commit | 6c8b6f845f4b89a1376103434d1e67943e02f5ab | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Eli Hart <konakid@gmail.com> | Mon May 17 19:37:41 2021 -0700 |
committer | Copybara-Service <copybara-worker@google.com> | Mon May 17 19:38:52 2021 -0700 |
tree | c1df09796a413cef484afceff125b66ea331d839 | |
parent | d2b5e550cc92d01c0014f27d8ec81e26ac9951dc [diff] |
[GH] [Room][Compiler Processing] Add additional type element information ## Proposed Changes Adds an interface function to get element kdoc. Implements this for javac, and uses null for KSP until https://github.com/google/ksp/issues/392 is fixed Also surfaces more XTypeElement information, such as whether the type is a data class, a fun interface, a companion object, etc. I implemented everything exposed in kotlin class metadata that seemed reasonable in order to future proof it a bit. I was not able to implement fun interface checking for KSP since it is not yet surfaced in KSP - https://github.com/google/ksp/issues/393 ## Testing Test: Added cases to XTypeElementTest.modifiers Note, I wasn't able to test the `expect` modifier. First I had to add support for custom compiler arguments so I could enable multiplatform via `"-Xmulti-platform"` but to get the test sources to compile I had to include a `actual` implementation as well, and since both the expected and actual implementations were in the same sources it seems the processor only picks up the actual. Omitting "actual" implementation doesn't work as compilation fails with "no actual implementation found in module", and I'm not sure how to have the compiler processing testing work with multiple module sources. The implementation of the "expect" modifier is very simple so I'm not sure how important the test is. ## Issues Fixed Fixes: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/185672887 This is an imported pull request from https://github.com/androidx/androidx/pull/164. Resolves #164 Github-Pr-Head-Sha: 0bcd0afc8f42c8fb0b7a94a965fe665423e45df1 GitOrigin-RevId: 04f408a71641bc716f10cac4b7b609f7b4e1f501 Change-Id: Ifcf6b7aac73643866034e4bb2e95df81ee997b72
Jetpack is a suite of libraries, tools, and guidance to help developers write high-quality apps easier. These components help you follow best practices, free you from writing boilerplate code, and simplify complex tasks, so you can focus on the code you care about.
Jetpack comprises the androidx.*
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