diff options
author | Eugene Burmako <xeno.by@gmail.com> | 2014-01-31 15:47:56 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Eugene Burmako <xeno.by@gmail.com> | 2014-02-14 23:51:23 +0100 |
commit | 483bd3cacb34df3b3c2cc205338cb8e12cb89838 (patch) | |
tree | fb3986311fe90c2960405c05de4378138f258281 /src/reflect | |
parent | d7dd68faa4cd279714c32965ebf83e118c915e0a (diff) | |
download | scala-483bd3cacb34df3b3c2cc205338cb8e12cb89838.tar.gz scala-483bd3cacb34df3b3c2cc205338cb8e12cb89838.tar.bz2 scala-483bd3cacb34df3b3c2cc205338cb8e12cb89838.zip |
adds Context.enclosingOwner
As per discussion at https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/scala-internals/nf_ooEBn6-k,
this commit introduces the new c.enclosingOwner API that is going to serve
two purposes: 1) provide a better controlled alternative to c.enclosingTree,
2) enable low-level tinkering with owner chains without having to cast
to compiler internals.
This solution is not ideal, because: 1) symbols are much more than
I would like to expose about enclosing lexical contexts (after the
aforementioned discussion I’m no longer completely sure whether exposing
nothing is the right thing to do, but exposing symbol completers is definitely
something that should be avoided), 2) we shouldn’t have to do that
low-level stuff in the first place.
However, let’s face the facts. This change represents both an improvement
over the state of the art wrt #1 and a long-awaited capability wrt #2.
I think this pretty much warrants its place in trunk in the spirit of
gradual, evolutionary development of reflection API.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/reflect')
-rw-r--r-- | src/reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.scala | 8 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/src/reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.scala b/src/reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.scala index 1ced2e54c6..7c186139cf 100644 --- a/src/reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.scala +++ b/src/reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.scala @@ -20,7 +20,8 @@ import scala.language.existentials // SI-6541 * This is somewhat aligned with the overall evolution of macros during the 2.11 development cycle, where we played with * `c.introduceTopLevel` and `c.introduceMember`, but at the end of the day decided to reject them. * - * If you're relying on the now deprecated APIs, consider reformulating your macros in terms of completely local expansion + * If you're relying on the now deprecated APIs, consider using the new [[c.enclosingOwner]] method that can be used to obtain + * the names of enclosing definitions. Alternatively try reformulating your macros in terms of completely local expansion * and/or joining a discussion of a somewhat related potential language feature at [[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/scala-debate/f4CLmYShX6Q]]. * We also welcome questions and suggestions on our mailing lists, where we would be happy to further discuss this matter. */ @@ -51,6 +52,11 @@ trait Enclosures { */ def enclosingPosition: Position + /** Symbol associated with the innermost enclosing lexical context. + * Walking the owner chain of this symbol will reveal information about more and more enclosing contexts. + */ + def enclosingOwner: Symbol + /** Tree that corresponds to the enclosing method, or EmptyTree if not applicable. * @see [[scala.reflect.macros.Enclosures]] */ |