Although using-enum's grammar is 'using elaborated-enum-specifier',
the lookup for the enum is ordinary lookup (and not the tagged-type
lookup that normally occurs wth an tagged-type specifier). Thus (a)
we can find typedefs and (b) do not find enum tags hidden by a non-tag
name (the struct stat thing).
This reimplements that part of using-enum handling, to address DR2621,
where clang's behaviour does not match std intent (and other
compilers).
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134283
This implements the 'using enum maybe-qualified-enum-tag ;' part of
1099. It introduces a new 'UsingEnumDecl', subclassed from
'BaseUsingDecl'. Much of the diff is the boilerplate needed to get the
new class set up.
There is one case where we accept ill-formed, but I believe this is
merely an extended case of an existing bug, so consider it
orthogonal. AFAICT in class-scope the c++20 rule is that no 2 using
decls can bring in the same target decl ([namespace.udecl]/8). But we
already accept:
struct A { enum { a }; };
struct B : A { using A::a; };
struct C : B { using A::a;
using B::a; }; // same enumerator
this patch permits mixtures of 'using enum Bob;' and 'using Bob::member;' in the same way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102241