The root problem is the fact that ConstantExpressionEvaluator returns
null for values such as infinity and NaN loaded from cls psi (see
IDEA-207252). This commit simply reverts a part of 8ab9226805 where we
started to compute default values more often than needed. In
LazyJavaClassMemberScope, we only need to check whether or not there
_is_ a default value, not compute its value.
#KT-29792 Fixed
Most of these tests used this directive as a way to opt in to a new
language feature, and most of those features are already stable for a
long time, so no opt-in is needed. Some other tests used the directive
to opt out from a language feature, replace those by the `LANGUAGE`
directive. One test used the directive to test behavior that actually
depended on the API version; use `API_VERSION` directive there instead.
See how we translate raw types to Kotlin model:
RawType(A) = A<ErasedUpperBound(T1), ...>
ErasedUpperBound(T : G<t>) = G<*> // UpperBound(T) is a type G<t> with arguments
ErasedUpperBound(T : A) = A // UpperBound(T) is a type A without arguments
ErasedUpperBound(T : F) = UpperBound(F) // UB(T) is another type parameter F
Stack overflow happens with the following classes:
class A<X extends B> // NB: raw type B in upper bound
class B<Y extends A> // NB: raw type A in upper bound
when calculating raw type for A, we start calculate ErasedUpperBound(Y),
thus starting calculating raw type for B => ErasedUpperBound(X) => RawType(A),
so we have SOE here.
The problem is that we calculating the arguments for these raw types eagerly,
while from the definition of ErasedUpperBound(Y) we only need a type constructor
of raw type B (and the number of parameters), we don't use its arguments.
The solution is to make arguments calculating for raw types lazy
#KT-16528 Fixed
It works only for Java methods and it's purpose is Java overridability rules emulation,
namely distinction of primitive types and their wrappers.
For example `void foo(Integer x)` should not be an override for `void foo(int x)`
#KT-11440 Fixed
#KT-11389 Fixed