propagating error conditions out of the various annotate-me-a-snowflake
routines. Generally (but not universally) removes redundant diagnostics
as well as, you know, not crashing on bad code. On the other hand,
I have just signed myself up to fix fiddly parser errors for the next
week. Again.
llvm-svn: 97221
class types, dependent types, and namespaces. I had previously
weakened this invariant while working on parsing pseudo-destructor
expressions, but recent work in that area has made these changes
unnecessary.
llvm-svn: 97112
destructor calls, e.g.,
p->T::~T
We now detect when the member access that we've parsed, e.g.,
p-> or x.
may be a pseudo-destructor expression, either because the type of p or
x is a scalar or because it is dependent (and, therefore, may become a
scalar at template instantiation time).
We then parse the pseudo-destructor grammar specifically:
::[opt] nested-name-specifier[opt] type-name :: ∼ type-name
and hand those results to a new action, ActOnPseudoDestructorExpr,
which will cope with both dependent member accesses of destructors and
with pseudo-destructor expressions.
This commit affects the parsing of pseudo-destructors, only; the
semantic actions still go through the semantic actions for member
access expressions. That will change soon.
llvm-svn: 97045
typedef int Int;
int *p;
p->Int::~Int();
This weakens the invariant that the only types in nested-name-specifiers are tag types (restricted to class types in C++98/03). However, we weaken this invariant as little as possible, accepting arbitrary types in nested-name-specifiers only when we're in a member access expression that looks like a pseudo-destructor expression.
llvm-svn: 96743
declaration, we can end up with template-id annotation tokens for
types that have not been converted into type annotation tokens. When
this is the case, translate the template-id into a type and parse as
an expression.
llvm-svn: 95404
C++ grammatical constructs that show up in top-level (namespace-level)
declarations, member declarations, template declarations, statements,
expressions, conditions, etc. For example, we now provide a pattern
for
static_cast<type>(expr)
when we can have an expression, or
using namespace identifier;
when we can have a using directive.
Also, improves the results of code completion at the beginning of a
top-level declaration. Previously, we would see value names (function
names, global variables, etc.); now we see types, namespace names,
etc., but no values.
llvm-svn: 93134
as a type or scope token if the next token requires it.
This eliminates a lot of redundant lookups in C++, but there's room for
improvement; a better solution would do a single lookup whose kind and
results would be passed through the parser.
llvm-svn: 92930
The following attributes are currently supported in C++0x attribute
lists (and in GNU ones as well):
- align() - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations and what entities it may apply to
- final - semantics believed to be conformant to CWG issue 817's proposed
wording, except for redeclarations
- noreturn - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations
- carries_dependency - currently ignored (this is an optimization hint)
llvm-svn: 89543
"->" with a use of ParseUnqualifiedId. Collapse
ActOnMemberReferenceExpr, ActOnDestructorReferenceExpr (both of them),
ActOnOverloadedOperatorReferenceExpr,
ActOnConversionOperatorReferenceExpr, and
ActOnMemberTemplateIdReferenceExpr into a single, new action
ActOnMemberAccessExpr that does the same thing more cleanly (and can
keep more source-location information).
llvm-svn: 85930
yet another copy of the unqualified-id parsing code.
Also, use UnqualifiedId to simplify the Action interface for building
id-expressions. ActOnIdentifierExpr, ActOnCXXOperatorFunctionIdExpr,
ActOnCXXConversionFunctionExpr, and ActOnTemplateIdExpr have all been
removed in favor of the new ActOnIdExpression action.
llvm-svn: 85904
IIDecl cannot be null. There is no need to check for both C++ mode and
presence of CXXRecordDecl. ObjC interfaces can't have ScopeSpecs.
llvm-svn: 85057
type looking using getTypeName() and every property access was using
NextToken() to do lookahead to see if the identifier is followed by
a '.'. Rearrange this code to not need lookahead and only do the
type lookup if we have "identifier." in the token stream. Also
improve a diagnostic a bit.
llvm-svn: 85056
opening parentheses and after each comma. We gather the set of visible
overloaded functions, perform "partial" overloading based on the set
of arguments that we have thus far, and return the still-viable
results sorted by the likelihood that they will be the best candidate.
