a9343aeb7d
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>
19 lines
407 B
Kotlin
Vendored
19 lines
407 B
Kotlin
Vendored
// WITH_STDLIB
|
|
// TARGET_BACKEND: JVM
|
|
// IGNORE_BACKEND_K2: JVM_IR
|
|
// K2 status: declaringClass is error for enums since Kotlin 1.9
|
|
// LANGUAGE: -ProhibitEnumDeclaringClass
|
|
|
|
package test
|
|
|
|
enum class KEnum { A }
|
|
|
|
fun test(e: KEnum): String {
|
|
return e.declaringClass.toString()
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fun box(): String {
|
|
val result = test(KEnum.A)
|
|
return if (result == "class test.KEnum") "OK" else "fail: $result"
|
|
}
|