rust/tests/ui/proc-macro/auxiliary/attributes-included.rs

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// force-host
// no-prefer-dynamic
#![crate_type = "proc-macro"]
extern crate proc_macro;
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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use proc_macro::{TokenStream, TokenTree, Delimiter, Literal, Spacing, Group};
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn foo(attr: TokenStream, input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
assert!(attr.is_empty());
let input = input.into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>();
{
let mut cursor = &input[..];
assert_inline(&mut cursor);
assert_doc(&mut cursor);
assert_inline(&mut cursor);
assert_doc(&mut cursor);
assert_foo(&mut cursor);
assert!(cursor.is_empty());
}
fold_stream(input.into_iter().collect())
}
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn bar(attr: TokenStream, input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
assert!(attr.is_empty());
let input = input.into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>();
{
let mut cursor = &input[..];
assert_inline(&mut cursor);
assert_doc(&mut cursor);
assert_invoc(&mut cursor);
assert_inline(&mut cursor);
assert_doc(&mut cursor);
assert_foo(&mut cursor);
assert!(cursor.is_empty());
}
input.into_iter().collect()
}
fn assert_inline(slice: &mut &[TokenTree]) {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[0] {
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TokenTree::Punct(tt) => assert_eq!(tt.as_char(), '#'),
_ => panic!("expected '#' char"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[1] {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => assert_eq!(tt.delimiter(), Delimiter::Bracket),
_ => panic!("expected brackets"),
}
*slice = &slice[2..];
}
fn assert_doc(slice: &mut &[TokenTree]) {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[0] {
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TokenTree::Punct(tt) => {
assert_eq!(tt.as_char(), '#');
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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assert_eq!(tt.spacing(), Spacing::Alone);
}
_ => panic!("expected #"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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let inner = match &slice[1] {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => {
assert_eq!(tt.delimiter(), Delimiter::Bracket);
tt.stream()
}
_ => panic!("expected brackets"),
};
let tokens = inner.into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>();
let tokens = &tokens[..];
if tokens.len() != 3 {
panic!("expected three tokens in doc")
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &tokens[0] {
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TokenTree::Ident(tt) => assert_eq!("doc", &*tt.to_string()),
_ => panic!("expected `doc`"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &tokens[1] {
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TokenTree::Punct(tt) => {
assert_eq!(tt.as_char(), '=');
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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assert_eq!(tt.spacing(), Spacing::Alone);
}
_ => panic!("expected equals"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match tokens[2] {
TokenTree::Literal(_) => {}
_ => panic!("expected literal"),
}
*slice = &slice[2..];
}
fn assert_invoc(slice: &mut &[TokenTree]) {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[0] {
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TokenTree::Punct(tt) => assert_eq!(tt.as_char(), '#'),
_ => panic!("expected '#' char"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[1] {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => assert_eq!(tt.delimiter(), Delimiter::Bracket),
_ => panic!("expected brackets"),
}
*slice = &slice[2..];
}
fn assert_foo(slice: &mut &[TokenTree]) {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[0] {
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TokenTree::Ident(tt) => assert_eq!(&*tt.to_string(), "fn"),
_ => panic!("expected fn"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[1] {
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TokenTree::Ident(tt) => assert_eq!(&*tt.to_string(), "foo"),
_ => panic!("expected foo"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[2] {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => {
assert_eq!(tt.delimiter(), Delimiter::Parenthesis);
assert!(tt.stream().is_empty());
}
_ => panic!("expected parens"),
}
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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match &slice[3] {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => assert_eq!(tt.delimiter(), Delimiter::Brace),
_ => panic!("expected braces"),
}
*slice = &slice[4..];
}
fn fold_stream(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
input.into_iter().map(fold_tree).collect()
}
fn fold_tree(input: TokenTree) -> TokenTree {
match input {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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TokenTree::Group(b) => {
TokenTree::Group(Group::new(b.delimiter(), fold_stream(b.stream())))
}
2018-05-05 13:09:41 -05:00
TokenTree::Punct(b) => TokenTree::Punct(b),
TokenTree::Ident(a) => TokenTree::Ident(a),
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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TokenTree::Literal(a) => {
if a.to_string() != "\"foo\"" {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
2018-04-02 10:19:32 -05:00
TokenTree::Literal(a)
} else {
proc_macro: Reorganize public API This commit is a reorganization of the `proc_macro` crate's public user-facing API. This is the result of a number of discussions at the recent Rust All-Hands where we're hoping to get the `proc_macro` crate into ship shape for stabilization of a subset of its functionality in the Rust 2018 release. The reorganization here is motivated by experiences from the `proc-macro2`, `quote`, and `syn` crates on crates.io (and other crates which depend on them). The main focus is future flexibility along with making a few more operations consistent and/or fixing bugs. A summary of the changes made from today's `proc_macro` API is: * The `TokenNode` enum has been removed and the public fields of `TokenTree` have also been removed. Instead the `TokenTree` type is now a public enum (what `TokenNode` was) and each variant is an opaque struct which internally contains `Span` information. This makes the various tokens a bit more consistent, require fewer wrappers, and otherwise provides good future-compatibility as opaque structs are easy to modify later on. * `Literal` integer constructors have been expanded to be unambiguous as to what they're doing and also allow for more future flexibility. Previously constructors like `Literal::float` and `Literal::integer` were used to create unsuffixed literals and the concrete methods like `Literal::i32` would create a suffixed token. This wasn't immediately clear to all users (the suffixed/unsuffixed aspect) and having *one* constructor for unsuffixed literals required us to pick a largest type which may not always be true. To fix these issues all constructors are now of the form `Literal::i32_unsuffixed` or `Literal::i32_suffixed` (for all integral types). This should allow future compatibility as well as being immediately clear what's suffixed and what isn't. * Each variant of `TokenTree` internally contains a `Span` which can also be configured via `set_span`. For example `Literal` and `Term` now both internally contain a `Span` rather than having it stored in an auxiliary location. * Constructors of all tokens are called `new` now (aka `Term::intern` is gone) and most do not take spans. Manufactured tokens typically don't have a fresh span to go with them and the span is purely used for error-reporting **except** the span for `Term`, which currently affects hygiene. The default spans for all these constructed tokens is `Span::call_site()` for now. The `Term` type's constructor explicitly requires passing in a `Span` to provide future-proofing against possible hygiene changes. It's intended that a first pass of stabilization will likely only stabilize `Span::call_site()` which is an explicit opt-in for "I would like no hygiene here please". The intention here is to make this explicit in procedural macros to be forwards-compatible with a hygiene-specifying solution. * Some of the conversions for `TokenStream` have been simplified a little. * The `TokenTreeIter` iterator was renamed to `token_stream::IntoIter`. Overall the hope is that this is the "final pass" at the API of `TokenStream` and most of `TokenTree` before stabilization. Explicitly left out here is any changes to `Span`'s API which will likely need to be re-evaluated before stabilization. All changes in this PR have already been reflected to the [`proc-macro2`], `quote`, and `syn` crates. New versions of all these crates have also been published to crates.io. Once this lands in nightly I plan on making an internals post again summarizing the changes made here and also calling on all macro authors to give the APIs a spin and see how they work. Hopefully pending no major issues we can then have an FCP to stabilize later this cycle! [`proc-macro2`]: https://docs.rs/proc-macro2/0.3.1/proc_macro2/
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TokenTree::Literal(Literal::i32_unsuffixed(3))
}
}
}
}