Most of the changes in this patch are a refactoring of the overloading
routines for a function call, since we needed to separate out the
notion of building an overload set (common to code-completion and
normal semantic analysis) and then what to do with that overload
set. As part of this change, I've pushed explicit template arguments
into a few more subroutines.
There is still much more work to do in this area. Function templates
won't be handled well (unless we happen to deduce all of the template
arguments before we hit the completion point), nor will overloaded
function-call operators or calls to member functions.
llvm-svn: 82549
essence, code completion is triggered by a magic "code completion"
token produced by the lexer [*], which the parser recognizes at
certain points in the grammar. The parser then calls into the Action
object with the appropriate CodeCompletionXXX action.
Sema implements the CodeCompletionXXX callbacks by performing minimal
translation, then forwarding them to a CodeCompletionConsumer
subclass, which uses the results of semantic analysis to provide
code-completion results. At present, only a single, "printing" code
completion consumer is available, for regression testing and
debugging. However, the design is meant to permit other
code-completion consumers.
This initial commit contains two code-completion actions: one for
member access, e.g., "x." or "p->", and one for
nested-name-specifiers, e.g., "std::". More code-completion actions
will follow, along with improved gathering of code-completion results
for the various contexts.
[*] In the current -code-completion-dump testing/debugging mode, the
file is truncated at the completion point and EOF is translated into
"code completion".
llvm-svn: 82166
templates, e.g.,
x.template get<T>
We can now parse these, represent them within an UnresolvedMemberExpr
expression, then instantiate that expression node in simple cases.
This allows us to stumble through parsing LLVM's Casting.h.
llvm-svn: 81300
formed without a trailing '(', diagnose the error (these expressions
must be immediately called), emit a fix-it hint, and fix the code.
llvm-svn: 81015
x->Base::f
We no longer try to "enter" the context of the type that "x" points
to. Instead, we drag that object type through the parser and pass it
into the Sema routines that need to know how to perform lookup within
member access expressions.
We now implement most of the crazy name lookup rules in C++
[basic.lookup.classref] for non-templated code, including performing
lookup both in the context of the type referred to by the member
access and in the scope of the member access itself and then detecting
ambiguities when the two lookups collide (p1 and p4; p3 and p7 are
still TODO). This change also corrects our handling of name lookup
within template arguments of template-ids inside the
nested-name-specifier (p6; we used to look into the scope of the
object expression for them) and fixes PR4703.
I have disabled some tests that involve member access expressions
where the object expression has dependent type, because we don't yet
have the ability to describe dependent nested-name-specifiers starting
with an identifier.
llvm-svn: 80843
Fixes PR4704 problems
Addresses Eli's patch feedback re: ugly cast code
Updates all postfix operators to remove ParenListExprs. While this is awful,
no better solution (say, in the parser) is obvious to me. Better solutions
welcome.
llvm-svn: 78621
--- Reverse-merging r78535 into '.':
D test/Sema/altivec-init.c
U include/clang/Basic/DiagnosticSemaKinds.td
U include/clang/AST/Expr.h
U include/clang/AST/StmtNodes.def
U include/clang/Parse/Parser.h
U include/clang/Parse/Action.h
U tools/clang-cc/clang-cc.cpp
U lib/Frontend/PrintParserCallbacks.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/CGExprScalar.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaInit.cpp
U lib/Sema/Sema.h
U lib/Sema/SemaExpr.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaTemplateInstantiateExpr.cpp
U lib/AST/StmtProfile.cpp
U lib/AST/Expr.cpp
U lib/AST/StmtPrinter.cpp
U lib/Parse/ParseExpr.cpp
U lib/Parse/ParseExprCXX.cpp
llvm-svn: 78551
In addition to being defined by the AltiVec PIM, this is also the vector
initializer syntax used by OpenCL, so that vector literals are compatible
with macro arguments.
