location where we're spelling a token even within a
macro. clang_getInstantiationLocation() tells where we instantiated
the macro.
I'm still not thrilled with the CXSourceLocation/CXSourceRange APIs,
since they gloss over macro-instantiation information.
Take 2: this time, adjusted tests appropriately and used a "simple"
approach to the spelling location.
llvm-svn: 118495
location where we're spelling a token even within a
macro. clang_getInstantiationLocation() tells where we instantiated
the macro.
I'm still not thrilled with the CXSourceLocation/CXSourceRange APIs,
since they gloss over macro-instantiation information.
llvm-svn: 118492
inclusion directives, keeping track of every #include, #import,
etc. in the translation unit. We keep track of the source location and
kind of the inclusion, how the file name was spelled, and the
underlying file to which the inclusion resolved.
llvm-svn: 116952
improvements to the compiler and the introduction of crash recovery,
it no longer makes sense to allow this mode. Moreover, this eliminates
one use of the "clang" executable from within libclang; we'd like them
all to go away.
llvm-svn: 116207
produces a simple "display" name that captures the
arguments/parameters for a function, function template, class
template, or class template specialization.
llvm-svn: 115428
to an "overloaded" set of declarations. This cursor kind works for
unresolved references to functions/templates (e.g., a call within a
template), using declarations, and Objective-C class and protocol
forward declarations.
llvm-svn: 113805
constructor, in source order. Also introduces a new reference kind for
class members, which is used here (for member initializers) and will
also be used for designated initializers and offsetof.
llvm-svn: 113545
clang_getSpecializedCursorTemplate(), which determines the template
(or member thereof) that the given cursor specializes or from which it
was instantiated. This routine can be used to establish a link between
templates and their instantiations/specializations.
llvm-svn: 112780
three different kinds of AST nodes to represent using declarations:
UsingDecl, UnresolvedUsingValueDecl, and
UnresolvedUsingTypenameDecl. These three are collapsed into a single
cursor kind for using declarations, since libclang clients don't need
the distinction.
Several related changes here:
- Cursor visitation of the three AST nodes for using declarations
- Proper source-range computation for these AST nodes
- Using declarations have no USRs, since they don't actually declare
any entities.
llvm-svn: 112730
suppressing USRs). Also, fix up the source location information for
using directives so that the declaration location refers to the
namespace name.
llvm-svn: 112693
with a new cursor kind for a reference to a namespace.
There's still some oddities in the source location information for
NamespaceAliasDecl that I'll address with a separate commit, so the
source locations displayed in the load-namespaces.cpp test will
change.
llvm-svn: 112676
determines the kind of declaration that would be generated if the
given template were instantiated. This allows a client to distinguish
among class/struct/union templates and function/member function/static
member function templates.
Also, teach clang_CXXMethod_isStatic() about function templates.
llvm-svn: 112655
template. Such cursors occur, for example, in template specialization
types such as vector<int>. Note that we do not handle the
super-interesting case where the template name is unresolved, e.g.,
within a template.
llvm-svn: 112636
libclang. This includes:
- Cursor kind for function templates, with visitation logic
- Cursor kinds for template parameters, with visitation logic
- Visitation logic for template specialization types, qualified type
locations
- USR generation for function templates, template specialization
types, template parameter types.
Also happens to fix PR7804, which I tripped across while testing.
llvm-svn: 112604
conversion functions. This introduces new cursor kinds for these three
C++ entities, and reworks visitation of function declarations so that
we get type-source information for the names.
llvm-svn: 112600
into the clients, e.g., the printing code-completion consumer and
c-index-test. Clients may want to re-sort the results anyway.
Provide a libclang function that sorts the results.
3rd try. How embarrassing.
llvm-svn: 112180
into the clients, e.g., the printing code-completion consumer and
c-index-test. Clients may want to re-sort the results anyway.
Provide a libclang function that sorts the results.
llvm-svn: 112149
clang_reparseTranslationUnit(), along with a function to retrieve the
default recommended reparsing options for a translation unit.
Also, add the CXTranslationUnit_CacheCompletionResults flag, which is
also currently unused.
llvm-svn: 110811
"editing" mode, introduce a separate function
clang_defaultEditingTranslationUnitOptions() that retrieves the set of
options. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 110613
flags enumeration + default-generating function that allows
code-completion to be customized via the libclang API.
Plus, turn on spell-checking when performing code completion.
llvm-svn: 110319
completion within the translation unit using the same command-line
arguments for parsing the translation unit. Eventually, we'll reuse
the precompiled preamble to improve code-completion performance, and
this also gives us a place to cache results.
Expose this function via the new libclang function
clang_codeCompleteAt(), which performs the code completion within a
CXTranslationUnit. The completion occurs in-process
(clang_codeCompletion() runs code completion out-of-process).
llvm-svn: 110210
will eventually replace
clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(). The only addition in
clang_parseTranslationUnit() is a set of flags that can control how
the translation unit is loaded. More interesting flags will be coming.
llvm-svn: 109027
reparses an already-parsed translation unit. At the moment it's just a
convenience function, but we hope to use it for performance
optimizations.
llvm-svn: 108756