Contexts that represent macros in-flight, including the current one. Very much like a stack trace, but for macros only. Can be useful for interoperating with other macros and for imposing compiler-friendly limits on macro expansion.
Is also priceless for emitting sane error messages for macros that are called by other macros on synthetic (i.e. position-less) trees. In that dire case navigate the enclosingMacros
stack, and it will most likely contain at least one macro with a position-ful macro application. See enclosingPosition
for a default implementation of this logic.
Unlike openMacros
, this is a val, which means that it gets initialized when the context is created and always stays the same regardless of whatever happens during macro expansion.
Tries to guess a position for the enclosing application. But that is simple, right? Just dereference pos
of macroApplication
? Not really. If we're in a synthetic macro expansion (no positions), we must do our best to infer the position of something that triggered this expansion. Surprisingly, quite often we can do this by navigation the enclosingMacros
stack.
The tree that undergoes macro expansion. Can be useful to get an offset or a range position of the entire tree being processed.
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing class, or EmptyTree if not applicable.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing DefDef tree. Throws EnclosureException
if there's no such enclosing tree.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing ImplDef tree (i.e. either ClassDef or ModuleDef). Throws EnclosureException
if there's no such enclosing tree.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing method, or EmptyTree if not applicable.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing PackageDef tree. Throws EnclosureException
if there's no such enclosing tree.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Compilation run that contains this macro application.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Tree that corresponds to the enclosing Template tree. Throws EnclosureException
if there's no such enclosing tree.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
Compilation unit that contains this macro application.
(Since version 2.11.0) c.enclosingTree-style APIs are now deprecated; consult the scaladoc for more information
© 2002-2019 EPFL, with contributions from Lightbend.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://www.scala-lang.org/api/2.13.0/scala-reflect/scala/reflect/macros/Enclosures.html
EXPERIMENTAL
A slice of the Scala macros context that exposes enclosing trees (method, class, compilation unit and currently compiled macro application), the enclosing position of the macro expansion, as well as macros and implicits that are currently in-flight.
Starting from Scala 2.11.0, the APIs to get the trees enclosing by the current macro application are deprecated, and the reasons for that are two-fold. Firstly, we would like to move towards the philosophy of locally-expanded macros, as it has proven to be important for understanding of code. Secondly, within the current architecture of scalac, we are unable to have c.enclosingTree-style APIs working robustly. Required changes to the typechecker would greatly exceed the effort that we would like to expend on this feature given the existence of more pressing concerns at the moment. This is somewhat aligned with the overall evolution of macros during the 2.11 development cycle, where we played with
c.introduceTopLevel
andc.introduceMember
, but at the end of the day decided to reject them.If you're relying on the now deprecated APIs, consider using the new c.internal.enclosingOwner method that can be used to obtain the names of enclosing definitions. Alternatively try reformulating your macros in terms of completely local expansion and/or joining a discussion of a somewhat related potential language feature at https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/scala-debate/f4CLmYShX6Q. We also welcome questions and suggestions on our mailing lists, where we would be happy to further discuss this matter.