This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.
The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.
* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`
The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.
* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
This patch changes the type of byte string literals from `&[u8]` to `&[u8; N]`.
It also implements some necessary traits (`IntoBytes`, `Seek`, `Read`, `BufRead`) for fixed-size arrays (also related to #21725) and adds test for #17233, which seems to be resolved.
Fixes#18465
[breaking-change]
Safe fns are no longer subtypes of unsafe fns, but you can coerce from one to the other.
This is a [breaking-change] in that impl fns must now be declared `unsafe` if the trait is declared `unsafe`. In some rare cases, the subtyping change may also direct affect you, but no such cases were encountered in practice.
Fixes#23449.
r? @nrc
This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.
The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.
* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`
The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.
* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
Final remnant of reflection is gone. Also, virtual `Trait` destructors are no longer tied to `Box`.
That means they can be used to drop any instance of the type (used in libarena to replace TyDesc).
This is [breaking-change] for direct users of intrinsics:
* use `intrinsics::type_name::<T>()` instead of `(*intrinsics::get_tydesc::<T>()).name`
* the only way to get the destructor is from a trait object's vtable (see libarena changes)
r? @pcwalton f? @dotdash
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
This upcast coercion currently never requires vtable changes. It should be generalized.
This is a [breaking-change] -- if you have an impl on an object type like `impl SomeTrait`, then this will no longer be applicable to object types like `SomeTrait+Send`. In the standard library, this primarily affected `Any`, and this PR adds impls for `Any+Send` as to keep the API the same in practice. An alternate workaround is to use UFCS form or standalone fns. For more details, see <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/18737#issuecomment-78450798>.
r? @nrc
This upcast coercion currently preserves the vtable for the object, but
eventually it can be used to create a derived vtable. The upcast
coercion is not introduced into method dispatch; see comment on #18737
for information about why. Fixes#18737.
This looks like the most logical target to give to this link, or at least what I would expect as someone that want to integrate with a native library.
r? @steveklabnik
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
To the correct MAP_NORESERVE. Every other instance is known as MAP_NORESERVE, so this is just a basic typo.
I really doubt this will break anybody's but my own code.
[breaking-change]
This removes the error case of the compression functions, the only errors that
can occur are incorrect parameters or an out-of-memory condition, both of which
are handled with panics in Rust.
Also introduces an extensible `Error` type instead of returning an `Option`.
The type implements a destructor so you can't destructure it.
The RUST_TARGET_STAGE_N rule uses LLVM_LIBDIR_RUSTFLAGS_<target-triple>,
which expands to -L "$(llvm-config --libdir)" when the target-triple is
also a host-triple. Rather than expand to -L "" if llvm-config has not yet
been built, add a dependency on the target llvm-config.
When the target-triple is not a host-triple, the new LLVM_CONFIG_$(2)
dependency should expand to nothing.
r? alexcrichton
The RUST_TARGET_STAGE_N rule uses LLVM_LIBDIR_RUSTFLAGS_<target-triple>,
which expands to -L "$(llvm-config --libdir)" when the target-triple is
also a host-triple. Rather than expand to -L "" if llvm-config has not yet
been built, add a dependency on the target llvm-config.
When the target-triple is not a host-triple, the new LLVM_CONFIG_$(2)
dependency should expand to nothing.
- Allow inherent implementations on `char`, `str`, `[T]`, `*const T`, `*mut T` and all the numeric primitives.
- copy `unicode::char::CharExt` methods into `impl char`
- remove `unicode::char::CharExt`, its re-export `std::char::CharExt` and `CharExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::str::StrExt` methods into `impl str`
- remove `collections::str::StrExt` its re-export `std::str::StrExt`, and `StrExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::slice::SliceExt` methods into `impl<T> [T]`
- remove `collections::slice::SliceExt` its re-export `std::slice::SliceExt`, and `SliceExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *const T`
- remove `core::ptr::PtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::PtrExt`, and `PtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` and `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *mut T`
- remove `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::MutPtrExt`, and `MutPtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::SignedInt` methods into `impl i{8,16,32,64,size}`
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::UnsignedInt` methods into `impl u{8,16,32,64,size}`
- remove `core::num::UnsignedInt` and its re-export `std::num::UnsignedInt`
- move `collections` tests into its own crate: `collectionstest`
- copy `core::num::Float` methods into `impl f{32,64}`
Because this PR removes several traits, this is a [breaking-change], however functionality remains unchanged and breakage due to unresolved imports should be minimal. If you encounter an error due to an unresolved import, simply remove the import:
``` diff
fn main() {
- use std::num::UnsignedInt; //~ error: unresolved import `std::num::UnsignedInt`.
-
println!("{}", 8_usize.is_power_of_two());
}
```
---
cc #16862
[preview docs](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/index.html)
[unicode::char](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/unicode/primitive.char.html)
[collections::str](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/collections/primitive.str.html)
[std::f32](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/primitive.f32.html)