This commit fixes two issues in the existing implementation of translating primitive array types:
* IrType.getArrayElementType throws an exception when the receiver is a primitive array type, because IR expects primitive array types use symbols defined in IrBuiltIns, but fir2ir translation doesn't;
* IteratorNext.toCallable assumes all element types are boxed.
The first issue is fixed by changing the fir2ir type translation to use symbols in IrBuiltIns for primitive array types, and the second by not unboxing primitive types.
Otherwise if Char value is a result of some erased generic call,
coercing it to I (primitive int) causes CCE at run-time.
#KT-23104 Fixed Target versions 1.2.40
When we have some custom implementation of Comparable, it's important
that we compare values exactly as 'lowBound <= a && a <= highBound'.
Make sure that evaluation order and compareTo calls match for
optimized and non-optimized case.
As of Kotlin 1.0 and 1.1, expression 'a in x .. y' is considered
equivalent to 'x.rangeTo(y).a', and should be evaluated in the following
order:
1. x
2. y
3. a
4. compare x with a
5. compare y with a (if needed)
It's safe to upcast integer types to Long,
floating-point types to Double.
So we don't have to create a range instance for cases such as
fun testLongInInt(x: Long, a: Int, b: Int) =
x in a .. b
which is equivalent to
fun testLongInInt(x: Long, a: Int, b: Int) =
x in a.toLong() .. b.toLong()
Provide BoundedValue-based implementation of InExpressionGenerator,
test it on range of comparable values.
Drop unneeded test (range of comparables is already tested by
ranges/contains/inComparableRanges.kt).
There's a subtle difference in behavior between comparing
primitive Float/Double (comparison follows IEEE standard)
and boxed Float/Double (comparison is a total order).
Make sure this corner case is preserved.
This patch mutes the following test categories:
* Tests with java dependencies (System class,
java stdlib, jvm-oriented annotations etc).
* Coroutines tests.
* Reflection tests.
* Tests with an inheritance from the standard
collections.