Commit Graph

36327 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Steve Klabnik
1c25aecf67 Rollup merge of #23622 - steveklabnik:gh23196, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #23196
2015-03-23 17:05:45 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
71b9ba1e5b Rollup merge of #23618 - steveklabnik:gh23571, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #23571
2015-03-23 17:05:45 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
8b6c0fd410 Rollup merge of #23608 - nagisa:refine-cursor-docstring, r=steveklabnik
r? @steveklabnik
2015-03-23 17:05:45 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
9299446030 Rollup merge of #23607 - mahkoh:cursor, r=alexcrichton
Closes #23599

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-23 17:05:44 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
61e690405a Rollup merge of #23561 - steveklabnik:gh23422, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #23422
2015-03-23 17:05:44 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
84f760b50a Rollup merge of #23509 - aturon:stab-entry, r=Gankro
This commit marks as `#[stable]` the `Entry` types for the maps provided
by `std`. The main reason these had been left unstable previously was
uncertainty about an eventual trait design, but several plausible
designs have been proposed that all work fine with the current type definitions.

r? @Gankro
2015-03-23 17:05:44 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
f788159797 Rollup merge of #23119 - nikomatsakis:issue-23116-ref-mut, r=pnkfelix
Don't allow upcasting to a supertype in the type of the match discriminant. Fixes #23116.

This is a [breaking-change] in that it closes a type hole that previously existed.

r? @pnkfelix
2015-03-23 17:05:43 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
4a81e66b44 Rollup merge of #22954 - ches:docs, r=steveklabnik
Greetings Rustaceans!

I've just been getting acquainted with Rust through the guide. First let me say that it's already in great shape, chapters are kept a good length to be digestible and paced to move the reader along fluidly, so my compliments to contributors!

Along the way I noticed a few minor copy errors, and also a few areas that I thought more subjectively could stand to be improved. My commits here are divided so that minor edits unlikely to be very contentious could be cherry-picked, and then topically on parts that might generate more discussion.

I also have some comments and questions that aren't directly associated with any changes on this branch yet. I'm not sure how you like to triage this sort of thing but I'll present them below and if it's appropriate they could be moved to separate issues or I might be able to help work some of them out within the scope of this PR. Sorry that these are a lot to take in, pretty much everything below here can be digested independently of the current changes in this PR so you could read the rest later 😄

### Questions and Comments

I'll give stable links to doc revisions as of this writing.

1. The [example using `PartialEq` in the Traits chapter][1] is poor—we have no idea how `PartialEq` works at this point in the text (or at any point, AFAICT), so it isn't clear why it won't work as a trait bound in this situation and `Float` almost magically does, with the aid of existing tailor-made identity functions that seem unlikely to be so conveniently available when we encounter a scenario like this in our real-world code.

   This section just seems glossed over, or perhaps content has moved around over time or there's an assumption that implementing equality with `PartialEq` should be covered in the guide eventually so this example will be less foreign. As it stands the text is hard to follow and not very meaningful.
2. I found treatment of the relationship of trait objects to pointers in the *Static and Dynamic Dispatch* chapter unclear. [The "Why Pointers?" section][2] opens with this line:

   > The use of language like "fat pointer" implies that a trait object is always a pointer of some form, but why?

