Most of the fields in an AST item were present in all variants. Things
could be simplified considerably by putting them in the rec rather
than in the variant tags.
I added a "resolved" version of the ast::constr type -- ty::constr_def
-- that has a def_id field instead of an ann_field. This is more
consistent with other types and eliminates some checking.
Incidentally, I removed the def_map argument to the top-level function
in middle::alias, since the ty::ctxt already has a def_map field.
Since the decl in a for or for-each loop must always be a local
decl, I changed the AST to express this. Fewer potential match
failures and "the impossible happened" error messages = yay!
Generate appropriate constraints for calls to functions with
preconditions, and reject calls where those constraints don't
hold true in the prestate.
...by which I mean that it works for one test case :-)
Before, all aliases were implicitly mutable, and writing
&mutable was the same as writing &. Now, the two are
distinguished, and assignments to regular aliases are
no longer allowed.
Changed function types to include a list of constraints. Added
code for parsing and pretty-printing constraints. This necessitated
splitting pprust into two files (pprust and ppaux) to break a
circulate dependency, as ty_to_str now needs to print out constraints,
which may include literals, but pprust depended on ty.
This litters aberrations like 'alt({foo.bar}) { ... }' and f({*baz})
though the code (mostly in trans.rs). These are a way to explicitly
copy the given value so that it can be safely aliased. At some point
we'll probably want a more explicit copy operator.
Hello from SFO Terminal 3!
unify_fn_common had the expected and actual types reversed in one
place. This was causing the type of an occurence of a function f
with type fn(int) -> T to be set to fn(_|_) -> T at a call site like
f(fail); I think this was also making some of the type error messages
come out backwards, but I haven't checked.
Also: ty_bot does not contain pointers
Previously, block_ty returned the type of the terminating
expression of the block (or nil if said expression was absent).
I changed check_expr to write the type of that expression into
the annotation for the block itself, so now block_ty can use the
block's annotation.
The typechecker had a number of special cases for unifying types
with _|_ (as with checking if and alt). But, a value of type _|_
should be usable in any context, as such a value always diverges,
and will never be used by its immediate context. Changed unify
accordingly, removed special cases.