go/types, types2: clarify Named, Alias, TypeName, Object

Updates #65855
Updates #66890

Change-Id: I167c9de818049cae02f0d99f8e0fb4017e07bea9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/604476
LUCI-TryBot-Result: Go LUCI <golang-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alan Donovan 2024-08-09 15:00:35 -04:00
parent 165bf241f2
commit c208b91395
8 changed files with 120 additions and 20 deletions

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@ -10,11 +10,36 @@ import (
)
// An Alias represents an alias type.
// Whether or not Alias types are created is controlled by the
// gotypesalias setting with the GODEBUG environment variable.
// For gotypesalias=1, alias declarations produce an Alias type.
// Otherwise, the alias information is only in the type name,
// which points directly to the actual (aliased) type.
//
// Alias types are created by alias declarations such as:
//
// type A = int
//
// The type on the right-hand side of the declaration can be accessed
// using [Alias.Rhs]. This type may itself be an alias.
// Call [Unalias] to obtain the first non-alias type in a chain of
// alias type declarations.
//
// Like a defined ([Named]) type, an alias type has a name.
// Use the [Alias.Obj] method to access its [TypeName] object.
//
// Historically, Alias types were not materialized so that, in the example
// above, A's type was represented by a Basic (int), not an Alias
// whose [Alias.Rhs] is int. But Go 1.24 allows you to declare an
// alias type with type parameters or arguments:
//
// type Set[K comparable] = map[K]bool
// s := make(Set[String])
//
// and this requires that Alias types be materialized. Use the
// [Alias.TypeParams] and [Alias.TypeArgs] methods to access them.
//
// To ease the transition, the Alias type was introduced in go1.22,
// but the type-checker would not construct values of this type unless
// the GODEBUG=gotypesalias=1 environment variable was provided.
// Starting in go1.23, this variable is enabled by default.
// This setting also causes the predeclared type "any" to be
// represented as an Alias, not a bare [Interface].
type Alias struct {
obj *TypeName // corresponding declared alias object
orig *Alias // original, uninstantiated alias

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@ -92,6 +92,17 @@ import (
// in its "lineage".
// A Named represents a named (defined) type.
//
// A declaration such as:
//
// type S struct { ... }
//
// creates a defined type whose underlying type is a struct,
// and binds this type to the object S, a [TypeName].
// Use [Named.Underlying] to access the underlying type.
// Use [Named.Obj] to obtain the object S.
//
// Before type aliases (Go 1.9), the spec called defined types "named types".
type Named struct {
check *Checker // non-nil during type-checking; nil otherwise
obj *TypeName // corresponding declared object for declared types; see above for instantiated types

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@ -14,9 +14,15 @@ import (
"unicode/utf8"
)
// An Object describes a named language entity such as a package,
// constant, type, variable, function (incl. methods), or label.
// All objects implement the Object interface.
// An Object is a named language entity.
// An Object may be a constant ([Const]), type name ([TypeName]),
// variable or struct field ([Var]), function or method ([Func]),
// imported package ([PkgName]), label ([Label]),
// built-in function ([Builtin]),
// or the predeclared identifier 'nil' ([Nil]).
//
// The environment, which is structured as a tree of Scopes,
// maps each name to the unique Object that it denotes.
type Object interface {
Parent() *Scope // scope in which this object is declared; nil for methods and struct fields
Pos() syntax.Pos // position of object identifier in declaration
@ -27,6 +33,7 @@ type Object interface {
Id() string // object name if exported, qualified name if not exported (see func Id)
// String returns a human-readable string of the object.
// Use [ObjectString] to control how package names are formatted in the string.
String() string
// order reflects a package-level object's source order: if object
@ -257,7 +264,11 @@ func (obj *Const) Val() constant.Value { return obj.val }
func (*Const) isDependency() {} // a constant may be a dependency of an initialization expression
// A TypeName represents a name for a (defined or alias) type.
// A TypeName is an [Object] that represents a type with a name:
// a defined type ([Named]),
// an alias type ([Alias]),
// a type parameter ([TypeParam]),
// or a predeclared type such as int or error.
type TypeName struct {
object
}

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@ -15,7 +15,10 @@ var lastID atomic.Uint32
// each call, starting with 1. It may be called concurrently.
func nextID() uint64 { return uint64(lastID.Add(1)) }
// A TypeParam represents a type parameter type.
// A TypeParam represents the type of a type parameter in a generic declaration.
//
// A TypeParam has a name; use the [TypeParam.Obj] method to access
// its [TypeName] object.
type TypeParam struct {
check *Checker // for lazy type bound completion
id uint64 // unique id, for debugging only

