[swift-dev] [swift-evolution] [Swift 4] Organizing source stability
Chris Lattner
clattner at apple.com
Fri Jul 29 23:13:22 CDT 2016
> On Jul 29, 2016, at 5:55 PM, Jacob Bandes-Storch <jtbandes at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Here are a few thoughts:
> -swift=4
> -swift-version=4
-swift-version seems like the best option to me, but Jordan will have a strong opinion. I think he’s crazy busy with Swift 3 work until late next week.
-Chris
> -language-version=4
> a top-of-file "shebang"-style comment indicating the version, something like //#swift(4), mirroring the "#if swift" syntax
>
> On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 5:27 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at apple.com <mailto:clattner at apple.com>> wrote:
>
>> On Jul 29, 2016, at 5:20 PM, Jacob Bandes-Storch via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>> wrote:
>>
>> Chris writes:
>> - Source stability features: These should be relatively small, but important. For example, we need a “-std=swift3” sort of compiler flag. We may also add a way to conditionally enable larger efforts that are under development but not yet stable - in order to make it easier to experiment with them.
>>
>>
>> I am curious whether the team has thoughts on how to organize the compiler codebase in such a way that new features can be added, and possibly source-breaking changes made, while still keeping the old functionality around.
>>
>> Are any obvious areas that will need refactoring to make this feasible? (Perhaps they could be turned into StarterBugs.)
>
> I think this would be a great thing to do. We need a few things:
>
> - The actual compiler flag. It is worth bikeshedding how it is spelled. “-std=“ is good inspiration, but clearly the wrong specific name.
>
> - The implementation should be straight forward: the flag should get plumbed through to a field in swift::LangOptions. Code that diverges can then check it.
>
> - Handling divergence in the standard library is another big issue. We have some ideas here, but it depends on having the compiler work done anyway to hook into.
>
>> How many versions back would the compiler be expected to support? Should the Swift 5 compiler still support Swift 3 code?
>
> To be determined. Swift 4 should definitely support Swift 3, but Swift 5 perhaps not. We can decide that when Swift 4 is winding down.
>
> -Chris
>
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