1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186
|
// RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -std=c++11 %s
// New exciting ambiguities in C++11
// final 'context sensitive' mess.
namespace final {
struct S { int n; };
struct T { int n; };
namespace N {
int n;
// These declare variables named final..
extern struct S final;
extern struct S final [[]];
extern struct S final, foo;
struct S final = S();
// This defines a class, not a variable, even though it would successfully
// parse as a variable but not as a class. DR1318's wording suggests that
// this disambiguation is only performed on an ambiguity, but that was not
// the intent.
struct S final { // expected-note {{here}}
int(n) // expected-error {{expected ';'}}
};
// This too.
struct T final : S {}; // expected-error {{base 'S' is marked 'final'}}
struct T bar : S {}; // expected-error {{expected ';' after top level declarator}} expected-error {{expected unqualified-id}}
}
// _Alignas isn't allowed in the places where alignas is. We used to
// assert on this.
struct U final _Alignas(4) {}; // expected-error 3{{}} expected-note {{}}
}
// enum versus bitfield. These are always required to be treated as an
// enum-base, but we disambiguate anyway for better error recovery.
namespace bitfield {
enum E {};
struct T {
constexpr T() {}
constexpr T(int) {}
constexpr T(T, T, T, T) {}
constexpr T operator=(T) const { return *this; }
constexpr operator int() const { return 4; }
};
constexpr T a, b, c, d;
struct S1 {
enum E : T ( a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, 4 ); // expected-error {{ISO C++ only allows ':' in member enumeration declaration to introduce a fixed underlying type, not an anonymous bit-field}}
};
// Enum definition, not a bit-field.
struct S2 {
enum E : T { a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, 4 }; // expected-error {{non-integral type}} expected-error {{expected identifier}}
};
struct S3 {
enum E : int { a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d }; // ok, defines an enum
};
// Ambiguous.
struct S4 {
enum E : int { a = 1 }; // ok, defines an enum
};
// This could be a bit-field, but would be ill-formed due to the anonymous
// member being initialized.
struct S5 {
enum E : int { a = 1 } { b = 2 }; // expected-error {{expected ';' after enum}} expected-error {{expected member name}}
};
// This could be a bit-field.
struct S6 {
enum E : int { 1 }; // expected-error {{expected identifier}}
};
struct U {
constexpr operator T() const { return T(); } // expected-note 2{{candidate}}
};
// This could be a bit-field.
struct S7 {
enum E : int { a = U() }; // expected-error {{no viable conversion}}
};
// This could be a bit-field, and does not conform to the grammar of an
// enum definition, because 'id(U())' is not a constant-expression.
constexpr const U &id(const U &u) { return u; }
struct S8 {
enum E : int { a = id(U()) }; // expected-error {{no viable conversion}}
};
// PR26249: Disambiguate 'enum :' as an enum-base always, even if that would
// be ill-formed. It cannot be an elaborated-type-specifier.
struct S {
enum : undeclared_type { v = 0 }; // expected-error {{unknown type name 'undeclared_type'}}
enum E : undeclared_type { w = 0 }; // expected-error {{unknown type name 'undeclared_type'}}
enum X : undeclared_type { x = 0 }; // expected-error {{unknown type name 'undeclared_type'}}
};
}
namespace trailing_return {
typedef int n;
int a;
struct S {
S(int);
S *operator()(...) const;
int n;
};
namespace N {
void f() {
// This parses as a function declaration, but DR1223 makes the presence of
// 'auto' be used for disambiguation.
S(a)()->n; // ok, expression; expected-warning{{expression result unused}}
S(a)(int())->n; // ok, expression; expected-warning{{expression result unused}}
auto(a)()->n; // ok, function declaration
auto(b)(int())->n; // ok, function declaration
using T = decltype(a);
using T = auto() -> n;
}
}
}
namespace ellipsis {
template<typename...T>
struct S {
void e(S::S()); // expected-error {{is a constructor name}}
void f(S(...args[sizeof(T)])); // expected-note {{here}} expected-note {{here}}
void f(S(...args)[sizeof(T)]); // expected-error {{redeclared}}
void f(S ...args[sizeof(T)]); // expected-error {{redeclared}}
void g(S(...[sizeof(T)])); // expected-note {{here}} expected-warning {{ISO C++11 requires a parenthesized pack declaration to have a name}}
void g(S(...)[sizeof(T)]); // expected-error {{function cannot return array type}}
void g(S ...[sizeof(T)]); // expected-error {{redeclared}}
void h(T(...)); // function type, expected-error {{unexpanded parameter pack}}
void h(T...); // pack expansion, ok
void i(int(T...)); // expected-note {{here}}
void i(int(T...a)); // expected-error {{redeclared}}
void i(int(T, ...)); // function type, expected-error {{unexpanded parameter pack}}
void i(int(T, ...a)); // expected-error {{expected ')'}} expected-note {{to match}} expected-error {{unexpanded parameter pack}}
void j(int(int...)); // function type, ok
void j(int(int...a)); // expected-error {{does not contain any unexpanded parameter packs}}
void j(T(int...)); // expected-error {{unexpanded parameter pack}}
void j(T(T...)); // expected-error {{unexpanded parameter pack}}
void k(int(...)(T)); // expected-error {{cannot return function type}}
void k(int ...(T));
void l(int(&...)(T)); // expected-warning {{ISO C++11 requires a parenthesized pack declaration to have a name}}
void l(int(*...)(T)); // expected-warning {{ISO C++11 requires a parenthesized pack declaration to have a name}}
void l(int(S<int>::*...)(T)); // expected-warning {{ISO C++11 requires a parenthesized pack declaration to have a name}}
};
struct CtorSink {
template <typename ...T> constexpr CtorSink(T &&...t) { }
constexpr operator int() const { return 42; }
};
template <unsigned ...N> struct UnsignedTmplArgSink;
template <typename ...T>
void foo(int x, T ...t) {
// Have a variety of cases where the syntax is technically unambiguous, but hinges on careful treatment of ellipses.
CtorSink(t ...), x; // ok, expression; expected-warning 2{{expression result unused}}
int x0(CtorSink(t ...)); // ok, declares object x0
int *p0 = &x0;
(void)p0;
CtorSink x1(int(t) ..., int(x)); // ok, declares object x1
CtorSink *p1 = &x1;
(void)p1;
UnsignedTmplArgSink<T(CtorSink(t ...)) ...> *t0; // ok
UnsignedTmplArgSink<((T *)0, 42u) ...> **t0p = &t0;
}
template void foo(int, int, int); // expected-note {{in instantiation of function template specialization 'ellipsis::foo<int, int>' requested here}}
}
namespace braced_init_list {
struct X {
void foo() {}
};
void (*pf1)() {};
void (X::*pmf1)() {&X::foo};
void (X::*pmf2)() = {&X::foo};
void test() {
void (*pf2)() {};
void (X::*pmf3)() {&X::foo};
void (X::*pmf4)() = {&X::foo};
}
}
|