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cmd/compile/internal/syntax: parser to accept ~x as unary expression
Accept ~x as ordinary unary expression in the parser but recognize such expressions as invalid in the type checker. This change opens the door to recognizing complex type constraint literals such as `*E|~int` in `[P *E|~int]` and parse them correctly instead of reporting a parse error because `P*E|~int` syntactically looks like an incorrect array length expression (binary expression where the RHS of | is an invalid unary expression ~int). As a result, the parser is more forgiving with expressions but the type checker will reject invalid uses as before. We could pass extra information into the binary/unary expression parse functions to prevent the use of ~ in invalid situations but it doesn't seem worth the trouble. In fact it may be advantageous to allow a more liberal expression syntax especially in the presence of errors (better parser synchronization after an error). Preparation for fixing #49482. Change-Id: I119e8bd9445dfa6460fcd7e0658e3554a34b2769 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/402255 Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com> Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com> Auto-Submit: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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@ -827,7 +827,7 @@ func (p *parser) unaryExpr() Expr {
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switch p.tok {
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case _Operator, _Star:
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switch p.op {
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case Mul, Add, Sub, Not, Xor:
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case Mul, Add, Sub, Not, Xor, Tilde:
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x := new(Operation)
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x.pos = p.pos()
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x.Op = p.op
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@ -65,15 +65,17 @@ func _[_ t[t] | t[t]]() {}
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// Single-expression type parameter lists and those that don't start
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// with a (type parameter) name are considered array sizes.
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// The term must be a valid expression (it could be a type - and then
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// a type-checker will complain - but we don't allow ~ in the expr).
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// The term must be a valid expression (it could be a type incl. a
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// tilde term) but the type-checker will complain.
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type (
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_[t] t
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_[/* ERROR unexpected ~ */ ~t] t
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_[t|t] t
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_[/* ERROR unexpected ~ */ ~t|t] t
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_[t| /* ERROR unexpected ~ */ ~t] t
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_[/* ERROR unexpected ~ */ ~t|~t] t
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// These are invalid and the type-checker will complain.
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_[~t] t
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_[~t|t] t
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_[t|~t] t
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_[~t|~t] t
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)
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type (
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@ -208,6 +208,12 @@ func (check *Checker) unary(x *operand, e *syntax.Operation) {
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x.typ = ch.elem
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check.hasCallOrRecv = true
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return
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case syntax.Tilde:
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// Provide a better error position and message than what check.op below could do.
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check.error(e, "cannot use ~ outside of interface or type constraint")
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x.mode = invalid
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return
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}
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if !check.op(unaryOpPredicates, x, e.Op) {
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@ -178,3 +178,10 @@ func _() {
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_ = -g /* ERROR 2-valued g */ ()
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_ = <-g /* ERROR 2-valued g */ ()
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}
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// ~ is accepted as unary operator only permitted in interface type elements
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var (
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_ = ~ /* ERROR cannot use ~ outside of interface or type constraint */ 0
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_ = ~ /* ERROR cannot use ~ outside of interface or type constraint */ "foo"
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_ = ~ /* ERROR cannot use ~ outside of interface or type constraint */ i0
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)
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@ -22,4 +22,4 @@ type _[P /* ERROR non-function P */ (*int)] int
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type _[P *struct /* ERROR "not an expression" */ {}| int /* ERROR "not an expression" */ ] struct{}
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// The following fails to parse, due to the '~'
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type _[P *struct /* ERROR "not an expression" */ {}|~ /* ERROR "unexpected ~" */ int] struct{}
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type _[P *struct /* ERROR "not an expression" */ {}|~int /* ERROR "not an expression" */ ] struct{}
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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
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package p
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func _(x int) {
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_ = ~x // ERROR "unexpected ~"
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_ = ~x // unary ~ permitted but the type-checker will complain
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}
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func _(x int) {
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