wreck.mtv=; cat x.go
package main
var x = string.Split()
wreck.mtv=; 6g x.go
x.go:2: type string used as expression
x.go:2: undefined DOT Split on string
x.go:3: illegal types for operand: AS
undefined
wreck.mtv=;
BUG=1938751
R=ken
OCL=30766
CL=30766
do not bother warning about marks left
on stack after syntax errors.
leave OCONV nodes in tree to avoid type errors
arising from multiple walks.
R=ken
OCL=30639
CL=30662
likely to go back to registers for most temporaries.
most tests in lib pass. these fail:
datafmt
fmt
go/scanner
log
reflect
strconv
template
R=ken
OCL=29896
CL=29898
* conversions all in one place.
* no separate load, store phases;
direct memory addressing when possible
(this is the x86 after all!).
avoids extra registers, extra MOVQs.
* fixes int32 -> uint64 bug
(was zero-extending)
R=ken
OCL=29482
CL=29484
structtype{a:1, a:2}
maptypetype{"xx":1, "xx":2}
arraytypetype{5:1, 5:2}
2. bug in registerization concerning
alias of a struct and one of its elements
3. code optimization of struct.field
(which exposed bug in 2)
R=r
OCL=29315
CL=29315
this is not a user-visible change.
before, all interface values were
struct Itype {
Sigt *type;
Sigi *inter;
void *method[n];
}
struct Iface {
void *addr;
Itype *itype;
}
the itype is basically a vtable, but it's unnecessary
if the static type is interface{ }.
for interface values with static type empty, the
new representation is
struct Eface {
void *addr;
Sigt *type;
}
this complicates the code somewhat, but
it reduces the number of Itypes that
have to be computed and cached,
it opens up opportunities to avoid function
calls in a few common cases,
and it will make it possible to lay out
interface{} values at compile time,
which i think i'll need for the new reflection.
R=ken
OCL=28701
CL=29121
with method m, s.m() is ok and m now shows up
in s's method set for interface runtime.
see http://cl/28419-p2 for new test interface10.go.
R=ken
OCL=28420
CL=28423
store only the original import path string (+ .a)
if 6g resolves it to an archive file.
let 6l re-resolve the .a at link time.
this lets libraries build against an archive
in the current directory but get used
against an installed archive.
R=r
OCL=27244
CL=27244
was copying a bit too much about t into n,
like whether the signature was queued to be printed.
(bug reported by anton)
was also editing t, meaning you could do
type T int;
func (p int) Meth() { }
both fixed.
R=ken
OCL=27052
CL=27052
if T has pointer methods. this is just a heuristic
but it catches the problem robert ran into and
lets me put the larger interface issues aside for
now. found one bug in pretty.
R=ken
OCL=26141
CL=26141
make f(g()) work when g returns multiple
args with names different than f expects.
func swap(a, b int) (c, d int) {
return b, a
}
swap(swap(1,2))
R=ken
OCL=24474
CL=24476
implement hiding lowercase methods m in
signatures by adding in a hash of the package name
to the type hash code.
remove remaining checks for internally-generated _ names:
they are all gone.
R=ken
OCL=23236
CL=23238