Still yellow because 3.6 is unreleased. While there make Urbana paper
links clickable and list binary literals as available in Clang 2.9
(they've been available basically since the dawn of Clang, but not
having a version number in the table looks weird)
llvm-svn: 228571
We don't yet support pointer-to-member template arguments that have undergone
pointer-to-member conversions, mostly because we don't have a mangling for them yet.
llvm-svn: 222807
This allows 'namespace A::B { ... }' as a shorthand for 'namespace A {
namespace B { ... } }'. We already supported this correctly for error recovery;
promote that support to a full implementation.
This is not the right implementation: we do not maintain source fidelity
because we desugar the nested namespace definition in the parser. This is
tricky to avoid, since the definition genuinely does inject one named
entity per level in the namespace name.
llvm-svn: 221574
This is a new form of expression of the form:
(expr op ... op expr)
where one of the exprs is a parameter pack. It expands into
(expr1 op (expr2onwards op ... op expr))
(and likewise if the pack is on the right). The non-pack operand can be
omitted; in that case, an empty pack gives a fallback value or an error,
depending on the operator.
llvm-svn: 221573
(for an integer too large for any signed type) from Warning to ExtWarn -- it's
ill-formed in C++11 and C99 onwards, and UB during translation in C89 and
C++98. Add diagnostic groups for two relevant diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 203974
* Explicitly say that we conform to the two N/A bullets that required no
compiler changes.
* Remove a library feature from our features list.
llvm-svn: 203964
attribute syntax. There's nothing generalized about this; it's one of
several first-class attribute syntaxes we support, all of which are
more-or-less equally general.
As discussed on cfe-commits, we may want to revisit this if we start allowing
this syntax as an extension in C (or if C adopts the syntax), but hopefully
this diagnostic wording will be crystal clear to everyone in the mean time.
llvm-svn: 199443
Use internal links to provide easier access to recent and ongoing work.
Also shift up the order of standards in the page title in order to avoid web
search results focusing on C++98 in the summary.
This is done to highlight the modern standards support in clang that was
previously languishing at the bottom of the page.
"C++98/03 is sooooo yesterday" - dgregor
llvm-svn: 196565
deallocation function (and the corresponding unsized deallocation function has
been declared), emit a weak discardable definition of the function that
forwards to the corresponding unsized deallocation.
This allows a C++ standard library implementation to provide both a sized and
an unsized deallocation function, where the unsized one does not just call the
sized one, for instance by putting both in the same object file within an
archive.
llvm-svn: 194055
tomorrow is complete.
There is a missing warning due to a serious issue with template
instantiation in Clang (and potentially in the core language).
llvm-svn: 191577
optimize, to follow the permissions granted in N3664. Under those rules, only
calls generated by new-expressions and delete-expressions are permitted to be
optimized, and direct calls to ::operator new and ::operator delete must be
treated as normal calls.
llvm-svn: 186799
- fix paper links to point to isocpp.org, where most of the papers are already up
- update "SVN" features to "Clang 3.3" to distinguish them from features which we
complete after the branch
- document use of -std=c++1y to enable c++1y support
llvm-svn: 181283
and mark "clarifying memory allocation" as done, since it turns out that our
optimizations here (such as they are) already conform to the new rules.
llvm-svn: 181110
Add a CXXDefaultInitExpr, analogous to CXXDefaultArgExpr, and use it both in
CXXCtorInitializers and in InitListExprs to represent a default initializer.
There's an additional complication here: because the default initializer can
refer to the initialized object via its 'this' pointer, we need to make sure
that 'this' points to the right thing within the evaluation.
llvm-svn: 179958
constructor. This isn't quite perfect (as usual, we don't handle default
arguments correctly yet, and we don't deal with copy/move constructors for
arguments correctly either, but this will be fixed when we implement core issue
1351.
This completes our support for inheriting constructors.
llvm-svn: 179154
implement correct functionality, even if it's not optimal. On this basis, mark
"data dependency ordering" as done. Add footnotes for cases where our
implementation is known to be suboptimal.
llvm-svn: 176891
* Mark attributes as done in SVN.
* Downgrade alignment support from 'Clang 3.0' to 'SVN', now that we actually implement the rules.
* Upgrade 'Dynamic initialization with concurrency' from 'No' to 'Clang 2.9' -- all that is required here is the ABI-mandated locking for the initialization of static locals.
llvm-svn: 175882
* Mark 'sequence points' as done now we have a warning for unsequenced operations
* Mark 'memory model' as done now we correctly model bitfield operations
llvm-svn: 173771
libraries have an incorrect definition of std::common_type (inherited from a
bug in the standard -- see LWG issue 2141), whereby they produce reference
types when they should not.
If we instantiate a typedef named std::common_type<...>::type, which is defined
in a system header as decltype(... ? ... : ...), and the decltype produces a
reference type, convert it to the non-reference type. (This doesn't affect any
LWG2141-conforming implementation of common_type, such as libc++'s, because the
default implementation of common_type<...>::type isn't supposed to produce a
reference type.)
This is horrible. I'm really sorry. :( Better ideas appreciated!
llvm-svn: 166455
we generate correct code for both strong and weak atomic compare-exchanges, even
though we don't propagate to the IR enough information to generate optimal weak
compare-exchanges on architectures which support them.
llvm-svn: 155161
implementations, mark the atomics-related parts of the C++11 status page
as done. I've not marked 'Strong Compare and Exchange' done, since although
we implement supporting builtins, we don't yet produce different code for
the weak and strong forms.
llvm-svn: 154644
between unscoped enumerations and class template member specializations,
whose behavior is currently under discussion in CWG (and for which there
is a preference to not implement the currently-standardized wording).
llvm-svn: 153464
scoped enumeration members. Later uses of an enumeration temploid as a nested
name specifier should cause its instantiation. Plus some groundwork for
explicit specialization of member enumerations of class templates.
llvm-svn: 152750
basic source character set in C++98. Add -Wc++98-compat diagnostics for same in
literals in C++11. Extend such support to cover string literals as well as
character literals, and mark N2170 as done.
