Index: pkg/dev_compiler/tool/input_sdk/lib/core/annotations.dart |
diff --git a/pkg/dev_compiler/tool/input_sdk/lib/core/annotations.dart b/pkg/dev_compiler/tool/input_sdk/lib/core/annotations.dart |
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-// Copyright (c) 2013, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file |
-// for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a |
-// BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
- |
-part of dart.core; |
- |
-/** |
- * The annotation `@Deprecated('expires when')` marks a feature as deprecated. |
- * |
- * The annotation `@deprecated` is a shorthand for deprecating until |
- * an unspecified "next release". |
- * |
- * The intent of the `@Deprecated` annotation is to inform users of a feature |
- * that they should change their code, even if it is currently still working |
- * correctly. |
- * |
- * A deprecated feature is scheduled to be removed at a later time, possibly |
- * specified as the "expires" field of the annotation. |
- * This means that a deprecated feature should not be used, or code using it |
- * will break at some point in the future. If there is code using the feature, |
- * that code should be rewritten to not use the deprecated feature. |
- * |
- * A deprecated feature should document how the same effect can be achieved, |
- * so the programmer knows how to rewrite the code. |
- * |
- * The `@Deprecated` annotation applies to libraries, top-level declarations |
- * (variables, getters, setters, functions, classes and typedefs), |
- * class-level declarations (variables, getters, setters, methods, operators or |
- * constructors, whether static or not), named optional arguments and |
- * trailing optional positional parameters. |
- * |
- * Deprecation is transitive: |
- * |
- * - If a library is deprecated, so is every member of it. |
- * - If a class is deprecated, so is every member of it. |
- * - If a variable is deprecated, so are its implicit getter and setter. |
- * |
- * |
- * A tool that processes Dart source code may report when: |
- * |
- * - the code imports a deprecated library. |
- * - the code exports a deprecated library, or any deprecated member of |
- * a non-deprecated library. |
- * - the code refers statically to a deprecated declaration. |
- * - the code dynamically uses a member of an object with a statically known |
- * type, where the member is deprecated on the static type of the object. |
- * - the code dynamically calls a method with an argument where the |
- * corresponding optional parameter is deprecated on the object's static type. |
- * |
- * |
- * If the deprecated use is inside a library, class or method which is itself |
- * deprecated, the tool should not bother the user about it. |
- * A deprecated feature is expected to use other deprecated features. |
- */ |
-class Deprecated { |
- /** |
- * A description of when the deprecated feature is expected to be retired. |
- */ |
- final String expires; |
- |
- /** |
- * Create a deprecation annotation which specifies the expiration of the |
- * annotated feature. |
- * |
- * The [expires] argument should be readable by programmers, and should state |
- * when an annotated feature is expected to be removed. |
- * This can be specified, for example, as a date, as a release number, or |
- * as relative to some other change (like "when bug 4418 is fixed"). |
- */ |
- const Deprecated(String expires) : this.expires = expires; |
- |
- String toString() => "Deprecated feature. Will be removed $expires"; |
-} |
- |
-class _Override { |
- const _Override(); |
-} |
- |
-/** |
- * Marks a feature as [Deprecated] until the next release. |
- */ |
-const Deprecated deprecated = const Deprecated("next release"); |
- |
-/** |
- * The annotation `@override` marks an instance member as overriding a |
- * superclass member with the same name. |
- * |
- * The annotation applies to instance methods, getters and setters, and to |
- * instance fields, where it means that the implicit getter and setter of the |
- * field is marked as overriding, but the field itself is not. |
- * |
- * The intent of the `@override` notation is to catch situations where a |
- * superclass renames a member, and an independent subclass which used to |
- * override the member, could silently continue working using the |
- * superclass implementation. |
- * |
- * The editor, or a similar tool aimed at the programmer, may report if no |
- * declaration of an annotated member is inherited by the class from either a |
- * superclass or an interface. |
- * |
- * Use the `@override` annotation judiciously and only for methods where |
- * the superclass is not under the programmer's control, the superclass is in a |
- * different library or package, and it is not considered stable. |
- * In any case, the use of `@override` is optional. |
- * |
- * For example, the annotation is intentionally not used in the Dart platform |
- * libraries, since they only depend on themselves. |
- */ |
-const Object override = const _Override(); |
- |
-class _Proxy { |
- const _Proxy(); |
-} |
- |
-/** |
- * The annotation `@proxy` marks a class as implementing members dynamically |
- * through `noSuchMethod`. |
- * |
- * The annotation applies to any class. It is inherited by subclasses from both |
- * superclass and interfaces. |
- * |
- * If a class is annotated with `@proxy`, or it implements any class that is |
- * annotated, then the class is considered to implement any member with regard |
- * to static type analysis. |
- * As such, it is not a static type warning to access any member of the object |
- * which is not implemented by the class, or to call a method with a different |
- * number of parameters than it is declared with. |
- * |
- * The annotation does not change which classes the annotated class implements, |
- * and does not prevent static warnings for assigning an object to a variable |
- * with a static type not implemented by the object. |
- * |
- * The suppression of warnings only affect static type warnings about |
- * member access. |
- * The runtime type of the object is unaffected. |
- * It is not considered to implement any special interfaces, |
- * so assigning it to a typed variable may fail in checked mode, |
- * and testing it with the `is` operator |
- * will only return true for types it actually implements or extends. |
- * Accessing a member which isn't implemented by the class |
- * will cause the `noSuchMethod` method to be called normally, |
- * the `@proxy` annotation merely states the intent to handle (some of) those |
- * `noSuchMethod` calls gracefully. |
- * |
- * A class that marked as `@proxy` should override the `noSuchMethod` |
- * declared on [Object]. |
- * |
- * The intent of the `@proxy` notation is to create objects that implement a |
- * type (or multiple types) that are not known at compile time. If the types |
- * are known at compile time, a class can be written that implements these |
- * types. |
- */ |
-const Object proxy = const _Proxy(); |