using inline namespaces is specified.
UseAuto used to fail to transform iterators when using inline namespaces and
non-fully qualified types, relying on a using directive previously declared.
- This fix uses the already define isFromStdNamespace matcher.
- Fixed tests and added a new test using inline namespaces.
- Added CustomMatchers to reuse common matchers among transforms.
llvm-svn: 186327
* Some file headers were missing for files in Core/
* Some headers were included but not necessary
* CMakeLists.txt was linking in LLVMSupport even though CMakeLists in subdirs
were linking it in too.
* StringRefisation of constructors of types in FileOverrides.h
* Other misc cleanups
Author: Guillaume Papin <guillaume.papin@epitech.eu>
llvm-svn: 185811
UseAuto used to replace declarion lists with new expressons where some
variable were not initialized with new.
This fix checks that every DeclStmt has a VarDecl with an initializer and it
also ensures that all declarations have the same type.
Added tests for multiple declarations and for typedefs.
llvm-svn: 182736
variables.
UseAuto used to match initialized variable declarations independently of
whether they were defined in a declaration list or as a single declaration.
Now it matches declaration statements where every variable declaration is
initialized.
llvm-svn: 182114
For variable declarations initialized with new expressions, use 'auto' for the
type specifier.
The 'auto' replacement happens only when the type of the VarDecl exactly
matches the type of the initializer and the VarDecl is *not* CV-qualified. The
only case that is currently handled is if the pointer type of the VarDecl is
itself CV qualified.
Some improvements need to be made to Clang's TypeLoc information in order for
other CV qualifier cases to be successfully handled. See the new test suite
new_cv_failing.cpp for examples of usages that could be handled with such an
improvement.
Function pointers are, for now, not transformed until the identifier info can
be extracted.
Reviewer: klimek
llvm-svn: 178575
The new Use-Auto transform replaces the type specifier for variable
declarations with the special C++11 'auto' type specifier. For now, the
replacement is done only for variables that are iterators of any of the
std containers and only if the type used is one of those explicitly
allowed by the standard (i.e. not an implementation-specific type).
Reviewers: gribozavr, silvas, klimek
llvm-svn: 176266