In type position, parentheses now mirror value position: (T) (a single unnamed element, no trailing comma) is a GROUPING that resolves to the inner type; (T,) is a 1-tuple; (A, B) a 2-tuple; named (x: T) and spread (..Ts) stay tuples; (...) -> R stays a function type. This lets a closure/optional/function type be parenthesized for readability without silently becoming a 1-tuple: [1](Closure(i64,i64) -> i64) // array of closures (issue 0177) -> 7 ?(?i64) // genuine nested optional (issue 0165 intent) Parser: src/parser.zig returns the inner node for a single unnamed non-spread no-trailing-comma parenthesized type. formatTypeName (both generic.zig diagnostics + types.zig reflection) now render a 1-tuple as (T,) so the spelling is unambiguous and diagnostics are self-consistent. The 0165 coerce/stmt note reworded accordingly. specs.md §Type Syntax updated; basic/0036 wrap return -> (i64,); obsolete diagnostic 1195 removed (?(?i64) now compiles); regression examples/types/0201-types-parenthesized-type-grouping.sx added; 0414 .ir golden regenerated for the (T,) rendering. Resolves 0177; updates 0165/0170. Verified by 3 adversarial reviews; suite 792/0.
2.9 KiB
0177 — calling a closure stored in an array element directly (fns[i](args)) crashes / miscompiles
RESOLVED via parenthesized-type grouping. The repro
[1](Closure(i64,i64) -> i64) = .[ add ]was not an array of closures — under the old rule(Closure(...) -> R)was a 1-tuple, so it was an array of 1-tuples andfns[0](...)tried to call a tuple → LLVM "Called function must be a pointer!". Per the user's direction, parentheses in TYPE position are now a GROUPING (mirroring value position):(T)(no trailing comma) resolves to the inner type,(T,)is the 1-tuple. So[1](Closure(...) -> R)is now an array of closures andfns[0](3,4)returns7. (The canonical non-paren[1]Closure(...) -> R = .[ add ]already worked.) Implemented insrc/parser.zig(single unnamed non-spread element, no trailing comma → return the inner type node). Regression:examples/types/0201-types-parenthesized-type-grouping.sx. specs.md §Type Syntax updated. Verified by 3 adversarial reviews; suite 792/0.
Symptom
A closure (or Closure(...)-typed value) stored in an array, called DIRECTLY via
index (fns[i](args)), does not dispatch through the closure ABI: it emits a bare
call_indirect on the whole {fn,env} struct → LLVM "Called function must be a
pointer!" (verify fail) for some return/arg shapes, or returns garbage for others.
Pre-existing (reproduces on master); distinct from issue 0170 (which fixed the
unwrap-through-optional call g!()). Here the callee is a non-optional closure
reached via array index, called directly without unwrap.
Reproduction
#import "modules/std.sx";
add :: (a: i64, b: i64) -> i64 { return a + b; }
main :: () {
fns : [1](Closure(i64, i64) -> i64) = .{ add };
print("{}\n", fns[0](3, 4)); // LLVM "Called function must be a pointer!" — expected 7
}
Expected: 7. Observed: LLVM verification failure (or, for other shapes, garbage
return / f64-arg verify failure).
Investigation prompt
src/ir/lower/call.zig: issue 0170 added closure-vs-fn-pointer dispatch to the
indirect-call catch-all else arm via inferExprType(callee) → .closure →
call_closure. A direct call whose callee is an ARRAY-INDEX expression
(fns[0]) of closure type apparently does not reach that dispatch — either it
takes an earlier call arm that still emits call_indirect, or
inferExprType(index_expr) does not return .closure so the else arm falls to
the fn-pointer path. Trace which arm fns[0](args) lowers through and ensure a
closure-typed callee — regardless of whether it's a bare ident, field access,
index, or call result — dispatches through call_closure (threading env + ctx
via the [ctx, env, user_args] ABI). Compare with the working arr[i]!()
(unwrap) path. Follow the no-silent-fallback rule. Verify: fns[0](3,4) → 7;
array-of-closure with captures; non-i64 returns (void/f64/struct); f64 args.
Add an examples/closures/03xx-array-of-closures-call.sx regression.