| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Apparently ghc-lib-parser's API blew up because the newly induced cyclic
dependency between TcRnTypes and PmOracle pulled in the other half of
GHC into the relevant strongly-connected component.
This patch arranges it so that PmTypes exposes mostly data type
definitions and type class instances to be used within PmOracle, without
importing the any of the possibly offending modules DsMonad, TcSimplify
and FamInst.
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Previously, we had an elaborate mechanism for selecting the warnings to
generate in the presence of different `COMPLETE` matching groups that,
albeit finely-tuned, produced wrong results from an end user's
perspective in some cases (#13363).
The underlying issue is that at the point where the `ConVar` case has to
commit to a particular `COMPLETE` group, there's not enough information
to do so and the status quo was to just enumerate all possible complete
sets nondeterministically. The `getResult` function would then pick the
outcome according to metrics defined in accordance to the user's guide.
But crucially, it lacked knowledge about the order in which affected
clauses appear, leading to the surprising behavior in #13363.
In !1010 we taught the term oracle to reason about literal values a
variable can certainly not take on. This MR extends that idea to
`ConLike`s and thereby fixes #13363: Instead of committing to a
particular `COMPLETE` group in the `ConVar` case, we now split off the
matching constructor incrementally and record the newly covered case as
a refutable shape in the oracle. Whenever the set of refutable shapes
covers any `COMPLETE` set, the oracle recognises vacuosity of the
uncovered set.
This patch goes a step further: Since at this point the information
in value abstractions is merely a cut down representation of what the
oracle knows, value abstractions degenerate to a single `Id`, the
semantics of which is determined by the oracle state `Delta`.
Value vectors become lists of `[Id]` given meaning to by a single
`Delta`, value set abstractions (of which the uncovered set is an
instance) correspond to a union of `Delta`s which instantiate the
same `[Id]` (akin to models of formula).
Fixes #11528 #13021, #13363, #13965, #14059, #14253, #14851, #15753, #17096, #17149
-------------------------
Metric Decrease:
ManyAlternatives
T11195
-------------------------
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The `PmExprEq` business was a huge hack and was at the same time vastly
too powerful and not powerful enough to encode negative term equalities,
i.e. facts of the form "forall y. x ≁ Just y".
This patch introduces the concept of 'refutable shapes': What matters
for the pattern match checker is being able to encode knowledge of the
kind "x can no longer be the literal 5". We encode this knowledge in a
`PmRefutEnv`, mapping a set of newly introduced `PmAltCon`s (which are
just `PmLit`s at the moment) to each variable denoting above
inequalities.
So, say we have `x ≁ 42 ∈ refuts` in the term oracle context and
try to solve an equality like `x ~ 42`. The entry in the refutable
environment will immediately lead to a contradiction.
This machinery renders the whole `PmExprEq` and `ComplexEq` business
unnecessary, getting rid of a lot of (mostly dead) code.
See the Note [Refutable shapes] in TmOracle for a place to start.
Metric Decrease:
T11195
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This patch removes the ping-pong style from HsPat (only, for now),
using the plan laid out at
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow/HandlingSourceLocations (solution
A).
- the class `HasSrcSpan`, and its functions (e.g., `cL` and `dL`), are introduced
- some instances of `HasSrcSpan` are introduced
- some constructors `L` are replaced with `cL`
- some patterns `L` are replaced with `dL->L` view pattern
- some type annotation are necessarily updated (e.g., `Pat p` --> `Pat (GhcPass p)`)
Phab diff: D5036
Trac Issues #15495
Updates haddock submodule
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Allow the user to explicitly bind type/kind variables in type and data
family instances (including associated instances), closed type family
equations, and RULES pragmas. Follows the specification of GHC
Proposal 0007, also fixes #2600. Advised by Richard Eisenberg.
This modifies the Template Haskell AST -- old code may break!
Other Changes:
- convert HsRule to a record
- make rnHsSigWcType more general
- add repMaybe to DsMeta
Includes submodule update for Haddock.
