This is mostly a reaction to #12730. If we are going to keep calling them `char`, at least make it clear that they aren't characters but codepoint/scalar.
Change `~[T]` to Vec<T> in librustc. Rebased and amended version of PR #12716.
Original author (or perhaps I should say meta-author) was @pcwalton, as is reflected in the commits.
I clean up! :)
This seems to be causing some confusion among users. Rust's char are
not 8bit characters, but 32bit UCS-4 codepoint without surrogates
(Unicode Scalar Values as per Unicode glossary).
Make the doc more explicit about it.
Signed-off-by: Luca Bruno <lucab@debian.org>
* `Ord` inherits from `Eq`
* `TotalOrd` inherits from `TotalEq`
* `TotalOrd` inherits from `Ord`
* `TotalEq` inherits from `Eq`
This is a partial implementation of #12517.
* `Ord` inherits from `Eq`
* `TotalOrd` inherits from `TotalEq`
* `TotalOrd` inherits from `Ord`
* `TotalEq` inherits from `Eq`
This is a partial implementation of #12517.
A structure's definition and implementation may be cross-module. If the
implementing module is parsed before defining module, the fully
qualified name of the structure won't be present for the implementation
to use when being indexed. So caches such 'orphan' implementation and
indexes it at the end of crate parsing.
Closes#10284.
A structure's definition and implementation may be cross-module. If the
implementing module is parsed before defining module, the fully
qualified name of the structure won't be present for the implementation
to use when being indexed. So caches such 'orphan' implementation and
indexes it at the end of crate parsing.
Closes#10284.
If no arguments are given to `vec!` then no pushes are emitted and
so the compiler (rightly) complains that the mutability of `temp` is
never used.
This behaviour is rather annoying for users.
If no arguments are given to `vec!` then no pushes are emitted and
so the compiler (rightly) complains that the mutability of `temp` is
never used.
This behaviour is rather annoying for users.
This leverages the new hashing framework and hashmap implementation to provide a
much speedier hashing algorithm for node ids and def ids. The hash algorithm
used is currentl FNV hashing, but it's quite easy to swap out.
I originally implemented hashing as the identity function, but this actually
ended up in slowing down rustc compiling libstd from 8s to 13s. I would suspect
that this is a result of a large number of collisions.
With FNV hashing, we get these timings (compiling with --no-trans, in seconds):
| | before | after |
|-----------|---------:|--------:|
| libstd | 8.324 | 6.703 |
| stdtest | 47.674 | 46.857 |
| libsyntax | 9.918 | 8.400 |
If #[feature(default_type_parameters)] is enabled for a crate, then
deriving(Hash) will expand with Hash<W: Writer> instead of Hash<SipState> so
more hash algorithms can be used.
This leverages the new hashing framework and hashmap implementation to provide a
much speedier hashing algorithm for node ids and def ids. The hash algorithm
used is currentl FNV hashing, but it's quite easy to swap out.
I originally implemented hashing as the identity function, but this actually
ended up in slowing down rustc compiling libstd from 8s to 13s. I would suspect
that this is a result of a large number of collisions.
With FNV hashing, we get these timings (compiling with --no-trans, in seconds):
| | before | after |
|-----------|---------:|--------:|
| libstd | 8.324 | 6.703 |
| stdtest | 47.674 | 46.857 |
| libsyntax | 9.918 | 8.400 |
On Windows, `LLVMRustGetLastError()` may return non-utf8 mojibake string
if system uses non-English locale. It caused ICE when llvm fails.
This patch doesn't fix the real problem, but just make rustc not die.
On Windows, `LLVMRustGetLastError()` may return non-utf8 mojibake string
if system uses non-English locale. It caused ICE when llvm fails.
This patch doesn't fix the real problem, but just make rustc not die.
Cosmetic changes at best, but there are so many such typos that I couldn't ignore them. :) Some occurrences of typos are linked to the generated documentations but no changes should break the builds.
This version is slightly more up to date and is closer to the 3.5 that we're
using. This also updates the travis config to have a build matrix which tests
rust against LLVM 3.3 and 3.4. For pull requests only LLVM 3.4 is tested to
reduce the load on travis.
This is mostly just fluff, there's no real reason to gate rust on these results,
it's more of just a nice thing to know when we break compatibility with LLVM 3.3
and 3.4 (and eventually 3.5). This turns off notifications of failed commits
(which are sent out for pushes to master).
The llvm.copysign and llvm.round intrinsics weren't added until LLVM 3.4, so if
we're on LLVM 3.3 we lower these to calls in libm instead of LLVM intrinsics.
This should fix our travis failures.
This PR brings back limited debuginfo which allows for nice backtraces and breakpoints, but omits any info about variables and types.
The `-g` and `--debuginfo` command line options have been extended to take an optional argument:
`-g0` means no debug info.
`-g1` means line-tables only.
`-g2` means full debug info.
Specifying `-g` without argument is equivalent to `-g2`.
Fixes#12280
This version is slightly more up to date and is closer to the 3.5 that we're
using. This also updates the travis config to have a build matrix which tests
rust against LLVM 3.3 and 3.4. For pull requests only LLVM 3.4 is tested to
reduce the load on travis.
This is mostly just fluff, there's no real reason to gate rust on these results,
it's more of just a nice thing to know when we break compatibility with LLVM 3.3
and 3.4 (and eventually 3.5). This turns off notifications of failed commits
(which are sent out for pushes to master).
This commit adds a appear-on-over link to all section headers to generated
documentation. Each header also receives an id now, even those generated through
markdown. The purpose of this is to provide easy to link to sections.
This modifies the default header markdown generation because the default id
added looks like "toc_NN" which is difficult to reconcile among all sections (by
default each section gets a "toc_0" id), and it's also not very descriptive of
where you're going.
This chooses to adopt the github-style anchors by taking the contents of the
title and hyphen-separating them (after lower casing).
Closes#12681