This seems too minor to warrant a release note to me. Let me know if you disagree.
llvm-svn: 152444
agreed on IRC, any remaining issues are best dealt with as bugs.
We have no __has_feature check for this; please shout if you'd like one. This
feature seems too small to be worth its own release notes bullet (again, please
shout if you disagree).
llvm-svn: 151380
As far as I know, this implementation is complete but might be missing a
few optimizations. Exceptions and virtual bases are handled correctly.
Because I'm an optimist, the web page has appropriately been updated. If
I'm wrong, feel free to downgrade its support categories.
llvm-svn: 130642
template<typename T> auto f(T a) -> decltype(a.foo());
Since this is the primary reason for the introduction of this feature, downgrade implementation status to "Some examples work".
llvm-svn: 129533
Turn on the __has_feature switch for variadic templates, document
their completion, and put the ExtWarn into the c++0x-extensions
warning group.
llvm-svn: 123854
explicit-instantiation-declaration-after-explicit-instantiation-definition
errors. This wraps up explicit template instantiation for now.
llvm-svn: 85347
Now that parsing, semantic analysis, and (I think) code generation of
pseudo-destructor expressions and explicit destructor calls works,
update the example-dynarray.cpp test to destroy the objects it
allocates and update the test to actually compile + link.
The code seems correct, but the Clang-compiled version dies with a
malloc error. Time to debug!
llvm-svn: 81025
involve qualified names, e.g., x->Base::f. We now maintain enough
information in the AST to compare the results of the name lookup of
"Base" in the scope of the postfix-expression (determined at template
definition time) and in the type of the object expression.
llvm-svn: 80953
pointers, by extending the "composite pointer type" logic to include
member pointer types.
Introduce test cases for member pointer comparisons, including those
that involve the builtin operator candidates implemented earlier.
llvm-svn: 79925
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
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
template class X<int>;
This also cleans up the propagation of template information through
declaration parsing, which is used to improve some diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 71608
- Support initialization of reference members; complain if any
reference members are left uninitialized.
- Use C++ copy-initialization for initializing each element (falls
back to constraint checking in C)
- Make sure we diagnose when one tries to provide an initializer
list for a non-aggregate.
- Don't complain about empty initializers in C++ (they are permitted)
- Unrelated but necessary: don't bother trying to convert the
decl-specifier-seq to a type when we're dealing with a C++
constructor, destructor, or conversion operator; it results in
spurious warnings.
llvm-svn: 63431
Fix a stupid mistake in UnwrapSimilarPointers that made any two member pointers compatible as long as the pointee was the same.
Make a few style corrections as suggested by Chris.
llvm-svn: 63215
Small cleanup in the handling of user-defined conversions.
Also, implement an optimization when constructing a call. We avoid
recomputing implicit conversion sequences and instead use those
conversion sequences that we computed as part of overload resolution.
llvm-svn: 62231
Duplicate-member checking within classes is still a little messy, and
anonymous unions are still completely broken in C. We'll need to unify
the handling of fields in C and C++ to make this code applicable in
both languages.
llvm-svn: 61878
functions. They work except that name lookup within the default
arguments needs to be deferred until the class definition is complete
(see FIXME in the test).
llvm-svn: 61059
being called to be converted to a reference-to-function,
pointer-to-function, or reference-to-pointer-to-function. This is done
through "surrogate" candidate functions that model the conversions
from the object to the function (reference/pointer) and the
conversions in the arguments.
llvm-svn: 59674
with function call syntax, e.g.,
Functor f;
f(x, y);
This is the easy part of handling calls to objects of class type
(C++ [over.call.object]). The hard part (coping with conversions from
f to function pointer or reference types) will come later. Nobody uses
that stuff anyway, right? :)
llvm-svn: 59663
built-in operator candidates. Test overloading of '&' and ','.
In C++, a comma expression is an lvalue if its right-hand
subexpression is an lvalue. Update Expr::isLvalue accordingly.
llvm-svn: 59643
post-decrement, including support for generating all of the built-in
operator candidates for these operators.
C++ and C have different rules for the arguments to the builtin unary
'+' and '-'. Implemented both variants in Sema::ActOnUnaryOp.
In C++, pre-increment and pre-decrement return lvalues. Update
Expr::isLvalue accordingly.
llvm-svn: 59638
operators. For example, one can now write "x + y" where x or y is a
class or enumeration type, and Clang will perform overload resolution
for "+" based on the overloaded operators it finds.
The other kinds of overloadable operators in C++ will follow this same
approach.
Three major issues remain:
1) We don't find member operators
2) Since we don't have user-defined conversion operators, we can't
call any of the built-in overloaded operators in C++ [over.built].
3) Once we've done the semantic checks, we drop the overloaded
operator on the floor; it doesn't get into the AST at all.
llvm-svn: 58821
operators in C++. Overloaded operators can be called directly via
their operator-function-ids, e.g., "operator+(foo, bar)", but we don't
yet implement the semantics of operator overloading to handle, e.g.,
"foo + bar".
llvm-svn: 58817
Implicit declaration of destructors (when necessary).
Extended Declarator to store information about parsed constructors
and destructors; this will be extended to deal with declarators that
name overloaded operators (e.g., "operator +") and user-defined
conversion operators (e.g., "operator int").
llvm-svn: 58767