Test Plan: validate
Reviewers: goldfire, bgamari, alanz
Subscribers: simonpj, RyanGlScott, goldfire, rwbarton,
thomie, mpickering, carter
GHC Trac Issues: #2600, #14268
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4894
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Currently, we parse both the **integral literal** value and the patterns
as `OverLit HsIntegral`. For example:
```
case 0::Int of
0 -> putStrLn "A"
1 -> putStrLn "B"
_ -> putStrLn "C"
```
When checking the exhaustiveness of pattern matching, we translate the
`0` in value position as `PmOLit`, but translate the `0` and `1` in
pattern position as `PmSLit`. The inconsistency leads to the failure of
`eqPmLit` to detect the equality and report warning of "Pattern match is
redundant" on pattern `0`, as reported in #14546. In this patch we
remove the specialization of `OverLit` patterns, and keep the overloaded
number literal in pattern as it is to maintain the consistency. Now we
can capture the exhaustiveness of pattern `0` and the redundancy of
pattern `1` and `_`.
For **string literals**, we parse the string literals as `HsString`.
When `OverloadedStrings` is enabled, it further be turned as `HsOverLit
HsIsString`, whether it's type is `String` or not. For example:
```
case "foo" of
"foo" -> putStrLn "A"
"bar" -> putStrLn "B"
"baz" -> putStrLn "C"
```
Previously, the overloaded string values are translated to `PmOLit` and
the non-overloaded string values are translated to `PmSLit`. However the
string patterns, both overloaded and non-overloaded, are translated to
list of characters. The inconsistency leads to wrong warnings about
redundant and non-exhaustive pattern matching warnings, as reported
in #14546.
In order to catch the redundant pattern in following case:
```
case "foo" of
('f':_) -> putStrLn "A"
"bar" -> putStrLn "B"
```
In this patch, we translate non-overloaded string literals, both in
value position and pattern position, as list of characters. For
overloaded string literals, we only translate it to list of characters
only when it's type is `stringTy`, since we know nothing about the
`toString` methods. But we know that if two overloaded strings are
syntax equal, then they are equal. Then if it's type is not `stringTy`,
we just translate it to `PmOLit`. We can still capture the
exhaustiveness of pattern `"foo"` and the redundancy of pattern `"bar"`
and `"baz"` in the following code:
```
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
main = do
case "foo" of
"foo" -> putStrLn "A"
"bar" -> putStrLn "B"
"baz" -> putStrLn "C"
```
Test Plan: make test TEST="T14546"
Reviewers: bgamari, simonpj
Reviewed By: bgamari, simonpj
Subscribers: simonpj, thomie, carter
GHC Trac Issues: #14546
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4571
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Poor DPH and its vectoriser have long been languishing; sadly it seems there is
little chance that the effort will be rekindled. Every few years we discuss
what to do with this mass of code and at least once we have agreed that it
should be archived on a branch and removed from `master`. Here we do just that,
eliminating heaps of dead code in the process.
Here we drop the ParallelArrays extension, the vectoriser, and the `vector` and
`primitive` submodules.
Test Plan: Validate
Reviewers: simonpj, simonmar, hvr, goldfire, alanz
Reviewed By: simonmar
Subscribers: goldfire, rwbarton, thomie, mpickering, carter
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4761
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The following commits were reverted prior to the release of GHC 8.4.1,
because the time to derive Data instances was too long [1].
438dd1cbba13d35f3452b4dcef3f94ce9a216905 Phab:D4147
e3ec2e7ae94524ebd111963faf34b84d942265b4 Phab:D4177
47ad6578ea460999b53eb4293c3a3b3017a56d65 Phab:D4186
The work is continuing, as the minimum bootstrap compiler is now
GHC 8.2.1, and this allows Plan B[2] for instances to be used. This
will land in a following commit.
Updates Haddock submodule
[1] https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow/Instances
[2] https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow/Instances#PLANB
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As documented in #14490, the Data instances currently blow up
compilation time by too much to stomach. Alan will continue working on
this in a branch and we will perhaps merge to 8.2 before 8.2.1 to avoid
having to perform painful cherry-picks in 8.2 minor releases.
