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[compiler] Track refs through object expressions and property lookups #30821
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Summary: This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both. The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it. [ghstack-poisoned]
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mvitousek
added a commit
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Aug 27, 2024
Summary: This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both. The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it. ghstack-source-id: fdfd7c8c8ef1391249d91560a1f5cc5b685050a6 Pull Request resolved: #30821
josephsavona
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Aug 27, 2024
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awesome!!
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if (isRefValueType(place.identifier)) { | ||
state.refValues.set(place.identifier.id, null); | ||
} |
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this should never occur but yeah, makes sense
…rty lookups" Summary: This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both. The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it. [ghstack-poisoned]
mvitousek
added a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Aug 27, 2024
Summary: This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both. The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it. ghstack-source-id: 5c6fcb895d4a1658ce9dddec286aad3a57a4c9f1 Pull Request resolved: #30821
mvitousek
added a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Aug 27, 2024
Summary: This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both. The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it. ghstack-source-id: 5c6fcb895d4a1658ce9dddec286aad3a57a4c9f1 Pull Request resolved: #30821
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Stack from ghstack (oldest at bottom):
Summary:
This addresses the issue of the compiler being overly restrictive about refs escaping into object expressions. Rather than erroring whenever a ref flows into an object, we will now treat the object itself as a ref, and apply the same escape rules to it. Whenever we look up a property from a ref value, we now don't know whether that value is itself a ref or a ref value, so we assume it's both.
The same logic applies to ref-accessing functions--if such a function is stored in an object, we'll propagate that property to the object itself and any properties looked up from it.