Files
kotlin/compiler/testData/codegen/boxWithStdlib/reified/nestedReified.kt
Denis Zharkov 3b2d0b88f3 Supported nested reified parameter declarations
Also switched to using type names as identifiers instead of their
indices
2014-11-27 15:15:04 +04:00

43 lines
1.1 KiB
Kotlin

import kotlin.test.assertEquals
inline fun <reified T, reified R> foo(): Array<String> {
val x = object {
inline fun <reified T1, reified T> bar(): Array<String> = array(
javaClass<T1>().getName(), javaClass<T>().getName(), javaClass<R>().getName()
)
fun f1() = bar<T, R>()
fun f2() = bar<R, T>()
fun f3() = bar<Boolean, T>()
fun f4() = bar<T, Boolean>()
}
val x1 = x.f1()
val x2 = x.f2()
val x3 = x.f3()
val x4 = x.f4()
return array(
x1[0], x1[1], x1[2],
x2[0], x2[1], x2[2],
x3[0], x3[1], x3[2],
x4[0], x4[1], x4[2]
)
}
fun box(): String {
val result = foo<Double, Int>()
val expected = array(
"java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer", "java.lang.Integer",
"java.lang.Integer", "java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer",
"java.lang.Boolean", "java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Integer",
"java.lang.Double", "java.lang.Boolean", "java.lang.Integer"
)
for (i in expected.indices) {
assertEquals(expected[i], result[i], "$i-th element")
}
return "OK"
}