This patch allows json to deserialize integers larger than 2^53 without losing precision. It does this by first keeping the integer portion of a number as a `i64`, and only casting it over to a `f64` if we have a decimal or exponent.
For crates `alloc`–`collections`. This is mostly just updating a few function/method descriptions to use the indicative style.
cc #4361; I’ve sort of assumed that the third-person indicative style has been decided on, but I could update this to use the imperative style if that’s preferred, or even update this to remove all function-style-related changes. (I think that standardising on one thing, even if it’s not the ‘best’ option, is still better than having no standard at all.) The indicative style seems to be more common in the Rust standard library at the moment, especially in the newer modules (e.g. `collections::vec`), more popular in the discussion about it, and also more popular amongst other languages (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/4361#issuecomment-33470215).
Stop read+write expressions from expanding into two occurences
in the AST. Add a bool to indicate whether an operand in output
position if read+write or not.
Fixes#14936
This incidentally fixes#16589, because it will cause `MatchIndices` to use `NaiveSearcher` instead of `TwoWaySearcher`, but I'm not sure #16589 should be closed until the underlying problem in `TwoWaySearcher` is found.
This was bothering me (and some other people). The macro was necessary in a transient step of my development, but I converged on a design where it was unnecessary, but it didn't really click that that had happened.
This fixes it up.
This implements `Add` and `Sub` for `Timespec`, which enables `Timespec` to be used as a time span. For example:
```rust
let begin = get_time();
// Do some stuff.
let end = get_time();
let delta = end - begin;
println!("Doing stuff took {}.{:09d} seconds.", delta.sec, delta.nsec);
```
This resolves one of the points mentioned in #2153.