:orphan: .. title:: Lexicon .. default-role:: term .. @raise litre.TestsAreMissing This file defines several terms used by the Swift compiler and standard library source code, tests, and commit messages. See also the `LLVM lexicon`_. .. _LLVM lexicon: http://llvm.org/docs/Lexicon.html .. note:: This document uses Sphinx-specific features. If you are viewing this on GitHub, you'll have to use raw mode, or download and build the docs yourself. .. glossary:: archetype A placeholder for a generic parameter or an associated type within a generic context. Sometimes known as a "rigid type variable" in formal CS literature. Directly stores its conforming protocols and nested archetypes, if any. canonical SIL SIL after the `mandatory passes ` have run. This can be used as input to IRGen to generate LLVM IR or object files. Clang importer The part of the compiler that reads C and Objective-C declarations and exposes them as Swift. Essentially contains a small instance of Clang running inside the Swift compiler, which is also used during IRGen. conformance A construct detailing how a particular type conforms to a particular protocol. Represented in the compiler by the ProtocolConformance type at the AST level. See also `witness table`. contextual type 1. The expected type for a Swift sub-expression based on the rest of the statement. For example, in the statement ``print(6 * 9)``, the contextual type of the expression ``6 * 9`` is ``Any``. 2. The type of a value or declaration from inside a potentially generic context. This type may contain `archetypes ` and cannot be used directly from outside the context. Compare with `interface type`. DI (definite initialization / definitive initialization) The feature that no uninitialized variables, constants, or properties will be read by a program, or the analysis pass that operates on SIL to guarantee this. This was `discussed on Apple's Swift blog`__. __ https://developer.apple.com/swift/blog/?id=28 dup From "duplicate". As a noun, refers to another filed issue that describes the same bug ("I have a dup of this"); as a verb, the act of marking a bug *as* a duplicate ("Please dup this to the underlying issue"). Sometimes written "dupe". Pronounced the same way as the first syllable of "duplicate", which for most American English speakers is "doop". existential A value whose type is a protocol composition (including a single protocol and *zero* protocols; the latter is the ``Any`` type). fragile Describes a type or function where making changes will break binary compatibility. See :doc:`LibraryEvolution.rst `. iff "`if and only if`__". This term comes from mathematics. __ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/If_and_only_if interface type The type of a value or declaration outside its generic context. These types are written using "formal" generic types, which only have meaning when combined with a particular generic declaration's "generic signature". Unlike `contextual types `, interface types store conformances and requirements in the generic signature and not in the types themselves. They can be compared across declarations but cannot be used directly from within the context. IUO (implicitly unwrapped optional) A type like Optional, but it implicitly converts to its wrapped type. If the value is ``nil`` during such a conversion, the program traps just as it would when a normal Optional is force-unwrapped. IUOs implicitly convert to and from normal Optionals with the same wrapped type. IWYU (include what you use) The accepted wisdom that implementation files (``.cpp``, ``.c``, ``.m``, ``.mm``) should explicitly ``#include`` or ``#import`` the headers they use. Doing so prevents compilation errors when header files are included in a different order, or when header files are modified to use forward declarations instead of direct includes. LGTM "Looks good to me." Used in code review to indicate approval with no further comments. main module The module for the file or files currently being compiled. mandatory passes / mandatory optimizations Transformations over SIL that run immediately after SIL generation. Once all mandatory passes have run (and if no errors are found), the SIL is considered `canonical `. metatype The type of a value representing a type. Greg Parker has a good explanation of `Objective-C's "metaclasses"`__; because Swift has types that are *not* classes, a more general term is used. We also sometimes refer to a value representing a type as a "metatype object" or just "metatype", usually within low-level contexts like IRGen and LLDB. This is technically incorrect (it's just a "type object"), but the malapropism happened early in the project and has stuck around. __ http://sealiesoftware.com/blog/archive/2009/04/14/objc_explain_Classes_and_metaclasses.html model A type that conforms to a particular protocol. Sometimes "concrete model". Example: "Array and Set are both models of CollectionType". module Has *many* uses in the Swift world. We may want to rename some of them. #1 and #2 are the most common. 1. A unit of API distribution and grouping. The ``import`` declaration brings modules into scope. Represented as ModuleDecl in the compiler. 2. A compilation unit; that is, source files that are compiled together. These files may contain cross-references. Represented as "the main module" (a specific ModuleDecl). 3. (as "SIL module") A container for SIL to be compiled together, along with various context for the compilation. 4. (as "LLVM module") A collection of LLVM IR to be compiled together. Always created in an LLVMContext. 5. A file containing serialized AST and SIL information for a source file or entire compilation unit. Often "swiftmodule file", with "swiftmodule" pronounced as a single word. 6. (as "Clang module") A set of self-contained C-family header files. Represented by a ClangModuleUnit in the Swift compiler, each of which is contained in its own ModuleDecl. For more information, see `Clang's documentation for Modules`__. 