Reverts haddock submodule.
This reverts commit 47ad6578ea460999b53eb4293c3a3b3017a56d65.
This reverts commit e3ec2e7ae94524ebd111963faf34b84d942265b4.
This reverts commit 438dd1cbba13d35f3452b4dcef3f94ce9a216905.
This reverts commit 0ff152c9e633accca48815e26e59d1af1fe44ceb.
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Further progress on implementing Trees that Grow on hsSyn AST.
See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow
Trees that grow extension points are added for
- Rest of HsExpr.hs
Updates haddock submodule
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: bgamari, shayan-najd, goldfire
Subscribers: goldfire, rwbarton, thomie, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4186
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See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow
Trees that grow extension points are added for
- HsExpr
Updates haddock submodule
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: bgamari, goldfire
Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie, shayan-najd, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4177
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This switches the compiler/ component to get compiled with
-XNoImplicitPrelude and a `import GhcPrelude` is inserted in all
modules.
This is motivated by the upcoming "Prelude" re-export of
`Semigroup((<>))` which would cause lots of name clashes in every
modulewhich imports also `Outputable`
Reviewers: austin, goldfire, bgamari, alanz, simonmar
Reviewed By: bgamari
Subscribers: goldfire, rwbarton, thomie, mpickering, bgamari
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3989
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Summary:
See https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/ImplementingTreesThatGrow
This commit prepares the ground for a full extensible AST, by replacing the type
parameter for the hsSyn data types with a set of indices into type families,
data GhcPs -- ^ Index for GHC parser output
data GhcRn -- ^ Index for GHC renamer output
data GhcTc -- ^ Index for GHC typechecker output
These are now used instead of `RdrName`, `Name` and `Id`/`TcId`/`Var`
Where the original name type is required in a polymorphic context, this is
accessible via the IdP type family, defined as
type family IdP p
type instance IdP GhcPs = RdrName
type instance IdP GhcRn = Name
type instance IdP GhcTc = Id
These types are declared in the new 'hsSyn/HsExtension.hs' module.
To gain a better understanding of the extension mechanism, it has been applied
to `HsLit` only, also replacing the `SourceText` fields in them with extension
types.
To preserve extension generality, a type class is introduced to capture the
`SourceText` interface, which must be honoured by all of the extension points
which originally had a `SourceText`. The class is defined as
class HasSourceText a where
-- Provide setters to mimic existing constructors
noSourceText :: a
sourceText :: String -> a
setSourceText :: SourceText -> a
getSourceText :: a -> SourceText
And the constraint is captured in `SourceTextX`, which is a constraint type
listing all the extension points that make use of the class.
Updating Haddock submodule to match.
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: simonpj, shayan-najd, goldfire, austin, bgamari
Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3609
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This patch adds a new pragma so that users can specify `COMPLETE` sets of
`ConLike`s in order to sate the pattern match checker.
A function which matches on all the patterns in a complete grouping
will not cause the exhaustiveness checker to emit warnings.
```
pattern P :: ()
pattern P = ()
{-# COMPLETE P #-}
foo P = ()
```
This example would previously have caused the checker to warn that
all cases were not matched even though matching on `P` is sufficient to
make `foo` covering. With the addition of the pragma, the compiler
will recognise that matching on `P` alone is enough and not emit
any warnings.
Reviewers: goldfire, gkaracha, alanz, austin, bgamari
Reviewed By: alanz
Subscribers: lelf, nomeata, gkaracha, thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D2669
GHC Trac Issues: #8779
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This commit implements the proposal in
https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/29 and
https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/35.
Here are some of the pieces of that proposal:
* Some of RuntimeRep's constructors have been shortened.
* TupleRep and SumRep are now parameterized over a list of RuntimeReps.
* This
means that two types with the same kind surely have the same
representation.
Previously, all unboxed tuples had the same kind, and thus the fact
above was
false.