llvm-svn: 78535
and __has_trivial_constructor builtin pseudo-functions and
additionally implements __has_trivial_copy and __has_trivial_assign,
from John McCall!
llvm-svn: 76916
compilation, and (hopefully) introduce RAII objects for changing the
"potentially evaluated" state at all of the necessary places within
Sema and Parser. Other changes:
- Set the unevaluated/potentially-evaluated context appropriately
during template instantiation.
- We now recognize three different states while parsing or
instantiating expressions: unevaluated, potentially evaluated, and
potentially potentially evaluated (for C++'s typeid).
- When we're in a potentially potentially-evaluated context, queue
up MarkDeclarationReferenced calls in a stack. For C++ typeid
expressions that are potentially evaluated, we will play back
these MarkDeclarationReferenced calls when we exit the
corresponding potentially potentially-evaluated context.
- Non-type template arguments are now parsed as constant
expressions, so they are not potentially-evaluated.
llvm-svn: 73899
C++. This logic is required to trigger implicit instantiation of
function templates and member functions of class templates, which will
be implemented separately.
This commit includes support for -Wunused-parameter, printing warnings
for named parameters that are not used within a function/Objective-C
method/block. Fixes <rdar://problem/6505209>.
llvm-svn: 73797
a paren expression without considering the context past the parentheses.
Behold:
(T())x; - type-id
(T())*x; - type-id
(T())/x; - expression
(T()); - expression
llvm-svn: 72260
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
type and argument types are missing, and let return type deduction
happen before we give errors for returning from a noreturn block.
Radar 6441502
llvm-svn: 70413
This gets rid of a bunch of random InvalidDecl bools in sema, changing
us to use the following approach:
1. When analyzing a declspec or declarator, if an error is found, we
set a bit in Declarator saying that it is invalid.
2. Once the Decl is created by sema, we immediately set the isInvalid
bit on it from what is in the declarator. From this point on, sema
consistently looks at and sets the bit on the decl.
This gives a very clear separation of concerns and simplifies a bunch
of code. In addition to this, this patch makes these changes:
1. it renames DeclSpec::getInvalidType() -> isInvalidType().
2. various "merge" functions no longer return bools: they just set the
invalid bit on the dest decl if invalid.
3. The ActOnTypedefDeclarator/ActOnFunctionDeclarator/ActOnVariableDeclarator
methods now set invalid on the decl returned instead of returning an
invalid bit byref.
4. In SemaType, refering to a typedef that was invalid now propagates the
bit into the resultant type. Stuff declared with the invalid typedef
will now be marked invalid.
5. Various methods like CheckVariableDeclaration now return void and set the
invalid bit on the decl they check.
There are a few minor changes to tests with this, but the only major bad
result is test/SemaCXX/constructor-recovery.cpp. I'll take a look at this
next.
llvm-svn: 70020
Remove an atrocious amount of trailing whitespace in the overloaded operator mangler. Sorry, couldn't help myself.
Change the DeclType parameter of Sema::CheckReferenceInit to be passed by value instead of reference. It wasn't changed anywhere.
Let the parser handle C++'s irregular grammar around assignment-expression and conditional-expression.
And finally, the reason for all this stuff: implement C++ semantics for the conditional operator. The implementation is complete except for determining lvalueness.
llvm-svn: 69299
instantiation for C++ typename-specifiers such as
typename T::type
The parsing of typename-specifiers is relatively easy thanks to
annotation tokens. When we see the "typename", we parse the
typename-specifier and produce a typename annotation token. There are
only a few places where we need to handle this. We currently parse the
typename-specifier form that terminates in an identifier, but not the
simple-template-id form, e.g.,
typename T::template apply<U, V>
Parsing of nested-name-specifiers has a similar problem, since at this
point we don't have any representation of a class template
specialization whose template-name is unknown.
