![]() match lowering: expand or-candidates mixed with candidates above This PR tweaks match lowering of or-patterns. Consider this: ```rust match (x, y) { (1, true) => 1, (2, false) => 2, (1 | 2, true | false) => 3, (3 | 4, true | false) => 4, _ => 5, } ``` One might hope that this can be compiled to a single `SwitchInt` on `x` followed by some boolean checks. Before this PR, we compile this to 3 `SwitchInt`s on `x`, because an arm that contains more than one or-pattern was compiled on its own. This PR groups branch `3` with the two branches above, getting us down to 2 `SwitchInt`s on `x`. We can't in general expand or-patterns freely, because this interacts poorly with another optimization we do: or-pattern simplification. When an or-pattern doesn't involve bindings, we branch the success paths of all its alternatives to the same block. The drawback is that in a case like: ```rust match (1, true) { (1 | 2, false) => unreachable!(), (2, _) => unreachable!(), _ => {} } ``` if we used a single `SwitchInt`, by the time we test `false` we don't know whether we came from the `1` case or the `2` case, so we don't know where to go if `false` doesn't match. Hence the limitation: we can process or-pattern alternatives alongside candidates that precede it, but not candidates that follow it. (Unless the or-pattern is the only remaining match pair of its candidate, in which case we can process it alongside whatever). This PR allows the processing of or-pattern alternatives alongside candidates that precede it. One benefit is that we now process or-patterns in a single place in `mod.rs`. r? ``@matthewjasper`` |
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