If the float can store all possible values of the integer without
rounding, coercion is allowed. The integer's precision must be less than
or equal to the float's significand precision.
Closes#18614
This was caused a `[0]std.builtin.Type.StructField.Attributes` to be
considered `undefined`, even though that type is OPV so should prefer
its OPV `.{}` over `undefined`.
Resolves: #30039
The new builtins are:
* `@EnumLiteral`
* `@Int`
* `@Fn`
* `@Pointer`
* `@Tuple`
* `@Enum`
* `@Union`
* `@Struct`
Their usage is documented in the language reference.
There is no `@Array` because arrays can be created like this:
if (sentinel) |s| [n:s]T else [n]T
There is also no `@Float`. Instead, `std.meta.Float` can serve this use
case if necessary.
There is no `@ErrorSet` and intentionally no way to achieve this.
Likewise, there is intentionally no way to reify tuples with comptime
fields, or function types with comptime parameters. These decisions
simplify the Zig language specification, and moreover make Zig code more
readable by discouraging overly complex metaprogramming.
Co-authored-by: Ali Cheraghi <alichraghi@proton.me>
Resolves: #10710
I had tried unrolling the loops to avoid requiring the
`vector_store_elem` instruction, but it's arguably a problem to generate
O(N) code for an operation on `@Vector(N, T)`. In addition, that
lowering emitted a lot of `.aggregate_init` instructions, which is
itself a quite difficult operation to codegen.
This requires reintroducing runtime vector indexing internally. However,
I've put it in a couple of instructions which are intended only for use
by `Air.Legalize`, named `legalize_vec_elem_val` (like `array_elem_val`,
but for indexing a vector with a runtime-known index) and
`legalize_vec_store_elem` (like the old `vector_store_elem`
instruction). These are explicitly documented as *not* being emitted by
Sema, so need only be implemented by backends if they actually use an
`Air.Legalize.Feature` which emits them (otherwise they can be marked as
`unreachable`).
I started this diff trying to remove a little dead code from the C
backend, but ended up finding a bunch of dead code sprinkled all over
the place:
* `packed` handling in the C backend which was made dead by `Legalize`
* Representation of pointers to runtime-known vector indices
* Handling for the `vector_store_elem` AIR instruction (now removed)
* Old tuple handling from when they used the InternPool repr of structs
* Straightforward unused functions
* TODOs in the LLVM backend for features which Zig just does not support
`std.Io.tty.Config.detect` may be an expensive check (e.g. involving
syscalls), and doing it every time we need to print isn't really
necessary; under normal usage, we can compute the value once and cache
it for the whole program's execution. Since anyone outputting to stderr
may reasonably want this information (in fact they are very likely to),
it makes sense to cache it and return it from `lockStderrWriter`. Call
sites who do not need it will experience no significant overhead, and
can just ignore the TTY config with a `const w, _` destructure.
Renames arePointersLogical to shouldBlockPointerOps for clarity
adds capability check to allow pointer ops on .storage_buffer when
variable_pointers capability is enabled.
Fixes#25638
This allows us to rule out support for certain address spaces based on the OS.
This commit is just a refactor, however, and doesn't actually make use of that
opportunity yet.
Far simpler, because everything which `crash_report.zig` did is now
handled pretty well by `std.debug` anyway. All we want is to print some
context around panics and segfaults. Using the new ability to override
the default segfault handler while still having std handle the
target-specific bits for us, that's really simple.
with field_ptr_load and field_ptr_named_load.
These avoid doing by-val load operations for structs that are
runtime-known while keeping the previous semantics for comptime-known
values.