The `comptime_args` field of Fn has a clarified purpose:
For generic function instantiations, there is a `TypedValue` here
for each parameter of the function:
* Non-comptime parameters are marked with a `generic_poison` for the value.
* Non-anytype parameters are marked with a `generic_poison` for the type.
Sema now has a `fn_ret_ty` field. Doc comments reproduced here:
> When semantic analysis needs to know the return type of the function whose body
> is being analyzed, this `Type` should be used instead of going through `func`.
> This will correctly handle the case of a comptime/inline function call of a
> generic function which uses a type expression for the return type.
> The type will be `void` in the case that `func` is `null`.
Various places in Sema are modified in accordance with this guidance.
Fixed `resolveMaybeUndefVal` not returning `error.GenericPoison` when
Value Tag of `generic_poison` is encountered.
Fixed generic function memoization incorrect equality checking. The
logic now clearly deals properly with any combination of anytype and
comptime parameters.
Fixed not removing generic function instantiation from the table in case
a compile errors in the rest of `call` semantic analysis. This required
introduction of yet another adapter which I have called
`GenericRemoveAdapter`. This one is nice and simple - it's the same hash
function (the same precomputed hash is passed in) but the equality
function checks pointers rather than doing any logic.
Inline/comptime function calls coerce each argument in accordance with
the function parameter type expressions. Likewise the return type
expression is evaluated and provided (see `fn_ret_ty` above).
There's a new compile error "unable to monomorphize function". It's
pretty unhelpful and will need to get improved in the future. It happens
when a type expression in a generic function did not end up getting
resolved at a callsite. This can happen, for example, if a runtime
parameter is attempted to be used where it needed to be comptime known:
```zig
fn foo(x: anytype) [x]u8 { _ = x; }
```
In this example, even if we pass a number such as `10` for `x`, it is
not marked `comptime`, so `x` will have a runtime known value, making
the return type unable to resolve.
In the LLVM backend I implement cmp instructions for float types to pass
some behavior tests that used floats.
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