- 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
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
references. There are several smallish fixes here:
- Make sure we look through template parameter scope when
determining whether we're parsing a nested class (or nested class
*template*). This makes sure that we delay parsing the bodies of
inline member functions until after we're out of the outermost
class (template) scope.
- Since the bodies of member functions are always parsed
"out-of-line", even when they were declared in-line, teach
unqualified name lookup to look into the (semantic) parents.
- Use the new InstantiateDeclRef to handle the instantiation of a
reference to a declaration (in DeclRefExpr), which drastically
simplifies template instantiation for DeclRefExprs.
- When we're instantiating a ParmVarDecl, it must be in the current
instantiation scope, so only look there.
Also, remove the #if 0's and FIXME's from the dynarray example, which
now compiles and executes thanks to Anders and Eli.
llvm-svn: 72481
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
expressions. We are now missing template instantiation logic for only
three classes of expressions:
- Blocks-related expressions (BlockExpr, BlockDeclRefExpr)
- C++ default argument expressions
- Objective-C expressions
Additionally, our handling of DeclRefExpr is still quite poor, since
it cannot handle references to many kinds of declarations.
As part of this change, converted the TemplateExprInstantiator to use
iteration through all of the expressions via clang/AST/StmtNodes.def,
ensuring that we don't forget to add template instantiation logic for
any new expression node kinds.
llvm-svn: 72303
expressions. This change introduces another AST node,
CXXUnresolvedMemberExpr, that captures member references (x->m, x.m)
when the base of the expression (the "x") is type-dependent, and we
therefore cannot resolve the member reference yet.
Note that our parsing of member references for C++ is still quite
poor, e.g., we don't handle x->Base::m or x->operator int.
llvm-svn: 72281
can. Also, delay semantic analysis of initialization for
value-dependent as well as type-dependent expressions, since we can't
always properly type-check a value-dependent expression.
llvm-svn: 72233
redundant functionality. The result (ASTOwningVector) lives in
clang/Parse/Ownership.h and is used by both the parser and semantic
analysis. No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 72214
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
temporaries are generated for some object-constructing expressions in
templates that are not type-dependent.
Also, be sure to introduce the variable from a CXXConditionDeclExpr
into the set of instantiated local variables.
llvm-svn: 72185
describe the construction of a value of a given type using function
syntax, e.g.,
T(a1, a2, ..., aN)
when the type or any of its arguments are type-dependent. In this
case, we don't know what kind of type-construction this will be: it
might construct a temporary of type 'T' (which might be a class or
non-class type) or might perform a conversion to type 'T'. Also,
implement printing of and template instantiation for this new
expression type. Due to the change in Sema::ActOnCXXTypeConstructExpr,
our existing tests cover template instantiation of this new expression
node.
llvm-svn: 72176