Java 8 rules for method overrides:
- base class method wins against a (default) interface method, so an abstract base class method should always be implemented in a derived class; - interface methods clash regardless of abstract/default with possibly undefined behavior at run-time, so a class or interface should always define its own method for methods inherited from multiple interfaces and not from base class; - meaningful diagnostics for class inheriting conflicting JVM signatures. Since no override will happen under Java 8 rules, ACCIDENTAL_OVERRIDE is misleading for this case; - update testData.
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@@ -14,17 +14,17 @@ abstract class D(): A() {
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override val i : Int = 34
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}
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<!ABSTRACT_MEMBER_NOT_IMPLEMENTED!>class C<!>() : D() {
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<!ABSTRACT_CLASS_MEMBER_NOT_IMPLEMENTED!>class C<!>() : D() {
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fun test() {
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super.i
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}
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}
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<!ABSTRACT_MEMBER_NOT_IMPLEMENTED!>class B<!>() : A() {
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<!ABSTRACT_CLASS_MEMBER_NOT_IMPLEMENTED!>class B<!>() : A() {
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override fun foo(): Int {
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super.<!ABSTRACT_SUPER_CALL!>i<!>
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super.fff() //everything is ok
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return super.<!ABSTRACT_SUPER_CALL!>foo<!>() //no error!!
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}
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}
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}
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