diff options
author | Paul Phillips <paulp@improving.org> | 2013-09-18 00:09:46 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | Paul Phillips <paulp@improving.org> | 2013-09-18 07:13:38 -0700 |
commit | f4267ccd96a9143c910c66a5b0436aaa64b7c9dc (patch) | |
tree | 174861715807c23ba332f78769a9f7e1377b7f02 /test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala | |
parent | d45a3c8cc8e9f1d95d797d548a85abd8597f5bc7 (diff) | |
download | scala-f4267ccd96a9143c910c66a5b0436aaa64b7c9dc.tar.gz scala-f4267ccd96a9143c910c66a5b0436aaa64b7c9dc.tar.bz2 scala-f4267ccd96a9143c910c66a5b0436aaa64b7c9dc.zip |
Cull extraneous whitespace.
One last flurry with the broom before I leave you slobs to code
in your own filth. Eliminated all the trailing whitespace I
could manage, with special prejudice reserved for the test cases
which depended on the preservation of trailing whitespace.
Was reminded I cannot figure out how to eliminate the trailing
space on the "scala> " prompt in repl transcripts. At least
reduced the number of such empty prompts by trimming transcript
code on the way in.
Routed ConsoleReporter's "printMessage" through a trailing
whitespace stripping method which might help futureproof
against the future of whitespace diseases. Deleted the up-to-40
lines of trailing whitespace found in various library files.
It seems like only yesterday we performed whitespace surgery
on the whole repo. Clearly it doesn't stick very well. I suggest
it would work better to enforce a few requirements on the way in.
Diffstat (limited to 'test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala')
-rw-r--r-- | test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala b/test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala index ad6afa7bd8..a05887023a 100644 --- a/test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala +++ b/test/files/pos/t2421_delitedsl.scala @@ -1,10 +1,10 @@ trait DeliteDSL { abstract class <~<[-From, +To] extends (From => To) - implicit def trivial[A]: A <~< A = new (A <~< A) {def apply(x: A) = x} + implicit def trivial[A]: A <~< A = new (A <~< A) {def apply(x: A) = x} trait Forcible[T] object Forcible { - def factory[T](f: T => Forcible[T]) = new (T <~< Forcible[T]){def apply(x: T) = f(x)} + def factory[T](f: T => Forcible[T]) = new (T <~< Forcible[T]){def apply(x: T) = f(x)} } case class DeliteInt(x: Int) extends Forcible[Int] @@ -22,16 +22,16 @@ trait DeliteDSL { // If T is already a proxy (it is forcible), the compiler should use // forcibleIdentity to deduce that P=T. If T is Int, the compiler // should use intToForcible to deduce that P=DeliteInt. - // + // // Without this feature, the user must write 'xs.proxyOfFirst[DeliteInt]', // with the feature they can write 'xs.proxyOfFirst', which is shorter and // avoids exposing internal DELITE types to the world. object Test { - val x = new DeliteCollection(List(1,2,3)).headProxy + val x = new DeliteCollection(List(1,2,3)).headProxy // inferred: val x: Forcible[Int] = new DeliteCollection[Int](List.apply[Int](1, 2, 3)).headProxy[Forcible[Int]](forcibleInt); - val xAlready = new DeliteCollection(List(DeliteInt(1),DeliteInt(2),DeliteInt(3))).headProxy + val xAlready = new DeliteCollection(List(DeliteInt(1),DeliteInt(2),DeliteInt(3))).headProxy // inferred: val xAlready: DeliteInt = new DeliteCollection[DeliteInt](List.apply[DeliteInt](DeliteInt(1), DeliteInt(2), DeliteInt(3))).headProxy[DeliteInt](trivial[DeliteInt]); } }
\ No newline at end of file |