   But the phrase "fat pointer" hasn't been used anywhere before. This is some of the more complex material in the guide, but this section nevertheless feels displaced, not clearly connecting preceding subject matter. Earlier we've covered the internal representation of trait objects and significance of pointers they contain, but it hasn't been spelled out (other than what `&Foo` syntax suggests) that trait objects are references (and why). That's what the "Why Pointers?" section is aiming to do I gather, but it seems out of place, I think it'd make more sense to cover this before the gory details of their internals.
3. Suggestion: move the *Error Handling* chapter much earlier in the Intermediate section of the guide, or even into the Basics section. I know the Intermediate section isn't intended to be read in order per se, but plenty of people like me are just going to read it straight through anyway 😁 These are pretty fundamental concepts to understand and `Option`, `Result`, and idioms like `unwrap()` and `.ok().expect()` are referenced numerous times throughout the rest of the guide. They feature pretty prominently as early as *Standard Input* and *Guessing Game* chapters in Basics, in fact. I happen to have a good understanding of these already through encountering their analogs in typed functional languages, but if I didn't I believe I really would have appreciated reading *Error Handling* much earlier.
4. In the `rustdoc` chapter, a [comment at the beginning of the first source example][3] refers to a "link" crate attribute being needed. There seems to be no such attribute present in the source. I believe this refers to `crate_type` [according to the reference][4], but it'd be nice if this example were updated/clarified (I think `crate_id` is deprecated/obsolete too).

   This brings me to a related comment also: after encountering crate attributes in the reference and also docs on Cargo configuration like `crate-type = ["dylib"]`, I'm uncertain about the relationship/redundancy between these. I'm sure this is the kind of thing where docs are simply struggling to keep pace with rapid changes in Rust and Cargo, just wanted to flag that this distinction ought to be clearly covered in the docs for one or the other at some point, it's presently hard to track down.
5. Minor: link to sample editor configurations in [the introductory chapter][5] is broken, probably the generator automatically translates `.md` links to `.html`. Perhaps it shouldn't do that for absolute URLs.
6. Following from my changes to the enums coverage in [*Compound Data Types*][6] in this PR: sum types are an important topic and I tried to make some improvements, but I think the motivating example of `Character` with `Digit(i32)` and `Other` variants is a pretty weak one, and a better example could greatly improve cohesion with the `Ordering` coverage later in the section and how that ties into pattern matching in the subsequent chapter. I just haven't thought of a better example to suggest yet.

   In particular, the text states:

   > This may seem rather limiting, but it's a limitation which we can overcome.

   This is referring to `Character`, and actually to more than one limitation: the preceding admonition that its variants aren't comparable/don't have ordering, and don't support binary operators like `*` and `+`. Overcoming these limitations actually never gets explained—we next cover how `Ordering` works as an enum itself for plain `i32`s, but never get around to showing how this might be applied to our `Digit` variant type.

   Since the coverage of enums already segues into pattern matching and this could be even tighter with a stronger example, it might be nice if our example enum were somehow connected to the final example program for the Basics section too, where `Ordering` reappears. I don't see how it would fit with the current guessing game example, but food for thought.
7. `#[derive]` seems conspicuously missing from the guide. It would probably make sense to introduce after showing simple examples of implementing equality and/or ordering traits by hand, which have been mentioned as possibilities above. Perhaps it's too much to breach this as early as the Basic section though without traits being introduced. `#[derive]` itself and the derivable traits can certainly be saved for Intermediate and referenced as covered later, in any case.

r? @steveklabnik for docs.

[1]: 1576142495/src/doc/trpl/traits.md (our-inverse-example)
[2]: 1576142495/src/doc/trpl/static-and-dynamic-dispatch.md (why-pointers)
[3]: 1576142495/src/doc/trpl/documentation.md (creating-documentation)
[4]: http://doc.rust-lang.org/reference.html#linkage
[5]: 1576142495/src/doc/trpl/hello-world.md
[6]: 1576142495/src/doc/trpl/compound-data-types.md (enums)
2015-03-23 17:05:43 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
a5e1cbe191 Beef up BufRead::consume documentation.
Fixes #23196
2015-03-23 13:42:39 -04:00
Julian Orth
d6fb7e9da8 derive missing trait implementations for cursor 2015-03-23 17:48:13 +01:00
Steve Klabnik
2750e3c83e Add note about pointer state after the call.
Fixes #23422
2015-03-23 12:21:53 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
45fae88256 When matching against a pattern (either via match or let) that
contains ref-bindings, do not permit any upcasting from the type of
the value being matched. Similarly, do not permit coercion in a `let`.

