of local classes. We were previously handling this by performing qualified
lookup within a function declaration(!!); replace it with the proper scope
lookup.
llvm-svn: 188050
recovery is not attempted with the fixit. Also move the associated test
case from FixIt/fixit.cpp to SemaCXX/member-expr.cpp since the fixit is
no longer automatically applied.
llvm-svn: 186342
followed by an identifier, then diagnose an identifier as being a bogus part of
the declarator instead of tripping over it. Improves diagnostics for cases like
std::vector<const int *p> my_vec;
llvm-svn: 186061
Combined with typo correction's new ability to apply global/absolute nested
name specifiers to possible corrections, cases such as in PR12287 where the
desired function is being shadowed by a lexically closer function with the
same name but a different number of parameters will now include a FixIt.
On a side note, since the test for this change caused
test/SemaCXX/typo-correction.cpp to exceed the typo correction limit for
a single file, I've included a test case for exceeding the limit and added
some comments to both the original and part two of typo-correction.cpp
warning future editors of the files about the limit.
llvm-svn: 185881
The removal is tried by retrying the failed lookup of a correction
candidate with either the MemberContext or SS (CXXScopeSpecifier) or
both set to NULL if they weren't already. If the candidate identifier
is then looked up successfully, make a note in the candidate that the
SourceRange should include any existing nested name specifier even if
the candidate isn't adding a different one (i.e. the candidate has a
NULL NestedNameSpecifier).
Also tweak the diagnostic messages to differentiate between a suggestion
that just replaces the identifer but leaves the existing nested name
specifier intact and one that replaces the entire qualified identifier,
in cases where the suggested replacement is unqualified.
llvm-svn: 185487
CorrectTypo will now see and consider those corrections that are effectively
shadowed by other declarations in a closer context when resolved via an
unqualified lookup. This involves adding any parent namespaces to the set of
namespaces as fully-qualified name specifiers, and also adding potential
corrections that passed name lookup but were rejected by the given
CorrectionCandidateCallback into the set of failed corrections that should be
tried with the set of namespace specifiers.
llvm-svn: 185486
in addition of receiver having static type, but also when
receiver has dynamic type (of 'id' variety) as well as when
receiver is of 'Class' type vareity. // rdar://7853549
llvm-svn: 184195
- 'register' storage class
- dynamic exception specifications
Only the former check is enabled by default for now (the latter might be quite noisy).
llvm-svn: 183881
C++1y, so stop adding the 'const' there. Provide a compatibility warning for
code relying on this in C++11, with a fix-it hint. Update our lazily-written
tests to add the const, except for those ones which were testing our
implementation of this rule.
llvm-svn: 179969
'long' and 'long long' are different for the purposes of mangling.
This caused <rdar://problem/13254874>.
This reverts commit c2f994d31ec85e9af811af38eb1b28709aef0b2c.
llvm-svn: 175681
which allows grouping parens in an abstract-pack-declarator. This was already
mostly implemented, but missed some cases. Add an ExtWarn for use of this
extension until CWG ratifies it.
llvm-svn: 175660
attributes yet, so just issue the appropriate diagnostics. Also generalize the
fixit for attributes-in-the-wrong-place code and reuse it here, if attributes
are placed after the access-specifier or 'virtual' in a base specifier.
llvm-svn: 175575
If the member has an initializer, assume it was probably intended to be static
and suggest/recover with that.
If the member doesn't have an initializer, assume it was probably intended to
be const instead of constexpr and suggest that.
(if the attempt to apply these changes fails, don't make any suggestion &
produce the same diagnostic experience as before. The only case where this can
come up that I know of is with a mutable constexpr with an initializer, since
mutable is incompatible with static (but it's already incompatible with
const anyway))
llvm-svn: 173873
This is a missing piece for C99 conformance.
This patch handles UCNs by adding a '\\' case to LexTokenInternal and
LexIdentifier -- if we see a backslash, we tentatively try to read in a UCN.
If the UCN is not syntactically well-formed, we fall back to the old
treatment: a backslash followed by an identifier beginning with 'u' (or 'U').
Because the spelling of an identifier with UCNs still has the UCN in it, we
need to convert that to UTF-8 in Preprocessor::LookUpIdentifierInfo.
Of course, valid code that does *not* use UCNs will see only a very minimal
performance hit (checks after each identifier for non-ASCII characters,
checks when converting raw_identifiers to identifiers that they do not
contain UCNs, and checks when getting the spelling of an identifier that it
does not contain a UCN).
