| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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* 2.10.x: (37 commits)
Added logic and tests for unchecked refinements.
Moved isNonRefinementClassType somewhere logical.
Moved two tests to less breaky locations.
Nailed down the "impossible match" logic.
Finish docs for string interpolation.
moves Context.ParseError outside the cake
revives macros.Infrastructure
moves Context.runtimeUniverse to TreeBuild.mkRuntimeUniverseRef
a more precise type for Context.mirror
gets rid of macros.Infrastructure
simplifies Context.Run and Context.CompilationUnit
exposes Position.source as SourceFile
removes extraneous stuff from macros.Infrastructure
merges macros.CapturedVariables into macros.Universe
merges macros.Exprs and macros.TypeTags into Context
removes front ends from scala-reflect.jar
PositionApi => Position
hides BuildUtils from Scaladoc
MirrorOf => Mirror
docs.pre-lib now checks for mods in reflect
...
Conflicts:
test/files/neg/t4302.check
test/files/neg/unchecked.check
test/files/neg/unchecked2.check
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I will again defer to a comment.
/** Given classes A and B, can it be shown that nothing which is
* an A will ever be a subclass of something which is a B? This
* entails not only showing that !(A isSubClass B) but that the
* same is true of all their subclasses. Restated for symmetry:
* the same value cannot be a member of both A and B.
*
* 1) A must not be a subclass of B, nor B of A (the trivial check)
* 2) One of A or B must be completely knowable (see isKnowable)
* 3) Assuming A is knowable, the proposition is true if
* !(A' isSubClass B) for all A', where A' is a subclass of A.
*
* Due to symmetry, the last condition applies as well in reverse.
*/
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I had this in before, then removed it since it is sometimes
redundant with an error message later issued by the pattern
matcher (e.g. scrutinee is incompatible with pattern type.)
However it also catches a lot of cases which are not errors,
so I think the modest redundancy is tolerable for now.
I also enhanced the logic for recognizing impossible
type tests, taking sealedness into account.
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Closes SI-6275, SI-5762.
The comment says is better than I can.
/** On pattern matcher checkability:
*
* Consider a pattern match of this form: (x: X) match { case _: P => }
*
* There are four possibilities to consider:
* [P1] X will always conform to P
* [P2] x will never conform to P
* [P3] X <: P if some runtime test is true
* [P4] X cannot be checked against P
*
* The first two cases correspond to those when there is enough static
* information to say X <: P or that !(X <: P) for all X and P.
* The fourth case includes unknown abstract types or structural
* refinements appearing within a pattern.
*
* The third case is the interesting one. We designate another type, XR,
* which is essentially the intersection of X and |P|, where |P| is
* the erasure of P. If XR <: P, then no warning is emitted.
*
* Examples of how this info is put to use:
* sealed trait A[T] ; class B[T] extends A[T]
* def f(x: B[Int]) = x match { case _: A[Int] if true => }
* def g(x: A[Int]) = x match { case _: B[Int] => }
*
* `f` requires no warning because X=B[Int], P=A[Int], and B[Int] <:< A[Int].
* `g` requires no warning because X=A[Int], P=B[Int], XR=B[Int], and B[Int] <:< B[Int].
* XR=B[Int] because a value of type A[Int] which is tested to be a B can
* only be a B[Int], due to the definition of B (B[T] extends A[T].)
*
* This is something like asSeenFrom, only rather than asking what a type looks
* like from the point of view of one of its base classes, we ask what it looks
* like from the point of view of one of its subclasses.
*/
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Instead of changing warnings to errors mid-stream, at the end of
a run I check for condition "no errors, some warnings, and fatal
warnings" and then generate an error at that point. This is
necessary to test for some warnings which come from later stages.
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Don't warn on "uncheckable" type patterns if they can be
statically guaranteed, regardless of their runtime checkability.
This covers patterns like Seq[Any] and lots more.
Review by @adriaanm.
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Spurious test was not good. Better test avoids suppressing
some legitimate warnings. Review by @moors.
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