Protocol method declarations now declare their receiver explicitly as the first parameter — 'self: *Self' (or 'self: Self') — matching the impl method signature, instead of the old implicit-receiver form where the listed params were only the extra args. That asymmetry repeatedly caused confusion over whether the first param was the receiver or an argument. The parser validates the first param is 'self' typed Self/*Self, then strips it, so all downstream lowering and the dispatch ABI are unchanged (impl blocks and call sites are unaffected). A protocol method missing the receiver is now a parse error. Migrated all 129 protocol method signatures across library + examples (+ one inline-sx test in sema.zig) to the explicit form. Updated specs.md + readme.md. New: examples/0418-protocols-explicit-receiver.sx (feature), examples/1190-diagnostics-protocol-missing-receiver.sx (negative/diagnostic).
26 lines
891 B
Plaintext
26 lines
891 B
Plaintext
// Step 2.7 — pack-as-value diagnostics. A pack is comptime-only (Decision 1),
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// so using the bare pack name where a runtime value is required is an error,
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// with a context-tailored suggestion. All four categories below fire (the
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// functions are monomorphized when called from main).
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#import "modules/std.sx";
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Show :: protocol { show :: (self: *Self) -> string; }
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A :: struct {}
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impl Show for A { show :: (self: *A) -> string => "A"; }
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sink :: (v: i64) -> void { _ = v; }
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storage :: (..xs: Show) -> void { y := xs; _ = y; } // A: store
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call :: (..xs: Show) -> void { sink(xs); } // B: pass to a call
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ret :: (..xs: Show) -> i64 { return xs; } // C: return
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iter :: (..xs: Show) -> void { for xs (x) { _ = x; } } // D: runtime iterate
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main :: () -> i32 {
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storage(A.{});
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call(A.{});
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_ = ret(A.{});
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iter(A.{});
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0
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}
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