Supported nested reified parameter declarations

Also switched to using type names as identifiers instead of their
indices
This commit is contained in:
Denis Zharkov
2014-11-21 12:07:08 +04:00
parent 080610c208
commit 3b2d0b88f3
15 changed files with 310 additions and 100 deletions
@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
import kotlin.test.assertEquals
open class A<T1, T2, T3>
inline fun <reified T, reified R> foo(): Array<A<*,*,*>> {
val x = object {
inline fun <reified T1, reified T> bar(): A<*,*,*> = object : A<T1,T,R>() {}
fun f1() = bar<T, R>()
fun f2() = bar<R, T>()
fun f3() = bar<Boolean, T>()
fun f4() = bar<T, Boolean>()
}
return array(x.f1(), x.f2(), x.f3(), x.f4())
}
fun box(): String {
val result = foo<Double, Int>()
val expected = array(
Triple("java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer", "java.lang.Integer"),
Triple("java.lang.Integer", "java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer"),
Triple("java.lang.Boolean", "java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer"),
Triple("java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Boolean", "java.lang.Integer")
).map { "A<${it.first}, ${it.second}, ${it.third}>" }
for (i in expected.indices) {
assertEquals(expected[i], result[i].javaClass.getGenericSuperclass()?.toString(), "$i-th element")
}
return "OK"
}