| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Cleaned up and optimized code that maps between raw and pickled flags. Avoids mystery constants. Makes a whole bunch of new flags be pickled which were not pickled before (more precisely: Everything in InitialFlags with value greater than 1 << 31 which is not in FlagsNotPickled now gets pickled whereas before it wasn't. Among these: VARARGS, IMPLCLASS, SPECIALZED, DEFAULTINIT, SYNCHRONIZED. I am curious how many tickets will get fixed by this change.
The first one I noted is t5504, which previously enforced the buggy behavior through a neg check!
There are also some build manager check file changes that have to do with the fact that flags now print in a different order for performance reasons.
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In a stunningly unusual demonstration of farsightedness,
I was able to generate these changes only by running:
scala scala.tools.nsc.util.FlagsUtilCompiler
With this much time in between runs:
-// Generated by mkFlagsTable() at Mon Oct 11 10:01:09 PDT 2010
+// Generated by mkFlagsTable() at Thu Feb 02 20:31:52 PST 2012
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*** Important note for busy commit log skimmers ***
Symbol method "fullName" has been trying to serve the dual role of "how
to print a symbol" and "how to find a class file." It cannot serve both
these roles simultaneously, primarily because of package objects but
other little things as well. Since in the majority of situations we want
the one which corresponds to the idealized scala world, not the grubby
bytecode, I went with that for fullName. When you require the path to a
class (e.g. you are calling Class.forName) you should use javaClassName.
package foo { package object bar { class Bippy } }
If sym is Bippy's symbol, then
sym.fullName == foo.bar.Bippy
sym.javaClassName == foo.bar.package.Bippy
*** End important note ***
There are many situations where we (until now) forewent revealing
everything we knew about a type mismatch. For instance, this isn't very
helpful of scalac (at least in those more common cases where you didn't
define type X on the previous repl line.)
scala> type X = Int
defined type alias X
scala> def f(x: X): Byte = x
<console>:8: error: type mismatch;
found : X
required: Byte
def f(x: X): Byte = x
^
Now it says:
found : X
(which expands to) Int
required: Byte
def f(x: X): Byte = x
^
In addition I rearchitected a number of methods involving:
- finding a symbol's owner
- calculating a symbol's name
- determining whether to print a prefix
No review.
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