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@ -13,11 +13,36 @@ import (
)
// An Alias represents an alias type.
// Whether or not Alias types are created is controlled by the
// gotypesalias setting with the GODEBUG environment variable.
// For gotypesalias=1, alias declarations produce an Alias type.
// Otherwise, the alias information is only in the type name,
// which points directly to the actual (aliased) type.
//
// Alias types are created by alias declarations such as:
//
// type A = int
//
// The type on the right-hand side of the declaration can be accessed
// using [Alias.Rhs]. This type may itself be an alias.
// Call [Unalias] to obtain the first non-alias type in a chain of
// alias type declarations.
//
// Like a defined ([Named]) type, an alias type has a name.
// Use the [Alias.Obj] method to access its [TypeName] object.
//
// Historically, Alias types were not materialized so that, in the example
// above, A's type was represented by a Basic (int), not an Alias
// whose [Alias.Rhs] is int. But Go 1.24 allows you to declare an
// alias type with type parameters or arguments:
//
// type Set[K comparable] = map[K]bool
// s := make(Set[String])
//
// and this requires that Alias types be materialized. Use the
// [Alias.TypeParams] and [Alias.TypeArgs] methods to access them.
//
// To ease the transition, the Alias type was introduced in go1.22,
// but the type-checker would not construct values of this type unless
// the GODEBUG=gotypesalias=1 environment variable was provided.
// Starting in go1.23, this variable is enabled by default.
// This setting also causes the predeclared type "any" to be
// represented as an Alias, not a bare [Interface].
type Alias struct {
obj *TypeName // corresponding declared alias object
orig *Alias // original, uninstantiated alias

View File

@ -95,6 +95,17 @@ import (
// in its "lineage".
// A Named represents a named (defined) type.
//
// A declaration such as:
//
// type S struct { ... }
//
// creates a defined type whose underlying type is a struct,
// and binds this type to the object S, a [TypeName].
// Use [Named.Underlying] to access the underlying type.
// Use [Named.Obj] to obtain the object S.
//
// Before type aliases (Go 1.9), the spec called defined types "named types".
type Named struct {
check *Checker // non-nil during type-checking; nil otherwise
obj *TypeName // corresponding declared object for declared types; see above for instantiated types

View File

@ -17,9 +17,15 @@ import (
"unicode/utf8"
)
// An Object describes a named language entity such as a package,
// constant, type, variable, function (incl. methods), or label.
// All objects implement the Object interface.
// An Object is a named language entity.
// An Object may be a constant ([Const]), type name ([TypeName]),
// variable or struct field ([Var]), function or method ([Func]),
// imported package ([PkgName]), label ([Label]),
// built-in function ([Builtin]),
// or the predeclared identifier 'nil' ([Nil]).
//
// The environment, which is structured as a tree of Scopes,
// maps each name to the unique Object that it denotes.
type Object interface {
Parent() *Scope // scope in which this object is declared; nil for methods and struct fields
Pos() token.Pos // position of object identifier in declaration
@ -30,6 +36,7 @@ type Object interface {
Id() string // object name if exported, qualified name if not exported (see func Id)
// String returns a human-readable string of the object.
// Use [ObjectString] to control how package names are formatted in the string.
String() string
// order reflects a package-level object's source order: if object
@ -260,7 +267,11 @@ func (obj *Const) Val() constant.Value { return obj.val }
func (*Const) isDependency() {} // a constant may be a dependency of an initialization expression
// A TypeName represents a name for a (defined or alias) type.
// A TypeName is an [Object] that represents a type with a name:
// a defined type ([Named]),
// an alias type ([Alias]),
// a type parameter ([TypeParam]),
// or a predeclared type such as int or error.
type TypeName struct {
object
}

View File

@ -18,7 +18,10 @@ var lastID atomic.Uint32
// each call, starting with 1. It may be called concurrently.
func nextID() uint64 { return uint64(lastID.Add(1)) }
// A TypeParam represents a type parameter type.
// A TypeParam represents the type of a type parameter in a generic declaration.
//
// A TypeParam has a name; use the [TypeParam.Obj] method to access
// its [TypeName] object.
type TypeParam struct {
check *Checker // for lazy type bound completion
id uint64 // unique id, for debugging only