This patch also adds basic support for actual UTF-8 in the source. This is
treated almost exactly the same as UCNs except that we consider stray
Unicode characters to be mistakes and offer a fixit to remove them.
llvm-svn: 173369
Presumably, if the printf format has the sign explicitly requested, the user
wants to treat the data as signed.
This is a fix-up for r172739, and also includes several test changes that
didn't make it into that commit.
llvm-svn: 172762
Following r168626, in class declaration or definition, there are a combination of syntactic locations
where C++11 attributes could appear, and among those the only valid location permitted by standard is
between class-key and class-name. So for those attributes appear at wrong locations, fixit is used to
move them to expected location and we recover by applying them to the class specifier.
llvm-svn: 171757
to also remove a trailing space if possible.
For example, removing '__bridge' from:
i = (__bridge I*)p;
should result in:
i = (I*)p;
not:
i = ( I*)p;
rdar://11314821
llvm-svn: 170764
For most cases where a conversion specifier doesn't match an argument,
we usually guess that the conversion specifier is wrong. However, if
the argument is an integer type and the specifier is %C, it's likely
the user really did mean to print the integer as a character.
(This is more common than %c because there is no way to specify a unichar
literal -- you have to write an integer literal, such as '0x2603',
and then cast it to unichar.)
This does not change the behavior of %S, since there are fewer cases
where printing a literal Unicode *string* is necessary, but this could
easily be changed in the future.
<rdar://problem/11982013>
llvm-svn: 169400
The type of a character literal is 'int' in C, but if the user writes a
character /as/ a literal, we should assume they meant it to be a
character and not a numeric value, and thus offer %c as a correction
rather than %d.
There's a special case for multi-character literals (like 'MooV'), which
have implementation-defined value and usually cannot be printed with %c.
These still use %d as the suggestion.
In C++, the type of a character literal is 'char', and so this problem
doesn't exist.
<rdar://problem/12282316>
llvm-svn: 169398
We tried to account for 'uint8_t' by saying that /typedefs/ of 'char'
should be corrected as %hhd rather than %c, but the condition was wrong.
llvm-svn: 169397
When suggesting "foo::bar" as a correction for "fob::bar" we mistakenly
replaced only "bar" with "foo::bar" producing "fob::foo::bar" which was broken.
This corrects that replacement in as many places as I could find & provides
test cases for all those cases I could find a test case for. There are a couple
that don't seem to be reachable (one looks entirely dead, the other just
doesn't seem to ever get called with a namespace to namespace change).
Review by Richard Smith ( http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D57 ).
llvm-svn: 165817
This only applies if the type has a name. (we could potentially do something
crazy with decltype in C++11 to qualify members of unnamed types but that
seems excessive)
It might be nice to also suggest a fixit for "&this->i", "&foo->i",
and "&foo.i" but those expressions produce 'bound' member functions that have
a different AST representation & make error recovery a little trickier. Left
as future work.
llvm-svn: 165763
have PPCallbacks::InclusionDirective pass the character range for the filename quotes or brackets.
rdar://11113134 & http://llvm.org/PR13880
llvm-svn: 164743
start of a statement or the end of a compound-statement, diagnose the comma as
a typo for a semicolon. Patch by Ahmed Bougacha! Additional test cases and
minor refactoring by me.
llvm-svn: 164085
warning to an error. C++ bans it, and both GCC and EDG diagnose it as
an error. Microsoft allows it, so we still warn in Microsoft
mode. Fixes <rdar://problem/11135644>.
llvm-svn: 163831
These types are defined differently on 32-bit and 64-bit platforms, and
trying to offer a fixit for one platform would only mess up the format
string for the other. The Apple-recommended solution is to cast to a type
that is known to be large enough and always use that to print the value.
This should only have an impact on compile time if the format string is
incorrect; in cases where the format string matches the definition on the
current platform, no warning will be emitted.
<rdar://problem/9135072&12164284>
llvm-svn: 163266
accurate by asking the parser whether there was an ambiguity rather than trying
to reverse-engineer it from the DeclSpec. Make the with-parameters case have
better diagnostics by using semantic information to drive the warning,
improving the diagnostics and adding a fixit.