* RepType.typePrimRep and friends now return a *list* of PrimReps. These
functions can now work successfully on unboxed tuples. This change is
necessary because we allow abstraction over unboxed tuple types and so
cannot
always handle unboxed tuples specially as we did before.
* We sometimes have to create an Id from a PrimRep. I thus split PtrRep
* into
LiftedRep and UnliftedRep, so that the created Ids have the right
strictness.
* The RepType.RepType type was removed, as it didn't seem to help with
* much.
* The RepType.repType function is also removed, in favor of typePrimRep.
* I have waffled a good deal on whether or not to keep VoidRep in
TyCon.PrimRep. In the end, I decided to keep it there. PrimRep is *not*
represented in RuntimeRep, and typePrimRep will never return a list
including
VoidRep. But it's handy to have in, e.g., ByteCodeGen and friends. I can
imagine another design choice where we have a PrimRepV type that is
PrimRep
with an extra constructor. That seemed to be a heavier design, though,
and I'm
not sure what the benefit would be.
* The last, unused vestiges of # (unliftedTypeKind) have been removed.
* There were several pretty-printing bugs that this change exposed;
* these are fixed.
* We previously checked for levity polymorphism in the types of binders.
* But we
also must exclude levity polymorphism in function arguments. This is
hard to check
for, requiring a good deal of care in the desugarer. See Note [Levity
polymorphism
checking] in DsMonad.
* In order to efficiently check for levity polymorphism in functions, it
* was necessary
to add a new bit of IdInfo. See Note [Levity info] in IdInfo.
* It is now safe for unlifted types to be unsaturated in Core. Core Lint
* is updated
accordingly.
* We can only know strictness after zonking, so several checks around
* strictness
in the type-checker (checkStrictBinds, the check for unlifted variables
under a ~
pattern) have been moved to the desugarer.
* Along the way, I improved the treatment of unlifted vs. banged
* bindings. See
Note [Strict binds checks] in DsBinds and #13075.
* Now that we print type-checked source, we must be careful to print
* ConLikes correctly.
This is facilitated by a new HsConLikeOut constructor to HsExpr.
Particularly troublesome
are unlifted pattern synonyms that get an extra void# argument.
* Includes a submodule update for haddock, getting rid of #.
* New testcases:
typecheck/should_fail/StrictBinds
typecheck/should_fail/T12973
typecheck/should_run/StrictPats
typecheck/should_run/T12809
typecheck/should_fail/T13105
patsyn/should_fail/UnliftedPSBind
typecheck/should_fail/LevPolyBounded
typecheck/should_compile/T12987
typecheck/should_compile/T11736
* Fixed tickets:
#12809
#12973
#11736
#13075
#12987
* This also adds a test case for #13105. This test case is
* "compile_fail" and
succeeds, because I want the testsuite to monitor the error message.
When #13105 is fixed, the test case will compile cleanly.
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Overhaul the Overhauled Pattern Match Checker
* Changed the representation of Value Set Abstractions. Instead of
using a prefix tree, we now use a list of Value Vector Abstractions.
The set of constraints Delta for every Value Vector Abstraction is the
oracle state so that we solve everything only once.
* Instead of doing everything lazily, we prune at once (and in general
everything is much stricter). Hence, an example written with pattern
guards is checked in almost the same time as the equivalent with
pattern matching.
* Do not store the covered and the divergent sets at all. Since what we
only need is a yes/no (does this clause cover anything? Does it force
any thunk?) We just keep a boolean for each.
* Removed flags `-Wtoo-many-guards` and `-ffull-guard-reasoning`.
Replaced with `fmax-pmcheck-iterations=n`. Still debatable what should
the default `n` be.
* When a guard is for sure not going to contribute anything, we treat
it as such: The oracle is not called and cases `CGuard`, `UGuard` and
`DGuard` from the paper are not happening at all (the generation of a
fresh variable, the unfolding of the pattern list etc.). his combined
with the above seems to be enough to drop the memory increase for test
T783 down to 18.7%.
* Do not export function `dsPmWarn` (it is now called directly from
within `checkSingle` and `checkMatches`).