7. Shorthand for a "precompiled module file"; effectively "precompiled headers" for an entire Clang module. Never used directly by Swift. See also `module cache`. __ http://clang.llvm.org/docs/Modules.html module cache Clang's cache directory for precompiled module files. As cache files, these are not forward-compatible, and so cannot be loaded by different versions of Clang (or programs using Clang, like the Swift compiler). Normally this is fine, but occasionally a development compiler will not have proper version information and may try to load older module files, resulting in crashes in ``clang::ASTReader``. NFC "No functionality change." Written in commit messages that are intended to have no change on the compiler or library's behavior, though for some this refers to having the *same* implementation and for others merely an *equivalent* one. "NFC" is typically used to explain why a patch has no included testcase, since the Swift project requires testcases for all patches that change functionality. open existential An `existential` value with its dynamic type pulled out, so that the compiler can do something with it. overlay A library that is imported whenever a C library or framework by the same name is imported. The purpose of an overlay is to augment and extend a library on the system when the library on the system cannot be modified. Apple has a number of overlays for its own SDKs in stdlib/public/SDK/. PR 1. "Problem Report": An issue reported in `LLVM's bug tracker`__. See also `SR`. 2. "pull request" __ https://llvm.org/bugs/ primary file The file currently being compiled, as opposed to the other files that are only needed for context. See also `Whole-Module Optimization `. QoI "Quality of implementation." The term is meant to describe not how well-engineered a particular implementation is, but how much value it provides to users beyond a sort of minimum expectation. Good diagnostics are a matter of QoI, as is good unoptimized performance. For example, a comment like "FIXME: QoI could be improved here" is suggesting that there's some sort of non-mandatory work that could be done that would improve the behavior of the compiler--it is not just a general statement that the code needs to be improved. Radar `Apple's bug-tracking system`__, or an issue reported on that system. __ https://bugreport.apple.com raw SIL SIL just after being generated, not yet in a form that can be used for IR generation. See `mandatory passes `. resilient Describes a type or function where making certain changes will not break binary compatibility. See :doc:`LibraryEvolution.rst `. runtime Code that implements a language's dynamic features that aren't just compiled down to plain instructions. For example, Swift's runtime library includes support for dynamic casting and for the Mirror-based reflection. script mode The parsing mode that allows top-level imperative code in a source file. SIL "Swift Intermediate Language". A high-level IR used by the Swift compiler for flow-sensitive diagnostics, optimization, and LLVM IR generation. -sil-serialize-all A mode where all functions in a library are made available for inlining by any client, regardless of access control. Also called "magic performance mode" as a reminder of how this drastically changes compilation. Not guaranteed to work on arbitrary code. SR An issue reported on `bugs.swift.org `_. A backronym for "Swift Report"; really the name is derived from LLVM's idiomatic use of "PR" ("Problem Report") for its bugs. We didn't go with "PR" for Swift because we wanted to be able to unambiguously reference LLVM bugs. stdlib "Standard library". Sometimes this just means the "Swift" module (also known as "swiftCore"); sometimes it means everything in the stdlib/ directory. Pronounced "stid-lib" or "ess-tee-dee-lib". trap A deterministic runtime failure. Can be used as both as a noun ("Using an out-of-bounds index on an Array results in a trap") and a verb ("Force-unwrapping a nil Optional will trap"). type metadata The runtime representation of a type, and everything you can do with it. Like a ``Class`` in Objective-C, but for any type. USR A Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) is a string that identifies a particular entity (function, class, variable, etc.) within a program. USRs can be compared across translation units to determine, e.g., when references in one translation refer to an entity defined in another translation unit. value witness table A runtime structure that describes how to do basic operations on an unknown value, like "assign", "copy", and "destroy". (For example, does copying this value require any retains?) Only conceptually related to a `witness table`. vtable (virtual dispatch table) A map attached to a class of which implementation to use for each overridable method in the class. Unlike an Objective-C method table, vtable keys are just offsets, making lookup much simpler at the cost of dynamism and duplicated information about *non*-overridden methods. witness The value or type that satisfies a protocol requirement. witness table The SIL (and runtime) representation of a `conformance`; essentially a `vtable ` but for a protocol instead of a class. Only conceptually related to a `value witness table`. WMO (whole-module optimization) A compilation mode where all files in a module are compiled in a single process. In this mode there is no `primary file`; all files are parsed, type-checked, and optimized together at the SIL level. LLVM optimization and object file generation may happen all together or in separate threads.