Document unintuitive argument order for Vec::dedup_by relation
When trying to use dedup_by to merge some auxiliary information from removed elements into kept elements, I was surprised to observe that vec.dedup_by(same_bucket) calls same_bucket(a, b) where b appears before a in the vector, and discards a when true is returned. This argument order is probably a bug, but since it has already been stabilized, I guess we should document it as a feature and move on. (Vec::dedup also uses == with this unexpected argument order, but I figure that’s not important since == is expected to be symmetric with no side effects.) Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
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@ -274,6 +274,11 @@ fn test_dedup_by() {
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vec.dedup_by(|a, b| a.eq_ignore_ascii_case(b));
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assert_eq!(vec, ["foo", "bar", "baz", "bar"]);
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let mut vec = vec![("foo", 1), ("foo", 2), ("bar", 3), ("bar", 4), ("bar", 5)];
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vec.dedup_by(|a, b| a.0 == b.0 && { b.1 += a.1; true });
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assert_eq!(vec, [("foo", 3), ("bar", 12)]);
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}
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#[test]
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@ -823,7 +823,8 @@ impl<T> Vec<T> {
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}
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}
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/// Removes consecutive elements in the vector that resolve to the same key.
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/// Removes all but the first of consecutive elements in the vector that resolve to the same
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/// key.
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///
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/// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates.
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///
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@ -842,11 +843,13 @@ impl<T> Vec<T> {
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self.dedup_by(|a, b| key(a) == key(b))
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}
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/// Removes consecutive elements in the vector according to a predicate.
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/// Removes all but the first of consecutive elements in the vector satisfying a given equality
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/// relation.
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///
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/// The `same_bucket` function is passed references to two elements from the vector, and
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/// returns `true` if the elements compare equal, or `false` if they do not. Only the first
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/// of adjacent equal items is kept.
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/// returns `true` if the elements compare equal, or `false` if they do not. The elements are
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/// passed in opposite order from their order in the vector, so if `same_bucket(a, b)` returns
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/// `true`, `a` is removed.
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///
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/// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates.
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///
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