summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/test/files/run/macro-reify-splice-splice/Macros_1.scala
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAgeFilesLines
* makes boxity of fast track macros configurableEugene Burmako2013-12-191-11/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, all built-in macros were assumed to be whitebox, but that’s actually not the case. Just quasiquote macros have to be whitebox, while the rest can be blackbox. This also fixes SI-8091, because blackbox macros are typechecked differently and therefore the necessary implicit conversion kicks in. If `f”...”` were to remain a whitebox macro, then due to the changes introduced in commit https://github.com/scala/scala/commit/a3b33419b02cafb7e2c6fed6dd96151859fc7d77 we would have to explicitly ascribe its expansion as String to achieve the same effect. After I made reify blackbox, several tests had to be changed, because we now explicitly ascribe the expansion with `c.Expr[T]`, which changes `toString`. Also, a number of less obvious corrections had to be applied, because things like `reify(<constant>).splice` have stopped being optimized away due to `reify(<constant>)` no longer having a narrow `c.Expr[<constant>.type]`, making it ineligible for constant folding. Moreover, this change forced me to adjust our approach to positioning blackbox wrappings, because after being changed to blacbox and starting using wrappings, f”...” interpolators used in the compiler started crashing -Yrangepos builds. Now wrapping Typed nodes are assigned with transparent positions.
* blackbox and whitebox macrosEugene Burmako2013-11-121-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This is the first commit in the series. This commit only: 1) Splits Context into BlackboxContext and WhiteboxContext 2) Splits Macro into BlackboxMacro and WhiteboxMacro 3) Introduces the isBundle property in the macro impl binding Here we just teach the compiler that macros can now be blackbox and whitebox, without actually imposing any restrictions on blackbox macros. These restrictions will come in subsequent commits. For description and documentation of the blackbox/whitebox separation see the official macro guide at the scaladoc website: http://docs.scala-lang.org/overviews/macros/blackbox-whitebox.html Some infrastructure work to make evolving macros easier: compile partest-extras with quick so they can use latest library/reflect/...
* evicts last traces of makro from our codebaseEugene Burmako2012-08-021-1/+1
| | | | Removes the stubs left out to appease the old starr, fixes macro tests.
* SI-5999 removes Context.reifyEugene Burmako2012-07-201-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Currently there are discrepancies between the behavior of c.reify and c.universe.reify. First step in fixing these problems is removing the duplication in the API. That's why I'm cutting away the Context.reify shortcut. Context.reify is a magic macro, hardwired in the fast track mechanism, so removing it requires redeploying the starr (because an old starr will crash if launched on sources that don't contain Context.reify). To cleanly redeploy a starr I've left a Context.reify stub in sources, but hidden it behind a `protected` modifier. When starr is redeployed (in a subsequent commit) the stub will be removed. I've also updated the tests to use c.universe.reify instead of c.reify. This will break some of them, because c.universe.reify uses a standard compiler mirror, which unlike a macro mirror doesn't like packageless classes. That's an annoyance, but I think having clean separation of commits is more important that being 100% consistent.
* removes pre-M4 compatibility stubs for the IDEEugene Burmako2012-06-211-1/+0
|
* repairs the tests after the refactoring spreeEugene Burmako2012-06-081-0/+12