1 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -std=c2x -fsyntax-only -verify -Wno-unused %s
2 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify=expected,cpp -Wno-unused -x c++ -std=c++17 %s
4 // Test various parsing situations for the Clang extension to _Generic which
5 // accepts a type name instead of an expression as the first operand.
10 // We can parse a simple type name.
11 _Generic(int, int : 0);
13 // We can also parse tag types.
17 _Generic(struct S
, default : 0);
18 _Generic(enum E
, default : 0);
19 _Generic(union U
, default : 0);
21 // We can also parse array types.
22 _Generic(int[12], default : 0);
24 // And pointer to array types, too.
25 _Generic(int(*)[12], default : 0);
27 // We do not accept a parenthesized type name.
28 _Generic((int), int : 0); // expected-error {{expected expression}}
30 // We can parse more complex types as well. Note, this is a valid spelling of
31 // a function pointer type in C but is not a valid spelling of a function
32 // pointer type in C++. Surprise!
33 _Generic(__typeof__(foo())(*)(__typeof__(&foo
)), int (*)(int (*)()) : 0); // cpp-error {{expected expression}} \
34 cpp
-error
{{expected
'(' for function
-style cast
or type construction
}}
36 // C being the magical language that it is, lets you define a type anywhere
37 // you can spell a type.
38 _Generic(struct T
{ int a
; }, default : 0); // cpp-error {{'T' cannot be defined in a type specifier}}
42 template <typename Ty
>
44 template <template <typename
> typename Uy
>
46 typedef typename Uy
<Ty
>::type foo
;
50 template <typename Ty
>
56 // Ensure we can parse more complex C++ typenames as well.
57 _Generic(S
<int>::T
<inst
>::foo
, int : 1);
59 // And that the type name doesn't confuse us when given an initialization
61 _Generic(S
<int>::T
<inst
>::foo
{}, int : 1);
64 template <typename Ty
, int N
= _Generic(Ty
, int : 0, default : 1)>
65 constexpr Ty
bar() { return N
; }
67 static_assert(bar
<int>() == 0);
68 static_assert(bar
<float>() == 1);