4.1.3 Selected Components
Selected_components
are used to denote components (including discriminants), entries, entry
families, and protected subprograms; they are also used as expanded names
as described below.
Syntax
Name Resolution Rules
A
selected_component
that is not an expanded name shall resolve to denote one of the following:
A component (including a discriminant):
A single entry, an entry family, or a protected
subprogram:
A view of a subprogram whose first formal parameter
is of a tagged type or is an access parameter whose designated type is
tagged:
The
prefix
(after any implicit dereference) shall resolve to denote an object or
value of a specific tagged type
T or class-wide type
T'Class.
The
selector_name
shall resolve to denote a view of a subprogram declared immediately within
the declarative region in which an ancestor of the type
T is declared.
The first formal parameter of the subprogram shall be of type
T,
or a class-wide type that covers
T, or an access parameter designating
one of these types. The designator of the subprogram shall not be the
same as that of a component of the tagged type visible at the point of
the
selected_component.
The subprogram shall not be an implicitly declared primitive operation
of type
T that overrides an inherited subprogram implemented by
an entry or protected subprogram visible at the point of the
selected_component.
The
selected_component
denotes a view of this subprogram that omits the first formal parameter.
This view is called a
prefixed view of the subprogram, and the
prefix of
the
selected_component
(after any implicit dereference) is called the
prefix of the prefixed
view.
An expanded name shall
resolve to denote a declaration that occurs immediately within a named
declarative region, as follows:
The
prefix
shall resolve to denote either a package (including the current instance
of a generic package, or a rename of a package), or an enclosing named
construct.
The
selector_name
shall resolve to denote a declaration that occurs immediately within
the declarative region of the package or enclosing construct (the declaration
shall be visible at the place of the expanded name — see
8.3).
The expanded name denotes that declaration.
If the
prefix
does not denote a package, then it shall be a
direct_name
or an expanded name, and it shall resolve to denote a program unit (other
than a package), the current instance of a type, a
block_statement,
a
loop_statement,
or an
accept_statement
(in the case of an
accept_statement
or
entry_body,
no family index is allowed); the expanded name shall occur within the
declarative region of this construct. Further, if this construct is a
callable construct and the
prefix
denotes more than one such enclosing callable construct, then the expanded
name is ambiguous, independently of the
selector_name.
Legality Rules
For a subprogram whose first parameter is an access
parameter, the prefix of any prefixed view shall denote an aliased view
of an object.
For a subprogram whose first parameter is of mode
in out or out, or of an anonymous access-to-variable type,
the prefix of any prefixed view shall denote a variable.
Dynamic Semantics
For a
selected_component
that denotes a component of a
variant,
a check is made that the values of the discriminants are such that the
value or object denoted by the
prefix
has this component.
The exception
Constraint_Error is raised if this check fails.
Examples
Examples of selected
components:
Tomorrow.Month --
a record component (see 3.8)
Next_Car.Owner --
a record component (see 3.10.1)
Next_Car.Owner.Age --
a record component (see 3.10.1)
--
the previous two lines involve implicit dereferences
Writer.Unit --
a record component (a discriminant) (see 3.8.1)
Min_Cell(H).Value --
a record component of the result (see 6.1)
--
of the function call Min_Cell(H)
Cashier.Append --
a prefixed view of a procedure (see 3.9.4)
Control.Seize --
an entry of a protected object (see 9.4)
Pool(K).Write --
an entry of the task Pool(K) (see 9.4)
Examples of expanded
names:
Key_Manager."<" --
an operator of the visible part of a package (see 7.3.1)
Dot_Product.Sum --
a variable declared in a function body (see 6.1)
Buffer.Pool --
a variable declared in a protected unit (see 9.11)
Buffer.Read --
an entry of a protected unit (see 9.11)
Swap.Temp --
a variable declared in a block statement (see 5.6)
Standard.Boolean --
the name of a predefined type (see A.1)
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