Compared to the old implementation: * In C++, we only recurse into aggregate classes. * Unnamed bit-fields are not printed. * Constant evaluation is supported. * Proper conversion is done when passing arguments through `...`. * Additional arguments are supported and are injected prior to the format string; this directly supports use with `fprintf`, for example. * An arbitrary callable can be passed rather than only a function pointer. In particular, in C++, a function template or overload set is acceptable. * All text generated by Clang is printed via `%s` rather than directly; this avoids issues where Clang's pretty-printing output might itself contain a `%` character. * Fields of types that we don't know how to print are printed with a `"*%p"` format and passed by address to the print function. * No return value is produced. Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, erichkeane, yihanaa Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124221
6.6 KiB
6.6 KiB