This means GEPi now takes a list of uints. Apologies in advance
if this is hard to rebase against, but it gets rid of many a cast :-)
Also modernized some for loops here and there.
This alignment is the "preferred" alignment of a type, which is not
necessarily the alignment the compiler will use when packing the
type into structures - that is the "ABI" alignment (in LLVM terms).
On x86, 64-bit ints have 8-byte preferred alignment, but 4-byte
ABI alignment.
This change uses the same code for handling the "self" reference for
classes as is already used for impls/ifaces. This allows removing the
extra maybe_self_id argument (which was just for classes) to trans_closure
that I added before. I also rewrote the translation for class ctors so
that it doesn't generate new AST nodes (instead translating directly).
Also changed visit so that it visits class ctors correctly with visit_fn,
and changed typestate to not do return-checking when visiting a class ctor.
This will make it easier to convert crate_ctxt into a region pointer, since
there are functions that return crate contexts. There would be no way to type
these functions if crate_ctxt had to be an inferred region pointer.
- Move io, run and rand to core.
- Remove incorrect ctypes module (use libc).
- Remove os-specific modules for os and fs.
- Split fs between core::path and core::os.
This required changing almost all users of hashmaps to import the hashmap interface first.
The `size` member in the hashmap structure was renamed to `count` to work around a name conflict.
This required changing almost all users of hashmaps to import the hashmap interface first.
The `size` member in the hashmap structure was renamed to `count` to work around a name conflict.
Programs using classes with fields only (no methods) compile and run,
as long as nothing refers to a class in a different crate (todo).
Also changed the AST representation of classes to have a separate
record for constructor info (instead of inlining the fields in the
item_class node), and fixed up spans and pretty-printing for
classes.