commit | 2905a68e4f6f4104ca42cf56721d6657274c07a3 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Brad Corso <bcorso@google.com> | Wed May 10 13:47:05 2023 -0700 |
committer | Brad Corso <bcorso@google.com> | Sun May 14 20:04:23 2023 -0700 |
tree | d9999469b09e38221c0057e9d744127801e0a29b | |
parent | fa4ce4af842ee12c85b451b2e1d297e10d1a8c32 [diff] |
Fix KSTypeVarianceResolver for type aliases with type parameters. This CL fixes resolution for type aliases with type parameters, e.g. ``` typealias MyAlias<T> = Foo<@JvmSuppressWildcards T, Bar<Baz<T>> ``` This required fixing two main issues. The first issue was that we were incorrectly resolving type aliases with type arguments. In particular, we were replacing the type arguments directly, which only works if the type alias and type have a 1-to-1 type parameter to type argument. For example, `MyAlias<Qux>` would be translated to `Foo<Qux>` rather than `Foo<Qux, Bar<Baz<Qux>>>`. Now, we properly replace the type parameters with its corresponding type argument. The second issue was that we would immediately resolve type aliases when creating a `KspType`, so the information of the type alias definition was not avialable when resolving the type via `KSTypeVarianceResolver`. This meant that we would lose information such as the `@JvmSuppressWildcards` in the type the example above since the type arguments had already been replaced. Now, we keep track of the original type alias in the `KspType` so that we can pass it in when calling `KSTypeVarianceResolver`. In addition, I restructured the `copy*` methods so that we can easily copy a `KspType` without having to duplicate a method in every subtype. Test: KspTypeNamesGoldenTest.kt Change-Id: Iaa300bc140ac3d83db692d7c983cbb8ab3ef28d3
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