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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-10953?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
]
Paul King updated GROOVY-10953:
-------------------------------
Description:
The following code runs fine without {{TypeChecked}} but fails in static
checking mode.
{code}
@groovy.transform.TypeChecked
def method() {
def (x, y, z) = 1..3
assert "$x $y $z" == '1 2 3'
}
method()
{code}
The error is:
{noformat}
[Static type checking] - Multiple assignments without list or tuple on the
right-hand side are unsupported in static type checking mode
{noformat}
The workaround is to replace the multi-assignment with:
{code}
def (x, y, z) = [1, 2, 3]
{code}
But since we know the range expression, we can do further checking.
was:
The following code runs fine without {{TypeChecked}} but fails in static
checking mode.
{code}
@groovy.transform.TypeChecked
def method() {
def (x, y, z) = 1..3
assert "$x $y $z" == '1 2 3'
}
method()
{code}
The error is:
{noformat}
[Static type checking] - Multiple assignments without list or tuple on the
right-hand side are unsupported in static type checking mode
{noformat}
{code}
The workaround is to replace the multi-assignment with:
{code}
def (x, y, z) = [1, 2, 3]
{code}
But since we know the range expression, we can do further checking.
> Extend multi-assignment type checking to Range expressions
> ----------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: GROOVY-10953
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-10953
> Project: Groovy
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Reporter: Paul King
> Assignee: Paul King
> Priority: Major
>
> The following code runs fine without {{TypeChecked}} but fails in static
> checking mode.
> {code}
> @groovy.transform.TypeChecked
> def method() {
> def (x, y, z) = 1..3
> assert "$x $y $z" == '1 2 3'
> }
> method()
> {code}
> The error is:
> {noformat}
> [Static type checking] - Multiple assignments without list or tuple on the
> right-hand side are unsupported in static type checking mode
> {noformat}
> The workaround is to replace the multi-assignment with:
> {code}
> def (x, y, z) = [1, 2, 3]
> {code}
> But since we know the range expression, we can do further checking.
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