| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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As seen here.
scala> class A { @deprecated("foo") def a = 1 }
warning: there were 1 deprecation warnings; re-run with -deprecation for details
defined class A
scala> :warnings
<console>:7: warning: @deprecated now takes two arguments; see the scaladoc.
class A { @deprecated("foo") def a = 1 }
^
scala> val x = 5 toString
warning: there were 1 feature warnings; re-run with -feature for details
x: String = 5
scala> :warnings
<console>:7: warning: postfix operator toString should be enabled
by making the implicit value language.postfixOps visible.
This can be achieved by adding the import clause 'import language.postfixOps'
or by setting the compiler option -language:postfixOps.
See the Scala docs for value scala.language.postfixOps for a discussion
why the feature should be explicitly enabled.
val x = 5 toString
^
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Added *.log and build/ to gitignore so partest/ant artifacts don't show
up in our commit messages. Also fixed whitespace issues arising from the
filter-branch history rewrite for git move.
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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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Finished reverting the misbegotten r23262, no review.
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Enhancing the repl-testing code by turning it into a transcript
producing machine. "Here's some code." "Here's a transcript!" "Good day
to you, sir!" "No, good day to YOU!"
These changes are awesome. Look at the checkfile diffs for god's sake,
they'll make you weep with joy. No review.
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I keep seeing huge simplifications available in the repl. Lot of
interesting features have come to town since it was first conceived. In
this commit I give the internal names some tips on aesthetics, and put
each line in its own package like civilized artificial constructs. No
review.
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Moved ClassfileAnnotation/StaticAnnotation/Annotation/TypeConstraint
into scala.annotation and enabled the deprecated type aliases in scala.*
to point there. Also enclosed is a new starr to bootstrap. No review.
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Modification to the widening logic to treat locally defined symbols like
final members thus allowing more constants to be inlined. Concretely,
that means that in code like this:
def f: Unit = { val b = false ; if (b) println("ok") }
The call to println is no longer generated at all, and in this code:
def f(x: Int) = { val X = 1 ; val Y = 2; x match { case X => 1 ; case Y => 2 } }
A tableswitch is generated instead of the present if/then/else.
I also added a big comment to the former widenIfNotFinal (now
widenIfNecessary for obvious reasons.) Review by rytz.
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closes #1569, #3731: refactored dependent method types to get rid of
debruijn indices and use singleton types instead.
this is the core of the dependent types refactoring, no implicit or
inference changes
(one baffling discovery: resultType should drop annotations that don't subclass TypeConstraint, even in the trivial case... wow -- thanks to Tiark for helping me figure it out on a terrace in Barcelona
TODO: probably need a more principled approach to the propagation of plugin type-annotations)
review by odersky
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- MethodTypes now have (params: List[Symbol])
- "copy"-methods for case classes
- the "copy" object in the compiler is now called "treeCopy"
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some small changes to implicits handling, existential abstraction, type
parameter bounds checking
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hopefully fixed the build by fixing deSkolemize, and adapting the new
collection libraries to stricter override checking.
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now use compiler trees instead of reflect trees.
In many cases, annotations on types can be rewritten
instead of discarded as the types undergo various
operations. Also, -Yself-in-annots has been added.
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