If we do, the local variable table will not make sense. As as
example:
```
inline fun foo(getString: () -> String = { "OK" }) {
println(getString())
}
inline fun bar() {
}
fun main() {
bar()
foo()
}
```
leads to the following bytecode:
```
public static final void main();
descriptor: ()V
flags: ACC_PUBLIC, ACC_STATIC, ACC_FINAL
Code:
stack=2, locals=4, args_size=0
0: iconst_0
1: istore_0
2: nop
3: nop
4: iconst_0
5: istore_1
6: nop
7: ldc #53 // String OK
9: astore_2
10: iconst_0
11: istore_3
12: getstatic #30 // Field java/lang/System.out:Ljava/io/PrintStream;
15: aload_2
16: invokevirtual #36 // Method java/io/PrintStream.println:(Ljava/lang/Object;)V
19: nop
20: return
LineNumberTable:
line 9: 0
line 13: 2
line 10: 3
line 14: 4
line 15: 6
line 16: 7
line 17: 19
line 11: 20
LocalVariableTable:
Start Length Slot Name Signature
2 1 0 $i$f$bar I
6 14 1 $i$f$foo I
4 16 0 getString$iv Lkotlin/jvm/functions/Function0;
```
The `getString$iv` local should not be there. It has been inlined away.
Leaving it in the local variable table leads to inconsistent locals
info. Local 0 contains an int but we declare a local of type
Function0.
When we generate call for 'foo', we make decision about invoking
a 'foo$default' too late, after the call arguments are generated.
If 'foo' was an override, and base class (interface) was generic,
'foo' in base class could have a different Kotlin and JVM
signature, so the arguments we generated could be generated wrong
(primitive or inline class values instead of boxes, see KT-38680).
Also, we always selected first base class in supertypes list,
which caused KT-15971.
Look into resolved call and see if we should actually call
'foo$default' instead of 'foo' when determining actual callable.
Overrides can't introduce default parameter values, and
override-equivalent inherited methods with default parameters
is an error in a child class. Thus, if we are calling a class
member function with a default parameters, there should be one
and only one overridden function that has default parameter values
and overrides nothing.
MPP-related:
* inherited from interfaces
* inherited body from interface
* default arguments in an interface, implemented by a class delegate
* super call of a method with default argument
Also:
* inheritance from an interface and another interface descendant (KT-21968)
* inheritance through an intermediate interface