2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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#![feature(stmt_expr_attributes)]
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fn main() {
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// fold_stmt (Item)
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#[allow(dead_code)]
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#[derive(Debug)] // should not warn
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struct Foo;
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// fold_stmt (Mac)
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2021-07-17 13:13:50 -05:00
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#[derive(Debug)] //~ ERROR `derive` may only be applied to `struct`s, `enum`s and `union`s
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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println!("Hello, world!");
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// fold_stmt (Semi)
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2021-07-17 13:13:50 -05:00
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#[derive(Debug)] //~ ERROR `derive` may only be applied to `struct`s, `enum`s and `union`s
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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"Hello, world!";
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// fold_stmt (Local)
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2021-07-17 13:13:50 -05:00
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#[derive(Debug)] //~ ERROR `derive` may only be applied to `struct`s, `enum`s and `union`s
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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let _ = "Hello, world!";
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Overhaul `syntax::fold::Folder`.
This commit changes `syntax::fold::Folder` from a functional style
(where most methods take a `T` and produce a new `T`) to a more
imperative style (where most methods take and modify a `&mut T`), and
renames it `syntax::mut_visit::MutVisitor`.
The first benefit is speed. The functional style does not require any
reallocations, due to the use of `P::map` and
`MoveMap::move_{,flat_}map`. However, every field in the AST must be
overwritten; even those fields that are unchanged are overwritten with
the same value. This causes a lot of unnecessary memory writes. The
imperative style reduces instruction counts by 1--3% across a wide range
of workloads, particularly incremental workloads.
The second benefit is conciseness; the imperative style is usually more
concise. E.g. compare the old functional style:
```
fn fold_abc(&mut self, abc: ABC) {
ABC {
a: fold_a(abc.a),
b: fold_b(abc.b),
c: abc.c,
}
}
```
with the imperative style:
```
fn visit_abc(&mut self, ABC { a, b, c: _ }: &mut ABC) {
visit_a(a);
visit_b(b);
}
```
(The reductions get larger in more complex examples.)
Overall, the patch removes over 200 lines of code -- even though the new
code has more comments -- and a lot of the remaining lines have fewer
characters.
Some notes:
- The old style used methods called `fold_*`. The new style mostly uses
methods called `visit_*`, but there are a few methods that map a `T`
to something other than a `T`, which are called `flat_map_*` (`T` maps
to multiple `T`s) or `filter_map_*` (`T` maps to 0 or 1 `T`s).
- `move_map.rs`/`MoveMap`/`move_map`/`move_flat_map` are renamed
`map_in_place.rs`/`MapInPlace`/`map_in_place`/`flat_map_in_place` to
reflect their slightly changed signatures.
- Although this commit renames the `fold` module as `mut_visit`, it
keeps it in the `fold.rs` file, so as not to confuse git. The next
commit will rename the file.
2019-02-04 22:20:55 -06:00
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// visit_expr
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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let _ = #[derive(Debug)] "Hello, world!";
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2021-07-17 13:13:50 -05:00
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//~^ ERROR `derive` may only be applied to `struct`s, `enum`s and `union`s
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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let _ = [
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Overhaul `syntax::fold::Folder`.
This commit changes `syntax::fold::Folder` from a functional style
(where most methods take a `T` and produce a new `T`) to a more
imperative style (where most methods take and modify a `&mut T`), and
renames it `syntax::mut_visit::MutVisitor`.
The first benefit is speed. The functional style does not require any
reallocations, due to the use of `P::map` and
`MoveMap::move_{,flat_}map`. However, every field in the AST must be
overwritten; even those fields that are unchanged are overwritten with
the same value. This causes a lot of unnecessary memory writes. The
imperative style reduces instruction counts by 1--3% across a wide range
of workloads, particularly incremental workloads.
The second benefit is conciseness; the imperative style is usually more
concise. E.g. compare the old functional style:
```
fn fold_abc(&mut self, abc: ABC) {
ABC {
a: fold_a(abc.a),
b: fold_b(abc.b),
c: abc.c,
}
}
```
with the imperative style:
```
fn visit_abc(&mut self, ABC { a, b, c: _ }: &mut ABC) {
visit_a(a);
visit_b(b);
}
```
(The reductions get larger in more complex examples.)
Overall, the patch removes over 200 lines of code -- even though the new
code has more comments -- and a lot of the remaining lines have fewer
characters.
Some notes:
- The old style used methods called `fold_*`. The new style mostly uses
methods called `visit_*`, but there are a few methods that map a `T`
to something other than a `T`, which are called `flat_map_*` (`T` maps
to multiple `T`s) or `filter_map_*` (`T` maps to 0 or 1 `T`s).
- `move_map.rs`/`MoveMap`/`move_map`/`move_flat_map` are renamed
`map_in_place.rs`/`MapInPlace`/`map_in_place`/`flat_map_in_place` to
reflect their slightly changed signatures.
- Although this commit renames the `fold` module as `mut_visit`, it
keeps it in the `fold.rs` file, so as not to confuse git. The next
commit will rename the file.
2019-02-04 22:20:55 -06:00
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// filter_map_expr
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2021-07-17 13:13:50 -05:00
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#[derive(Debug)] //~ ERROR `derive` may only be applied to `struct`s, `enum`s and `union`s
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2020-11-14 05:47:14 -06:00
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"Hello, world!",
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2018-04-18 01:19:21 -05:00
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];
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}
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