| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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In the previous commit, we avoided an awkward chain of casts
by exploiting the knowledge that Scala defined classes will
by JVM accessible, and as such immune to `LinkageError`s when
used as the target of a cast.
This commit generalized this to the entire fix for SI-4283,
rather than just for derived value classes.
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Attempting to reduce the frequency of low-level operations
with modes. I mean stuff like this:
if ((mode & (EXPRmode | LHSmode)) == EXPRmode)
THey don't make those ten line boolean guards any easier
to understand. Hopefully this will lead us toward eliminating
some of the modes entirely, or at least better isolating
their logic rather than having it interspersed at arbitrary
points throughout the typer.
Modes are in their entirety a leaked implementation detail.
Typing a tree requires a tree and optionally an expected type.
It shouldn't require a bucket of state bits. In subsequent
commits I will start eliminating them.
This commit also breaks adapt down into more digestible chunks.
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I started out looking to limit the noise from empty type
bounds, i.e. the endless repetition of
class A[T >: _root_.scala.Nothing <: _root_.scala.Any]
This led me to be reminded of all the unnecessary and
in fact damaging overreaches which are performed during parsing.
Why should a type parameter for which no bounds are
specified be immediately encoded with this giant tree:
TypeBounds(
Select(Select(Ident(nme.ROOTPKG), tpnme.scala_), tpnme.Nothing),
Select(Select(Ident(nme.ROOTPKG), tpnme.scala_), tpnme.Any)
)
...which must then be manually recognized as empty type bounds?
Truly, this is madness.
- It deftly eliminates the possibility of recognizing
whether the user wrote "class A[T]" or "class A[T >: Nothing]"
or "class A[T <: Any]" or specified both bounds. The fact
that these work out the same internally does not imply the
information should be exterminated even before parsing completes.
- It burdens everyone who must recognize type bounds trees,
such as this author
- It is far less efficient than the obvious encoding
- It offers literally no advantage whatsoever
Encode empty type bounds as
TypeBounds(EmptyTree, EmptyTree)
What could be simpler.
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1) Deprecates much of Predef and scala.Console, especially:
- the read* methods (see below)
- the set{Out,Err,In} methods (see SI-4793)
2) Removed long-deprecated:
- Predef#exit
- Predef#error should have gone, but could not due to sbt
At least the whole source base has now been future-proofed
against the eventual removal of Predef#error.
The low justification for the read* methods should be readily
apparent: they are little used and have no call to be in global
namespace, especially given their weird ad hoc semantics and
unreasonably tempting names such as readBoolean().
3) Segregated the deprecated elements in Predef from the part
which still thrives.
4) Converted all the standard Predef implicits into implicit
classes, value classes where possible:
- ArrowAssoc, Ensuring, StringFormat, StringAdd, RichException (value)
- SeqCharSequence, ArrayCharSequence (non-value)
Non-implicit deprecated stubs prop up the names of the
formerly converting methods.
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Conflicts:
src/compiler/scala/tools/nsc/typechecker/Contexts.scala
src/compiler/scala/tools/nsc/typechecker/Namers.scala
src/compiler/scala/tools/nsc/typechecker/Typers.scala
src/continuations/plugin/scala/tools/selectivecps/CPSAnnotationChecker.scala
src/reflect/scala/reflect/internal/AnnotationCheckers.scala
src/reflect/scala/reflect/internal/Symbols.scala
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AnnotationCheckers are insufficient because they live outside the
compiler cake and it's not possible to pass a Typer into an annotation
checker.
Analyzer plugins hook into important places of the compiler:
- when the namer assigns a type to a symbol (plus a special hook for
accessors)
- before typing a tree, to modify the expected type
- after typing a tree, to modify the type assigned to the tree
Analyzer plugins and annotation checker can be activated only during
selected phases of the compiler.
Refactored the CPS plugin to use an analyzer plugin (since
adaptToAnnotations is now part of analyzer plugins, no longer
annotation checkers).
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