* Make `PmExprVar` hold a `Name` instead of an `Id`. The term oracle
does not handle type information so using `Id` was a waste of
time/space.
* Added testcases T11195, T11303b (data families) and T11374
The patch addresses at least the following:
Trac #11195, #11276, #11303, #11374, #11162
Test Plan: validate
Reviewers: goldfire, bgamari, hvr, austin
Subscribers: simonpj, thomie
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1795
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The idea here is described in [wiki:Typechecker]. Briefly,
this refactor keeps solid track of "synthesis" mode vs
"checking" in GHC's bidirectional type-checking algorithm.
When in synthesis mode, the expected type is just an IORef
to write to.
In addition, this patch does a significant reworking of
RebindableSyntax, allowing much more freedom in the types
of the rebindable operators. For example, we can now have
`negate :: Int -> Bool` and
`(>>=) :: m a -> (forall x. a x -> m b) -> m b`. The magic
is in tcSyntaxOp.
This addresses tickets #11397, #11452, and #11458.
Tests:
typecheck/should_compile/{RebindHR,RebindNegate,T11397,T11458}
th/T11452
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Summary:
In the past the canonical way for constructing an SDoc string literal was the
composition `ptext . sLit`. But for some time now we have function `text` that
does the same. Plus it has some rules that optimize its runtime behaviour.
This patch takes all uses of `ptext . sLit` in the compiler and replaces them
with calls to `text`. The main benefits of this patch are clener (shorter) code
and less dependencies between module, because many modules now do not need to
import `FastString`. I don't expect any performance benefits - we mostly use
SDocs to report errors and it seems there is little to be gained here.
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: bgamari, austin, goldfire, hvr, alanz
Subscribers: goldfire, thomie, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1784
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Summary:
Certain syntactic elements have integers in them, such as fixity
specifications, SPECIALISE pragmas and so on.
The lexer will accept mult-radix literals, with arbitrary leading zeros
in these.
Bring in a SourceText field to each affected AST element to capture the
original literal text for use with API Annotations.
Affected hsSyn elements are
```
-- See note [Pragma source text]
data Activation = NeverActive
| AlwaysActive
| ActiveBefore SourceText PhaseNum
-- Active only *strictly before* this phase
| ActiveAfter SourceText PhaseNum
-- Active in this phase and later
deriving( Eq, Data, Typeable )
-- Eq used in comparing rules in HsDecls
data Fixity = Fixity SourceText Int FixityDirection
-- Note [Pragma source text]
deriving (Data, Typeable)
```
and
```
| HsTickPragma -- A pragma introduced tick
SourceText -- Note [Pragma source text] in BasicTypes
(StringLiteral,(Int,Int),(Int,Int))
-- external span for this tick
((SourceText,SourceText),(SourceText,SourceText))
-- Source text for the four integers used in the span.
-- See note [Pragma source text] in BasicTypes
(LHsExpr id)
```
Updates haddock submodule
Test Plan: ./validate
Reviewers: goldfire, bgamari, austin
Reviewed By: bgamari
Subscribers: thomie, mpickering
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1781
GHC Trac Issues: #11430
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Since GHC 8.1/8.2 only needs to be bootstrap-able by GHC 7.10 and
GHC 8.0 (and GHC 8.2), we can now finally drop all that pre-AMP
compatibility CPP-mess for good!
Reviewers: austin, goldfire, bgamari
Subscribers: goldfire, thomie, erikd
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D1724
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This implements the ideas originally put forward in
"System FC with Explicit Kind Equality" (ICFP'13).
There are several noteworthy changes with this patch:
* We now have casts in types. These change the kind
of a type. See new constructor `CastTy`.
* All types and all constructors can be promoted.
This includes GADT constructors. GADT pattern matches
take place in type family equations. In Core,
types can now be applied to coercions via the
`CoercionTy` constructor.
* Coercions can now be heterogeneous, relating types
of different kinds. A coercion proving `t1 :: k1 ~ t2 :: k2`
proves both that `t1` and `t2` are the same and also that
`k1` and `k2` are the same.
