rust/tests/rustdoc/synthetic_auto/complex.rs

Ignoring revisions in .git-blame-ignore-revs. Click here to bypass and see the normal blame view.

43 lines
1002 B
Rust
Raw Normal View History

Generate documentation for auto-trait impls A new section is added to both both struct and trait doc pages. On struct/enum pages, a new 'Auto Trait Implementations' section displays any synthetic implementations for auto traits. Currently, this is only done for Send and Sync. On trait pages, a new 'Auto Implementors' section displays all types which automatically implement the trait. Effectively, this is a list of all public types in the standard library. Synthesized impls for a particular auto trait ('synthetic impls') take into account generic bounds. For example, a type 'struct Foo<T>(T)' will have 'impl<T> Send for Foo<T> where T: Send' generated for it. Manual implementations of auto traits are also taken into account. If we have the following types: 'struct Foo<T>(T)' 'struct Wrapper<T>(Foo<T>)' 'unsafe impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' // pretend that Wrapper<T> makes this sound somehow Then Wrapper will have the following impl generated: 'impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' reflecting the fact that 'T: Send' need not hold for 'Wrapper<T>: Send' to hold Lifetimes, HRTBS, and projections (e.g. '<T as Iterator>::Item') are taken into account by synthetic impls However, if a type can *never* implement a particular auto trait (e.g. 'struct MyStruct<T>(*const T)'), then a negative impl will be generated (in this case, 'impl<T> !Send for MyStruct<T>') All of this means that a user should be able to copy-paste a synthetic impl into their code, without any observable changes in behavior (assuming the rest of the program remains unchanged).
2017-11-22 15:16:55 -06:00
mod foo {
pub trait MyTrait<'a> {
type MyItem: ?Sized;
}
pub struct Inner<'a, Q, R: ?Sized> {
field: Q,
field3: &'a u8,
my_foo: Foo<Q>,
field2: R,
}
pub struct Outer<'a, T, K: ?Sized> {
my_inner: Inner<'a, T, K>,
}
pub struct Foo<T> {
myfield: T,
}
}
// @has complex/struct.NotOuter.html
// @has - '//*[@id="synthetic-implementations-list"]//*[@class="impl"]//h3[@class="code-header"]' \
2022-08-31 10:05:46 -05:00
// "impl<'a, T, K: ?Sized> Send for Outer<'a, T, K>where K: for<'b> Fn((&'b bool, &'a u8)) \
// -> &'b i8, T: MyTrait<'a>, <T as MyTrait<'a>>::MyItem: Copy, 'a: 'static"
Generate documentation for auto-trait impls A new section is added to both both struct and trait doc pages. On struct/enum pages, a new 'Auto Trait Implementations' section displays any synthetic implementations for auto traits. Currently, this is only done for Send and Sync. On trait pages, a new 'Auto Implementors' section displays all types which automatically implement the trait. Effectively, this is a list of all public types in the standard library. Synthesized impls for a particular auto trait ('synthetic impls') take into account generic bounds. For example, a type 'struct Foo<T>(T)' will have 'impl<T> Send for Foo<T> where T: Send' generated for it. Manual implementations of auto traits are also taken into account. If we have the following types: 'struct Foo<T>(T)' 'struct Wrapper<T>(Foo<T>)' 'unsafe impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' // pretend that Wrapper<T> makes this sound somehow Then Wrapper will have the following impl generated: 'impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' reflecting the fact that 'T: Send' need not hold for 'Wrapper<T>: Send' to hold Lifetimes, HRTBS, and projections (e.g. '<T as Iterator>::Item') are taken into account by synthetic impls However, if a type can *never* implement a particular auto trait (e.g. 'struct MyStruct<T>(*const T)'), then a negative impl will be generated (in this case, 'impl<T> !Send for MyStruct<T>') All of this means that a user should be able to copy-paste a synthetic impl into their code, without any observable changes in behavior (assuming the rest of the program remains unchanged).
2017-11-22 15:16:55 -06:00
pub use foo::{Foo, Inner as NotInner, MyTrait as NotMyTrait, Outer as NotOuter};
unsafe impl<T> Send for Foo<T>
where
T: NotMyTrait<'static>,
{
}
unsafe impl<'a, Q, R: ?Sized> Send for NotInner<'a, Q, R>
where
Q: NotMyTrait<'a>,
<Q as NotMyTrait<'a>>::MyItem: Copy,
2018-02-18 00:23:06 -06:00
R: for<'b> Fn((&'b bool, &'a u8)) -> &'b i8,
Generate documentation for auto-trait impls A new section is added to both both struct and trait doc pages. On struct/enum pages, a new 'Auto Trait Implementations' section displays any synthetic implementations for auto traits. Currently, this is only done for Send and Sync. On trait pages, a new 'Auto Implementors' section displays all types which automatically implement the trait. Effectively, this is a list of all public types in the standard library. Synthesized impls for a particular auto trait ('synthetic impls') take into account generic bounds. For example, a type 'struct Foo<T>(T)' will have 'impl<T> Send for Foo<T> where T: Send' generated for it. Manual implementations of auto traits are also taken into account. If we have the following types: 'struct Foo<T>(T)' 'struct Wrapper<T>(Foo<T>)' 'unsafe impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' // pretend that Wrapper<T> makes this sound somehow Then Wrapper will have the following impl generated: 'impl<T> Send for Wrapper<T>' reflecting the fact that 'T: Send' need not hold for 'Wrapper<T>: Send' to hold Lifetimes, HRTBS, and projections (e.g. '<T as Iterator>::Item') are taken into account by synthetic impls However, if a type can *never* implement a particular auto trait (e.g. 'struct MyStruct<T>(*const T)'), then a negative impl will be generated (in this case, 'impl<T> !Send for MyStruct<T>') All of this means that a user should be able to copy-paste a synthetic impl into their code, without any observable changes in behavior (assuming the rest of the program remains unchanged).
2017-11-22 15:16:55 -06:00
Foo<Q>: Send,
{
}