go/test/typeparam/cons.go

101 lines
2 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// run
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
// Copyright 2021 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
package main
import "fmt"
// Overriding the predeclare "any", so it can be used as a type constraint or a type
// argument
type any interface{}
type Function[a, b any] interface {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
Apply(x a) b
}
type incr struct{ n int }
func (this incr) Apply(x int) int {
return x + this.n
}
type pos struct{}
func (this pos) Apply(x int) bool {
return x > 0
}
type compose[a, b, c any] struct {
f Function[a, b]
g Function[b, c]
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func (this compose[a, b, c]) Apply(x a) c {
return this.g.Apply(this.f.Apply(x))
}
type _Eq[a any] interface {
Equal(a) bool
}
type Int int
func (this Int) Equal(that int) bool {
return int(this) == that
}
type List[a any] interface {
Match(casenil Function[Nil[a], any], casecons Function[Cons[a], any]) any
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
type Nil[a any] struct {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func (xs Nil[a]) Match(casenil Function[Nil[a], any], casecons Function[Cons[a], any]) any {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
return casenil.Apply(xs)
}
type Cons[a any] struct {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
Head a
Tail List[a]
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func (xs Cons[a]) Match(casenil Function[Nil[a], any], casecons Function[Cons[a], any]) any {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
return casecons.Apply(xs)
}
type mapNil[a, b any] struct {
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func (m mapNil[a, b]) Apply(_ Nil[a]) any {
return Nil[b]{}
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
type mapCons[a, b any] struct {
f Function[a, b]
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func (m mapCons[a, b]) Apply(xs Cons[a]) any {
return Cons[b]{m.f.Apply(xs.Head), Map[a, b](m.f, xs.Tail)}
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func Map[a, b any](f Function[a, b], xs List[a]) List[b] {
return xs.Match(mapNil[a, b]{}, mapCons[a, b]{f}).(List[b])
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
}
func main() {
var xs List[int] = Cons[int]{3, Cons[int]{6, Nil[int]{}}}
var ys List[int] = Map[int, int](incr{-5}, xs)
var xz List[bool] = Map[int, bool](pos{}, ys)
cs1 := xz.(Cons[bool])
cs2 := cs1.Tail.(Cons[bool])
_, ok := cs2.Tail.(Nil[bool])
cmd/compile: get instantiated generic types working with interfaces Get instantiatiated generic types working with interfaces, including typechecking assignments to interfaces and instantiating all the methods properly. To get it all working, this change includes: - Add support for substituting in interfaces in subster.typ() - Fill in the info for the methods for all instantiated generic types, so those methods will be available for later typechecking (by the old typechecker) when assigning an instantiated generic type to an interface. We also want those methods available so we have the list when we want to instantiate all methods of an instantiated type. We have both for instantiated types encountered during the initial noder phase, and for instantiated types created during stenciling of a function/method. - When we first create a fully-instantiated generic type (whether during initial noder2 pass or while instantiating a method/function), add it to a list so that all of its methods will also be instantiated. This is needed so that an instantiated type can be assigned to an interface. - Properly substitute type names in the names of instantiated methods. - New accessor methods for types.Type.RParam. - To deal with generic types which are empty structs (or just don't use their type params anywhere), we want to set HasTParam if a named type has any type params that are not fully instantiated, even if the type param is not used in the type. - In subst.typ() and elsewhere, always set sym.Def for a new forwarding type we are creating, so we always create a single unique type for each generic type instantiation. This handles recursion within a type, and also recursive relationships across many types or methods. We remove the seen[] hashtable, which was serving the same purpose, but for subst.typ() only. We now handle all kinds of recursive types. - We don't seem to need to force types.CheckSize() on created/substituted generic types anymore, so commented out for now. - Add an RParams accessor to types2.Signature, and also a new exported types2.AsSignature() function. Change-Id: If6c5dd98427b20bfe9de3379cc16f83df9c9b632 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/298449 Run-TryBot: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org> Trust: Dan Scales <danscales@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org>
2021-03-03 21:33:27 +00:00
if cs1.Head != false || cs2.Head != true || !ok {
panic(fmt.Sprintf("got %v, %v, %v, expected false, true, true",
cs1.Head, cs2.Head, ok))
}
}