* The `Coercion` type has been significantly enhanced.
The documentation in `docs/core-spec/core-spec.pdf` reflects
the new reality.
* The type of `*` is now `*`. No more `BOX`.
* Users can write explicit kind variables in their code,
anywhere they can write type variables. For backward compatibility,
automatic inference of kind-variable binding is still permitted.
* The new extension `TypeInType` turns on the new user-facing
features.
* Type families and synonyms are now promoted to kinds. This causes
trouble with parsing `*`, leading to the somewhat awkward new
`HsAppsTy` constructor for `HsType`. This is dispatched with in
the renamer, where the kind `*` can be told apart from a
type-level multiplication operator. Without `-XTypeInType` the
old behavior persists. With `-XTypeInType`, you need to import
`Data.Kind` to get `*`, also known as `Type`.
* The kind-checking algorithms in TcHsType have been significantly
rewritten to allow for enhanced kinds.
* The new features are still quite experimental and may be in flux.
* TODO: Several open tickets: #11195, #11196, #11197, #11198, #11203.
* TODO: Update user manual.
Tickets addressed: #9017, #9173, #7961, #10524, #8566, #11142.
Updates Haddock submodule.
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Two changes:
1. Instead of generating constraints of the form (x ~ e) (as we do in
the paper), generate constraints of the form (e ~ e). The term oracle
(`tmOracle` in deSugar/TmOracle.hs) is not really efficient and in the
presence of many (x ~ e) constraints behaves quadratically. For
literals, constraints of the form (False ~ (x ~ lit)) are pretty common,
so if we start with { y ~ False, y ~ (x ~ lit) } we end up givng to the
solver (a) twice as many constraints as we need and (b) half of them
trigger the solver's weakness. This fixes #11160.
2. Treat two overloaded literals that look different as different. This
is not entirely correct but it is what both the previous and the current
check did. I had the ambitious plan to do the *right thing* (equality
between overloaded literals is undecidable in the general case) and just
use this assumption when issuing the warnings. It seems to generate much
more constraints than I expected (breaks #11161) so I just do it
immediately now instead of generating everything and filtering
afterwards.
Even if it is not (strictly speaking) correct, we have the following:
* Gives the "expected" warnings (the ones Ocaml or the previous
algorithm would give) and,
* Most importantly, it is safe. Unless a catch-all clause exists, a
match against literals is always non-exhaustive. So, effectively
this affects only what is shown to the user (and, evidently,
performance!).
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This patch adresses several problems concerned with exhaustiveness and
redundancy checking of pattern matching. The list of improvements includes:
* Making the check type-aware (handles GADTs, Type Families, DataKinds, etc.).
This fixes #4139, #3927, #8970 and other related tickets.
* Making the check laziness-aware. Cases that are overlapped but affect
evaluation are issued now with "Patterns have inaccessible right hand side".
Additionally, "Patterns are overlapped" is now replaced by "Patterns are
redundant".
* Improved messages for literals. This addresses tickets #5724, #2204, etc.
* Improved reasoning concerning cases where simple and overloaded
patterns are matched (See #322).
* Substantially improved reasoning for pattern guards. Addresses #3078.
* OverloadedLists extension does not break exhaustiveness checking anymore
(addresses #9951). Note that in general this cannot be handled but if we know
that an argument has type '[a]', we treat it as a list since, the instance of
'IsList' gives the identity for both 'fromList' and 'toList'. If the type is
not clear or is not the list type, then the check cannot do much still. I am
a bit concerned about OverlappingInstances though, since one may override the
'[a]' instance with e.g. an '[Int]' instance that is not the identity.
* Improved reasoning for nested pattern matching (partial solution). Now we
propagate type and (some) term constraints deeper when checking, so we can
detect more inconsistencies. For example, this is needed for #4139.
I am still not satisfied with several things but I would like to address at
least the following before the next release:
Term constraints are too many and not printed for non-exhaustive matches
(with the exception of literals). This sometimes results in two identical (in
appearance) uncovered warnings. Unless we actually show their difference, I
would like to have a single warning.
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