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* Embrace -XTypeInType, add -XStarIsTypeVladislav Zavialov2018-06-141-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Summary: Implement the "Embrace Type :: Type" GHC proposal, .../ghc-proposals/blob/master/proposals/0020-no-type-in-type.rst GHC 8.0 included a major change to GHC's type system: the Type :: Type axiom. Though casual users were protected from this by hiding its features behind the -XTypeInType extension, all programs written in GHC 8+ have the axiom behind the scenes. In order to preserve backward compatibility, various legacy features were left unchanged. For example, with -XDataKinds but not -XTypeInType, GADTs could not be used in types. Now these restrictions are lifted and -XTypeInType becomes a redundant flag that will be eventually deprecated. * Incorporate the features currently in -XTypeInType into the -XPolyKinds and -XDataKinds extensions. * Introduce a new extension -XStarIsType to control how to parse * in code and whether to print it in error messages. Test Plan: Validate Reviewers: goldfire, hvr, bgamari, alanz, simonpj Reviewed By: goldfire, simonpj Subscribers: rwbarton, thomie, mpickering, carter GHC Trac Issues: #15195 Differential Revision: https://phabricator.haskell.org/D4748
* Fix #12919 by making the flattener homegeneous.Richard Eisenberg2018-03-261-0/+55
This changes a key invariant of the flattener. Previously, flattening a type meant flattening its kind as well. But now, flattening is always homogeneous -- that is, the kind of the flattened type is the same as the kind of the input type. This is achieved by various wizardry in the TcFlatten.flatten_many function, as described in Note [flatten_many]. There are several knock-on effects, including some refactoring in the canonicalizer to take proper advantage of the flattener's changed behavior. In particular, the tyvar case of can_eq_nc' no longer needs to take casts into account. Another effect is that flattening a tyconapp might change it into a casted tyconapp. This might happen if the result kind of the tycon contains a variable, and that variable changes during flattening. Because the flattener is homogeneous, it tacks on a cast to keep the tyconapp kind the same. However, this is problematic when flattening CFunEqCans, which need to have an uncasted tyconapp on the LHS and must remain homogeneous. The solution is a more involved canCFunEqCan, described in Note [canCFunEqCan]. This patch fixes #13643 (as tested in typecheck/should_compile/T13643) and the panic in typecheck/should_compile/T13822 (as reported in #14024). Actually, there were two bugs in T13822: the first was just some incorrect logic in tryFill (part of the unflattener) -- also fixed in this patch -- and the other was the main bug fixed in this ticket. The changes in this patch exposed a long-standing flaw in OptCoercion, in that breaking apart an AppCo sometimes has unexpected effects on kinds. See new Note [EtaAppCo] in OptCoercion, which explains the problem and fix. Also here is a reversion of the major change in 09bf135ace55ce2572bf4168124d631e386c64bb, affecting ctEvCoercion. It turns out that making the flattener homogeneous changes the invariants on the algorithm, making the change in that patch no longer necessary. This patch also fixes: #14038 (dependent/should_compile/T14038) #13910 (dependent/should_compile/T13910) #13938 (dependent/should_compile/T13938) #14441 (typecheck/should_compile/T14441) #14556 (dependent/should_compile/T14556) #14720 (dependent/should_compile/T14720) #14749 (typecheck/should_compile/T14749) Sadly, this patch negatively affects performance of type-family- heavy code. The following patch fixes these performance degradations. However, the performance fixes are somewhat invasive and so I've kept them as a separate patch, labeling this one as [skip ci] so that validation doesn't fail on the performance cases.