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* Introduce an IR-level type system
Up to this point, the Slang IR has used the front-end type system to represent types in the IR.
As a result (but ultimately more importantly) the IR representation of generics and specialization has used AST-level concepts embedded in the IR.
For example, to express the specialization of `vector<T,N>` to a concrete type `float` for `T`, we needed an IR operation that could represent the specialization, with operands that somehow represented the type argument `float`.
The whole thing was very complicated.
The big idea of this change is to introduce a new representation in which types in the IR are just ordinary instructions, so that using them as operands makes sense. The hierarchy of IR types closely mirrors the AST-side hierarchy for now, and that will probably be something we should maintain going forward.
In order to make these changes work, though, I also had to do major overhauls of things like the way substitutions are performed, how we check interface conformances, the way lookup through interface types is done, etc. etc. This is a big change, and unfortunately any attempt to summarize it in the commit message wouldn't do it justice.
* Fix 64-bit build warning
* Fix up some clang warnings/errors
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Fixes #350
When the Slang project forked off from the Spire research effort, we renamed things as we went, but many cases seem to have slipped through the cracks.
The two biggest diffs here are:
- The `hello` example program was incorrectly talking about what was in the shader file (Slang no longer supports the "module" or "pipeline" constructs from Spire), and so it wasn't just a simple rename.
- The files under `tests/bindings` were mistakenly using `__SPIRE__` as a preprocessor guard, which means that they weren't actually testing what they meant to. Luckily, it looks like the relevant functionality didn't regress while these tests were unintentionally deactivated.
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