forked from OSchip/llvm-project
c008af6466
Standardize on the most common namespace setup in our *.cpp files: using namespace llvm; namespace clang { namespace clangd { void foo(StringRef) { ... } And remove redundant llvm:: qualifiers. (Except for cases like make_unique where this causes problems with std:: and ADL). This choice is pretty arbitrary, but some broad consistency is nice. This is going to conflict with everything. Sorry :-/ Squash the other configurations: A) using namespace llvm; using namespace clang; using namespace clangd; void clangd::foo(StringRef); This is in some of the older files. (It prevents accidentally defining a new function instead of one in the header file, for what that's worth). B) namespace clang { namespace clangd { void foo(llvm::StringRef) { ... } This is fine, but in practice the using directive often gets added over time. C) namespace clang { namespace clangd { using namespace llvm; // inside the namespace This was pretty common, but is a bit misleading: name lookup preferrs clang::clangd::foo > clang::foo > llvm:: foo (no matter where the using directive is). llvm-svn: 344850 |
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CMakeLists.txt | ||
IndexBenchmark.cpp |