fixes#23749, refs #22716
`semIndirectOp` is used here because of the callback expressions, in
this case `db.getProc(...)`, and `semIndirectOp` calls `semOpAux` to
type its arguments before overloading starts. Hence it can opt in to
symchoices since overloading will resolve them.
This fixes crashes in some specific network configurations (as
`cstringArrayToSeq` is used extensively in `nativesockets`).
---------
Co-authored-by: Andreas Rumpf <rumpf_a@web.de>
fixes#23742
Before my PR, `setLen(0)` doesn't free buffer if `s != nil`, but it
allocated unnecessary memory for `strs`. This PR rectifies this
behavior. `setLen(0)` no longer allocates memory for uninitialized
strs/seqs
Unlike present Nim this actually fills `Hash` for `string` & related.
For the curious, note that `hashData` remains the aboriginal Nim string
hasher & `import hashes {.all.}` allows simultaneous test/time of {orig,
murmur, farm} on your favorite CPU & back end compiler.
Update tests also conditioned upon `nimPreviewHashFarm` so they should
pass either with or without that `define` on.
In `--jsbigint=on` mode, only the lower 32-bits of `Hash` match nimvm &
run-time values because `type Hash = int` and on JS int=int32, not int64
as for 64-bit Nim platforms. Due to the matching, `const` Table should
match run-time `Table` on all platforms.
To operate in `--jsbigint=off` mode is feasible but needs much "double
precision mul/xor/ror/shr-arithmetic"-style work. That is distracting &
also of questionable value since JS added BigInt in 2018, ringabout
added Nim support for it in 2021 & `nimPreviewHashFarm` is unlikely to
swap from an opt-in to an opt-out default before 2025..2026 which will
have given a backward looking time window of 7..8 years for deployment
platforms - reasonably generous.
Add a changelog entry for 2.2.
fixes#23730
Since #23188 the compiler errors when matching a type variable to an
uninstantiated static value. However sometimes an uninstantiated static
value is given even when only a type match is being performed to the
base type of the static type, in the given issue this case is:
```nim
proc foo[T: SomeInteger](x: T): int = int(x)
proc bar(x: static int): array[foo(x), int] = discard
discard bar(123)
```
To deal with this issue we only error when matching against a type
variable constrained to `static`.
Not sure if the `q.typ.kind == tyGenericParam and
q.typ.genericConstraint == tyStatic` check is necessary, the code above
for deciding whether the variable becomes `skConst` doesn't use it.
fixes#17247
This generates a new NIM_STATIC_ASSERT_AUX variable for each line that
NIM_STATIC_ASSERT is called from.
While this can solve all existing issues in the current code base, this
method is not effective for multiple asserts on a single line.
ref #20653
```nim
Error* = object
case kind*: ErrorType
of ErrorA:
discard
of ErrorB:
discard
```
For an object variants without fields, it shouldn't generate empty
brackets for default values since there are no fields at all in case
branches.
Fix non-exported `setFileSize` to take optional `oldSize` to (on posix)
shrink differently than it grows (`ftruncate` not `posix_fallocate`)
since it makes sense to assume the higher address space has already been
allocated there and include the old file size in the `proc resize` call.
Also, do not even try `setFileSize` in the first place unless the `open`
itself works by moving the call into the `if newFileSize != -1` branch.
Just cosmetics, also improve some old 2011 comments, note a logic diff
for callers using both `mappedSize` & `newFileSize` from windows branch
in case someone wants to fix that & simplify code formatting a little.
fixes#23513
Also, the old `runnableExample` is just a copy of `proc
parseInt(openArray[char], var int, int)` variant (in Line 1000).
---------
Co-authored-by: ringabout <43030857+ringabout@users.noreply.github.com>
fixes#23690
```nim
dest.`:state` = src.`:state`
var :tmp_553651276 = dest.e1.a
`=wasMoved`(dest.e1.a)
dest.e1.a.kind = src.e1.a.kind
case dest.e1.a.kind
of 0:
dest.e1.a.a = src.e1.a.a
of 1:
`=copy`(dest.e1.a.c, src.e1.a.c)
case :tmp_553651276.kind
of 0:
of 1:
`=destroy`(:tmp_553651276.c)
```
`dest.e1.a.kind = src.e1.a.kind` changes the discrimant but it fails to
clear the memory of `dest.e1.a`. Before using hooks for copying, we need
to clear the dest, e.g. `=wasMoved(dest.e1.a.c)`.
```nim
dest.`:state` = src.`:state`
var :tmp_553651276 = dest.e1.a
`=wasMoved`(dest.e1.a)
dest.e1.a.kind = src.e1.a.kind
case dest.e1.a.kind
of 0:
`=wasMoved`(dest.e1.a.a)
dest.e1.a.a = src.e1.a.a
`=wasMoved`(dest.e1.a.b)
of 1:
`=wasMoved`(dest.e1.a.c)
`=copy`(dest.e1.a.c, src.e1.a.c)
case :tmp_553651276.kind
of 0:
of 1:
`=destroy`(:tmp_553651276.c)
```
fixes#10440, fixes#13871, fixes#14665, fixes#19672, fixes#23677
The false positive in #23677 was caused by behavior in
`implicitlyDiscardable` where only the last node of `if`/`case`/`try`
etc expressions were considered, as in the final node of the final
branch (in this case `else`). To fix this we use the same iteration in
`implicitlyDiscardable` that we use in `endsInNoReturn`, with the
difference that for an `if`/`case`/`try` statement to be implicitly
discardable, all of its branches must be implicitly discardable.
`noreturn` calls are also considered implicitly discardable for this
reason, otherwise stuff like `if true: discardableCall() else: error()`
doesn't compile.
However `endsInNoReturn` also had bugs, one where `finally` was
considered in noreturn checking when it shouldn't, another where only
`nkIfStmt` was checked and not `nkIfExpr`, and the node given for the
error message was bad. So `endsInNoReturn` now skips over
`skipForDiscardable` which no longer contains
`nkIfStmt`/`nkCaseStmt`/`nkTryStmt`, stores the first encountered
returning node in a var parameter for the error message, and handles
`finally` and `nkIfExpr`.
Fixing #23677 already broke a line in `syncio` so some package code
might be affected.
Because of the bug in `tools/parse_unicodedata.nim`, CJK Ideographs were
not considered letters in `isAlpha()`, even though they have category
Lo. This is because they are specified as range in `UnicodeData.txt`,
not as separate characters:
```
4E00;<CJK Ideograph, First>;Lo;0;L;;;;;N;;;;;
9FEF;<CJK Ideograph, Last>;Lo;0;L;;;;;N;;;;;
```
The parser was not prepared to parse such ranges and thus omitted almost
all CJK Ideographs from consideration.
To fix this, we need to consider ranges from `UnicodeData.txt` in
`tools/parse_unicodedata.nim`.