(caveat for the latter: it assumes that binary operations are strict;
a TODO is to detect or and and and correctly reflect that they're lazy
in the second argument). I had to add an ann field to ast.block,
resulting in the usual boilerplate changes.
Test cases that currently work (if you uncomment the typestate pass
in the driver) (all these are under test/compile-fail):
fru-typestate
ret-uninit
use-uninit
use-uninit-2
use-uninit-3
Also changed the ts_ann field on statements to be an ann instead,
which explains most of the changes.
As well, got rid of the "warning: no type for expression" error
by filling in annotations for local decls in typeck (not sure whether
this was my fault or not).
Finally, in bitv, added a clone() function to copy a bit vector,
and fixed is_true, is_false, and to_str to not be nonsense.
This makes passing them around cheaper. There is now a table (see
front/codemap.rs) that is needed to transform such an uint into an
actual filename/line/col location.
Also cleans up the span building in the parser a bit.
I think just about every type can be used as a block result now. There's quite
a proliferation of tests here, but they all test slightly different things and
some are split out to remain XFAILed. The tests of generic vectors are still
XFAILed because generic aliased boxes still don't work in general.
Nicer parsing of self-calls (expr_self_method nodes inside expr_call
nodes, rather than a separate expr_call_self) makes typechecking
tractable. We can now write self-calls that take arguments and return
values (see: test/run-pass/obj-self-*.rs).
It was creating non-multiple-of-four section sizes, which, for some
reason, presumably by LLVM, were clipped, rather than padded, to be a
multiple of four.
It's still sketchy. I added a typestate annotation field to statements
tagged stmt_decl or stmt_expr, because a stmt_decl statement has a typestate
that's different from that of its child node. This necessitated trivial
changes to a bunch of other files all over to the compiler. I also added a
few small standard library functions, some of which I didn't actually end
up using but which I thought might be useful anyway.