X Outer<X>::Inner1<Y>::foo(Y) {
return X();
}
we need to look for the template names (e.g., "Inner1") as a member of
the current instantiation (Outer<X>), even before we have entered the
scope of the current instantiation. Since we can't do this in general
(i.e., we should not be looking into all dependent
nested-name-specifiers as if they were the current instantiation), we
rely on the parser to tell us when it is parsing a declaration
specifier sequence, and, therefore, when we should consider the
current scope specifier to be a current instantiation.
Printing of complicated, dependent nested-name-specifiers may be
somewhat broken by this commit; I'll add tests for this issue and fix
the problem (if it still exists) in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 80044
implicit cast logic in RegionStoreManager to BasicStoreManager. This involved
moving CastRetriedVal from RegionStoreManager to StoreManager.
llvm-svn: 80026
accurately. Prevents the assert from triggering incorrectly when friending
functions first declared in extern "C" contexts. Fixes bug 4757.
llvm-svn: 80016
the logic is there for out-of-line definitions with multiple levels of
nested templates, but this is still a work-in-progress: we're having
trouble determining when we should look into a dependent
nested-name-specifier.
llvm-svn: 80003
member templates declared inside other templates. This allows us to
match out-of-line definitions of member function templates within
class templates to the declarations within the class template. We
still can't handle out-of-line definitions for member class templates,
however.
llvm-svn: 79955