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Posted to notifications@groovy.apache.org by "ASF GitHub Bot (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2016/10/07 15:04:20 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (GROOVY-7909) Calling parents method from trait using Parent.super.method() fail depending on trait declaration order

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-7909?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15555320#comment-15555320 ] 

ASF GitHub Bot commented on GROOVY-7909:
----------------------------------------

Github user jwagenleitner commented on a diff in the pull request:

    https://github.com/apache/groovy/pull/432#discussion_r82406821
  
    --- Diff: src/test/groovy/bugs/Groovy7909Bug.groovy ---
    @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
    +package groovy.bugs
    --- End diff --
    
    Could you add the license header to this file, should be able to grab it from another file in the same package.


> Calling parents method from trait using Parent.super.method() fail depending on trait declaration order
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: GROOVY-7909
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-7909
>             Project: Groovy
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Compiler
>    Affects Versions: 2.4.7
>         Environment: Grails 3.1.9
>            Reporter: Sébastien Collin
>            Priority: Critical
>
> I'm using trait for multiple inheritance and I faced an issue when compiling my project (using Grails 3.1.9, so with the gradle task CompileGroovy).
> My traits are sharing a common method ({{def method()}}) and I'm referencing parent's version through ParentClassName.super.method()
> I'm seeing this error:
> {quote}
> > BUG! exception in phase 'semantic analysis' in source unit 'xxx.groovy' ClassNode#getTypeClass for YYY is called before the type class is set
> {quote}
> When testing different cases it seems that this problem appears because classes are not compiled in the right order.
> For example, a script with 
> {code}
> trait Three implements One, Two {
>     def postMake() {
>         One.super.postMake()
>         Two.super.postMake()
>         println "Three"
>     }
> }
> trait One {
>     def postMake() { println "One"}
> }
> trait Two {
>     def postMake() { println "Two"}
> }
> class Four implements Three {
>     def make() {
>         Three.super.postMake()
>         println "All done?"
>     }
> }
> Four f = new Four()
> f.make()
> {code}
> will fail, whereas putting Three method after One and Two will succeed.
> Beside, keeping this trait's declaration order but changing method names to be unique (and removing {{XXX.super}}) will compile and execute correctly.
> I hope I'm clear enough...



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