After this change, optional expected annotations will be compiled to
physical class files on JVM, and stored to metadata on other platforms,
to allow their usages from dependent platform modules. For example:
@OptionalExpectation
expect annotation class A
When compiling this code on JVM, A.class will be produced as if the
class A did neither have the 'expect' modifier, nor had it been
annotated with OptionalExpectation. Note that if there's no actual
annotation class for A, then usages (which can only be usages as
annotation entries) are simply skipped.
Class A will be public from Kotlin's point of view (since it should
be possible to use it in Kotlin sources), but _package-private_ in Java
to disallow its usages outside of the declaring module.
#KT-18882 Fixed
#KT-24617 Fixed
varargs inside annotations will be supported later when
constant evaluation of more complex expressions of unsigned types
will be ready
#KT-24880 In Progress
Previous way to distinguish "primary constructor properties" from other
properties wasn't correct for deserialized properties, because currently
we don't have special information about this in metadata
Namely, check that when one calls a restricted function
the reciever used for that calls is obtained exactly from the enclosing
suspend function
#KT-24859 Fixed
If a type alias is used to reference an object (companion object) as a
qualifier, record FakeCallableDescriptorForTypeAliasObject in
REFERENCE_TARGET. This tells IDE that type alias was used in the file,
thus, if it's imported, such import isn't redundant.
REFERENCE_TARGET is used mostly by IDE and by ClassifierUsageChecker,
which we also have to update to handle qualifiers with
FakeCallableDescriptorForTypeAliasObject in REFERENCE_TARGET.
Rewrite some parts of ClassifierUsageChecker for cleaner interaction.
#KT-21863 Fixed Target versions 1.2.40
Hack: callee expression for when with subject variable is the subject
variable declaration. This solves the problem that all sub-calls in the
expression are implicitly considered to have a single common lexical
scope (and 'when (val x = ...)' introduces a new lexical scope, which
contains 'x').
'Subject.Error' is redundant.
'Subject.None' can be an object.
'Subject#dataFlowValue' can be a lateinit property.
TODO: fix
- parsing local extension properties in 'when' subject
- parsing destructuring declarations in 'when' subject
- non-completed calls in nested 'when' with subject variable
- non-completed calls for subject variable in 'in' pattern
Supported:
- conversion in resolution parts. Also sam-with-receiver is supported automatically
- separate flag for kotlin function with java SAM as parameters
TODO:
- fix overload conflict error when function type is the same byte origin types is ordered
- consider case when parameter type is T, T <:> Runnable
- support vararg of Runnable
[NI] Turn off synthetic scope with SAM adapter functions if NI enabled
if assertions mode is not LEGACY.
This is done since assertions can be disabled (in both compile time and
runtime) and thus, the data flow info is not reliable anymore.
#KT-24529: Fixed
This commits adds a new annotation OptionalExpectation to the standard
library, which is experimental. To enable its usage, either pass
'-Xuse-experimental=kotlin.ExperimentalMultiplatform' as a compiler
argument, or '-Xuse-experimental=kotlin.Experimental' and also annotate
each usage with `@UseExperimental(ExperimentalMultiplatform::class)`
#KT-18882 Fixed