Semantic analysis is only partially complete, with some support for
template instantiation that works for simple examples.
llvm-svn: 67875
know how to recover from an error, we can attach a hint to the
diagnostic that states how to modify the code, which can be one of:
- Insert some new code (a text string) at a particular source
location
- Remove the code within a given range
- Replace the code within a given range with some new code (a text
string)
Right now, we use these hints to annotate diagnostic information. For
example, if one uses the '>>' in a template argument in C++98, as in
this code:
template<int I> class B { };
B<1000 >> 2> *b1;
we'll warn that the behavior will change in C++0x. The fix is to
insert parenthese, so we use code insertion annotations to illustrate
where the parentheses go:
test.cpp:10:10: warning: use of right-shift operator ('>>') in template
argument will require parentheses in C++0x
B<1000 >> 2> *b1;
^
( )
Use of these annotations is partially implemented for HTML
diagnostics, but it's not (yet) producing valid HTML, which may be
related to PR2386, so it has been #if 0'd out.
In this future, we could consider hooking this mechanism up to the
rewriter to actually try to fix these problems during compilation (or,
after a compilation whose only errors have fixes). For now, however, I
suggest that we use these code modification hints whenever we can, so
that we get better diagnostics now and will have better coverage when
we find better ways to use this information.
This also fixes PR3410 by placing the complaint about missing tokens
just after the previous token (rather than at the location of the next
token).
llvm-svn: 65570
vector<vector<double>> Matrix;
In C++98/03, this token always means "right shift". However, if we're in
a context where we know that it can't mean "right shift", provide a
friendly reminder to put a space between the two >'s and then treat it
as two >'s as part of recovery.
In C++0x, this token is always broken into two '>' tokens.
llvm-svn: 65484
us whether there was an error in trying to parse a type-name (type-id
in C++). This allows propagation of errors further in the compiler,
suppressing more bogus error messages.
llvm-svn: 64922
any named parameters, e.g., this is accepted in C:
void f(...) __attribute__((overloadable));
although this would be rejected:
void f(...);
To do this, moved the checking of the "ellipsis without any named
arguments" condition from the parser into Sema (where it belongs anyway).
llvm-svn: 64902
to a class template. For example, the template-id 'vector<int>' now
has a nice, sugary type in the type system. What we can do now:
- Parse template-ids like 'vector<int>' (where 'vector' names a
class template) and form proper types for them in the type system.
- Parse icky template-ids like 'A<5>' and 'A<(5 > 0)>' properly,
using (sadly) a bool in the parser to tell it whether '>' should
be treated as an operator or not.
This is a baby-step, with major problems and limitations:
- There are currently two ways that we handle template arguments
(whether they are types or expressions). These will be merged, and,
most likely, TemplateArg will disappear.
- We don't have any notion of the declaration of class template
specializations or of template instantiations, so all template-ids
are fancy names for 'int' :)
llvm-svn: 64153
This shrinks OwningResult by one pointer. Since it is no longer larger than OwningPtr, merge the two.
This leads to simpler client code and speeds up my benchmark by 2.7%.
For some reason, this exposes a previously hidden bug, causing a regression in SemaCXX/condition.cpp.
llvm-svn: 63867
function DeclaratorChunk in common cases. This uses a fixed array in
Declarator when it is small enough for the first function declarator chunk
in a declarator.
This eliminates all malloc/free traffic from DeclaratorChunk::getFunction
when running on Cocoa.h except for five functions: signal/bsd_signal/sigset,
which have multiple Function DeclChunk's, and
CFUUIDCreateWithBytes/CFUUIDGetConstantUUIDWithBytes, which take more than
16 arguments.
This patch was pair programmed with Steve.
llvm-svn: 62599