Patch by Nikola Smiljanic. Some minor changes by me to suppress diagnostics for
declarations of the form 'T (*x)(...)', which seem to have a very high false
positive rate, and to reduce indentation in 'warnAboutAmbiguousFunction'.
llvm-svn: 160998
This time, make sure we don't try to print fixits with newline characters,
since they don't have a valid column width, and they don't look good anyway.
PR13417 (and originally <rdar://problem/11877454>)
llvm-svn: 160561
Recovering as if the user had actually called -isEqual: is a bit too far from
the semantics of the program as written, /even though/ it's probably what they
intended.
llvm-svn: 160377
This code is very sensitive to the difference between "columns" as printed
and "bytes" (SourceManager columns). All variables are now named explicitly
and our assumptions are (hopefully) documented as both comment and assertion.
Whether parseable fixits should use byte offsets or Unicode character counts
is pending discussion on the mailing list; currently the implementation uses
bytes (and has no problems on lines containing multibyte characters).
This has been added to the user manual.
<rdar://problem/11877454>
llvm-svn: 160319
If a non-unicode locale is used, the unicode character is escaped and any
byte that is in the escaped representation but not the semicolon will
become whitespace.
llvm-svn: 160113
Chris pointed out that while the comparison is certainly problematic
and does not have well-defined behavior, it isn't any worse than some
of the other abuses that we merely warn about and doesn't need to make
the compilation fail.
Revert the release notes change (r159766) now that this is just a new warning.
llvm-svn: 159939
also deal with '>>>' (in CUDA), '>=', and '>>='. Fix the FixItHints logic to
deal with cases where the token is followed by an adjacent '=', '==', '>=',
'>>=', or '>>>' token, where a naive fix-it would result in a differing token
stream on a re-lex.
llvm-svn: 158652
Objective-C literals conceptually always create new objects, but may be
optimized by the compiler or runtime (constant folding, singletons, etc).
Comparing addresses of these objects is relying on this optimization
behavior, which is really an implementation detail.
In the case of == and !=, offer a fixit to a call to -isEqual:, if the
method is available. This fixit is directly on the error so that it is
automatically applied.
Most of the time, this is really a newbie mistake, hence the fixit.
llvm-svn: 158230
This is mainly for attempting to recover in cases where a class provides
a custom operator-> and a '.' was accidentally used instead of '->' when
accessing a member of the object returned by the current object's
operator->.
llvm-svn: 155580
followed by an identifier as declaration specificer (except for ObjC).
This allows e.g. an out-of-line C++ member function definitions to be
recognized as functions and not as variable declarations if the type
name for the first parameter is not recognized as a type--say, when there
is a function name shadowing an enum type name and the parameter is
missing the "enum" keyword needed to distinguish the two.
Note that returning TPResult::Error() instead of TPResult::True()
appears to have the same end result, while TPResult::Ambiguous()
results in a crash.
llvm-svn: 155163
The warning this inhibits, -Wobjc-root-class, is opt-in for now. However, all clang unit tests that would trigger
the warning have been updated to use -Wno-objc-root-class. <rdar://problem/7446698>
llvm-svn: 154187
Based on Doug's feedback to r153887 this omits the FixIt if the following token
isn't syntactically valid for the context. (not a comma, '...', identifier,
'>', or '>>')
There's a bunch of work to handle the '>>' case, but it makes for a much more
pleasant diagnostic in this case.
llvm-svn: 154163
Infinite recursion was happening when DiagnoseInvalidRedeclaration
called ActOnFunctionDeclarator to check if a typo correction works when
the correction was just to the nested-name-specifier because the wrong
DeclContext was being passed in. Unlike a number of functions
surrounding typo correction, the DeclContext passed in for a function is
the context of the function name after applying any nested name
specifiers, not the lexical DeclContext where the
function+nested-name-specifier appears.
llvm-svn: 153962
The diagnostic message correctly informs the user that they have omitted the
'class' keyword, but neither suggests this insertion as a fixit, nor attempts
to recover as if they had provided the keyword.
This fixes the recovery, adds the fixit, and adds a separate diagnostic and
corresponding replacement fixit for cases where the user wrote 'struct' or
'typename' instead of 'class' (suggested by Richard Smith as a possible common
mistake).
I'm not sure the diagnostic message for either the original or new cases feel
very Clang-esque, so I'm open to suggestions there. The fixit hints make it
fairly easy to see what's required, though.
llvm-svn: 153887