Assigning to a nonexistent struct field (`p.q = 2` where Point has no `q`) aborted the compiler with the `.unresolved` LLVM tripwire instead of a source diagnostic (issue 0094). The lvalue field lookup never diagnosed a miss: - `lowerAssignment`'s `.field_access` target left `field_ty = .unresolved` when no struct field matched, then built `ptrTo(field_ty)` and stored — so a pointer-to-`.unresolved` reached LLVM emission and tripped the panic. - `lowerExprAsPtr`'s `.field_access` fallback returned `structGepTyped(obj_ptr, 0, .s64, obj_ty)` on a miss — a silent field-0/`.s64` default that mislowered the lvalue. Both sites now reuse the read path's `emitFieldError` (the exact facility `lowerFieldAccessOnType` uses), so read and write reject identically with `field 'q' not found on type 'Point'`. `lowerExprAsPtr` also resolves union/tagged-union fields via `union_gep` (the old `.s64` fallback was silently standing in for union field access — e.g. `u.a[0] = v`), so that path is fixed, not just made loud. The `types.zig` tripwire is untouched: the fix is to never produce `.unresolved` for a missing-field store. Regression tests: - examples/1145-diagnostics-missing-struct-field-assign.sx — negative, both sites error, exit 1. - examples/0165-types-nested-struct-field-assign.sx — positive, nested struct field write + address-of a matched field still work. - src/ir/lower.test.zig — lowering unit test asserting the field-not-found diagnostic for a missing-field assignment.
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