Note: Breaking API change on the Dictionary classes.
The numeric value classes were using "Value" in the naming, but this silently
collided with the KVC category on NSObject; meaning KVC code could break up a
keypath and call these selectors with the wrong types leading to crashes (even
though the code all would compile cleanly).
- Rename the methods to use the "type" instead of literal "Value".
- Update all the impls and tests.
- Enable the warning that will catch issues like this in the future.
Fixes https://github.com/google/protobuf/issues/1616
- Extend GPB*ObjectDictionary to support generic syntax.
- Update the generator to output generics so the enclosed type is exposed for compiler checks.
- Use generics in a the public interfaces.
- Update the generated sources that are checked in.
- Move up to 8.4 as the high simulator (assuming Xcode 6.4).
- Add cast to NSMutableDictionary so clang and resolve the selector.
- Add case for the newer static analyzer so it won't trigger a false warning.
- Update the "dictionary" interface to use "object" naming. Xcode 7+ has gotten
more strict on the use of nonnull/nullable; combining that with the generic
collection support; and the "dictionary" classes we created now collide with
what the generic KeyValueCoding in the system headers triggering
warnings/errors. Fix this and hopefully all future issue by renaming the
methods to use "object" for the classes that have data types as objects
instead of PODs. Taking this renaming hit now while ObjC is still in beta
because it is a breaking change for any existing code.
- Style fixups in the code.
- map<> serialization fixes and more tests.
- Autocreation of map<> fields (to match repeated fields).
- @@protoc_insertion_point(global_scope|imports).
- Fixup proto2 syntax extension support.
- Move all startup code to +initialize so it happen on class usage and not app startup.
- Have generated headers use forward declarations and move imports into generated code, reduces what is need at compile time to speed up compiled and avoid pointless rippling of rebuilds.