In early prototypes of interpreter, it was easier to assume that
all classes from Java can be interpreted and fix something if not.
Check for Java declaration was done by checking that the package name is
starting with "java". But this is actually wrong and can lead to errors
when some code is declared in "java" something package, but is not from
Java stdlib.
#KT-60467 Fixed
Earlier we always allowed to interpret `IrGetObjectValue` because
this value is used in const val getter. But now we do a special
check for such getter avoiding visit of `IrGetObjectValue` node.
#KT-59775 Fixed
- Actualize muted K2 tests
- Actualize muted K1 tests with module systems because legacy Wasm test
infra had no respect for "// MODULE: ..." test directives
In this commit we have a lot of change in test data. This was caused
by the way where we evaluate constants. We split constant evaluation
into two distinct parts: only necessary evaluations for `fir2ir`
(like const val and annotations) and optimizations for lowering.
Now we don't do all constant evaluation on `fir2ir`, but IR
dump is executed after this phase, so test data changed.
#KT-58923
This way we achieve faster compilation time. We want to traverse
IR tree as little as possible. If we add new checker than the time
to evaluate constants basically doubles.
#KT-58923
These two functions apparently are represented in Kotlin as methods
of `kotlin.String`. Because of that we accidentally treated them as
builtins.
To also minimize such cases, added filtration by return type. We are
allowing to interpret only these functions that have primitive or
unsigned return type.
#KT-57028 Fixed
It is not enough to store evaluated constants only by
<startOffset, endOffset> pair. We need to consider case there constant
can be located in different files with the same offset but with
different values.
#KT-57928 Fixed
#KT-57929 Fixed
The compiler should only report diagnostics for
comparisons over builtins and identity-less types,
other incompatibilities should be reported
via inspections.
It's ok that in `equalityChecksOnIntegerTypes`
instead of `EQUALITY_NOT_APPLICABLE_WARNING` we get
`EQUALITY_NOT_APPLICABLE`, because
`ProperEqualityChecksInBuilderInferenceCalls`
is already active by default.
This change also replaces the notion of a representative superclass
with the least upper bound.
This makes complex types like
intersection/flexible transparent to
RULES1-based compatibility checks.
One way to look at it is to think
that this is an automatic way of handling
type parameters: automatic picking of
"interesting" bounds, and checking them against one another.
Note that `TypeIntersector.intersectTypes`
for `Int` and `T` where `T` is a type parameter
may return both `{Int & T}` or `null`
depending on `T`-s bounds. At the same time,
for type parameters `T` and `K` it will
always return `{T & K}`.
`ConeTypeIntersector.intersectTypes`, on the
other hand, will always return `{Int & T}`
irrespectively of the bounds. Meaning, the two
intersectors differ in corner cases.
`lowerBoundIfFlexible` call in `isLiterallyTypeParameter` is backed by
the `equalityOfFlexibleTypeParameters` test.
^KT-35134 #fixed-in-k2
^KT-22499 #fixed-in-k2
^KT-46383 #fixed-in-k2
This change allows to revert adding `WITH_STDLIB` directive
to tests which happened at `a9343aeb`.
Co-authored-by: Alexander Udalov <Alexander.Udalov@jetbrains.com>
This inconsistency is present due to not using the `// WITH_STDLIB`
in the above tests. When K1 creates the enum, it tries to generate
`entries()`, and for that it tries to load `kotlin.enums.EnumEntries`,
but this is actually an unresolved reference. K1 silently swallows it,
and proceeds.
The reason K2 doesn't fail is that in order to generate `entries()` it
simply creates the necessary `ConeClassLikeType` with the desired
`classId` instead of loading the whole `ClassDescriptor`.
The reason we can still observe `$ENTRIES` and `$entries` in K1
is because they are generated during the JVM codegen, and it
only checks if the `EnumEntries` language feature is supported. It
doesn't check if the `entries` property has really existed in IR
(by this time it's expected to have already been lowered to the
`get-entries` function - that's why "has ... existed").
The reason why the codegen doesn't fail when working with
`kotlin.enums.EnumEntries` is because it creates its
own `IrClassSymbol`.
^KT-55840 Fixed
Merge-request: KT-MR-8727
Merged-by: Nikolay Lunyak <Nikolay.Lunyak@jetbrains.com>