globalInitValue had no unary_op arm, so g : s64 = -1; fell into the catch-all 'must be initialized by a compile-time constant' even though constExprValue already folds negate(literal) for the module-const identifier route. The new arm routes through constExprValue and applies the direct-literal rules to the folded value: checkIntLiteralFits on ints (g : s8 = -300 gets the range diagnostic), and a negated float at an integer global narrows only when integral (-4.0 folds to -4, -4.5 errors). Binary-op initializers keep the specific non-constant diagnostic. Regression: examples/0175-types-negative-literal-global.sx.
17 lines
552 B
Plaintext
17 lines
552 B
Plaintext
// A negated literal is a compile-time constant for a global initializer:
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// ints serialize directly, an integral negative float narrows into an
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// integer global (non-integral errors), and boundary values fit exactly.
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// Out-of-range negatives get the literal fits-check, not "non-constant".
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// Regression (issue 0113): `g : s64 = -1;` was rejected as not a
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// compile-time constant (globalInitValue had no unary_op arm).
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#import "modules/std.sx";
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g1 : s64 = -1;
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g2 : s64 = -4.0;
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g3 : s8 = -128;
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main :: () {
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print("{} {} {}\n", g1, g2, g3);
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}
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