This is a [breaking-change] in that it closes a type hole that
previously existed, and in that coercion is not performed. You should
be able to work around the latter by converting:

```rust
let ref mut x: T = expr;
```

into

```rust
let x: T = expr;
let ref mut x = x;
```

Restricting coercion not to apply in the case of `let ref` or `let ref mut` is sort
of unexciting to me, but seems the best solution:

1. Mixing coercion and `let ref` or `let ref mut` is a bit odd, because you are taking
   the address of a (coerced) temporary, but only sometimes. It's not syntactically evident,
   in other words, what's going on. When you're doing a coercion, you're kind of

2. Put another way, I would like to preserve the relationship that
   `equality <= subtyping <= coercion <= as-coercion`, where this is
   an indication of the number of `(T1,T2)` pairs that are accepted by
   the various relations. Trying to mix `let ref mut` and coercion
   would create another kind of relation that is like coercion, but
   acts differently in the case where a precise match is needed.

3. In any case, this is strictly more conservative than what we had
   before and we can undo it in the future if we find a way to make
   coercion mix with type equality.

The change to match I feel ok about but similarly unthrilled. There is
some subtle text already concerning whether to use eqtype or subtype
for identifier bindings. The best fix I think would be to always have
match use strict equality but use subtyping on identifier bindings,
but the comment `(*)` explains why that's not working at the moment.
As above, I think we can change this as we clean up the code there.
2015-03-23 05:30:43 -04:00
Manish Goregaokar
b4e9106a8a Rollup merge of #23590 - FuGangqiang:attr, r=alexcrichton 2015-03-23 04:54:27 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
5b9e87b571 Rollup merge of #23576 - barosl:mutex-doc, r=alexcrichton 2015-03-23 04:54:27 +05:30
FuGangqiang
7ec80fa31c add lifetime for while and for expression 2015-03-23 04:54:27 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
f5782faa06 Rollup merge of #23562 - steveklabnik:fix_book_numbers, r=alexcrichton
Rustbook already does this.
2015-03-23 04:54:27 +05:30
FuGangqiang
5836efdfe7 fix the attributes sytax 2015-03-23 04:54:27 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
420bf9dd44 Rollup merge of #23554 - Ms2ger:readme-rustc, r=steveklabnik 2015-03-23 04:54:26 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
718fe3d9c5 Rollup merge of #23578 - fhahn:issue-22820-feature-gate-tests1, r=alexcrichton
...ures.

Namely:

 * `box_syntax`
 * `box_patterns`
 * `simd_ffi`
 * `macro_reexport`

cc #22820
2015-03-23 04:54:26 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
d8baa010ab Rollup merge of #23570 - dotdash:issue23550, r=eddyb
Boolean values and small aggregates have a different type in args/allocas than
in SSA values but the intrinsics for volatile and atomic ops were
missing the necessary casts to handle that.

Fixes #23550
2015-03-23 04:54:26 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
a91eece96b Rollup merge of #23559 - aturon:future-proof-map-index, r=Gankro
This commit removes the `IndexMut` impls on `HashMap` and `BTreeMap`, in
order to future-proof the API against the eventual inclusion of an
`IndexSet` trait.

Ideally, we would eventually be able to support:

```rust
map[owned_key] = val;
map[borrowed_key].mutating_method(arguments);
&mut map[borrowed_key];
```

but to keep the design space as unconstrained as possible, we do not
currently want to support `IndexMut`, in case some other strategy will
eventually be needed.

Code currently using mutating index notation can use `get_mut` instead.

[breaking-change]

Closes #23448

r? @Gankro
2015-03-23 04:54:26 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
fbc823d1e3 Document how to document macros
Fixes #23571
2015-03-22 15:26:23 -04:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
90c8592889 Refine Cursor docstring 2015-03-22 19:36:17 +02:00
bors
b0aad7dd4f Auto merge of #23361 - petrochenkov:refdst, r=jakub-
After this patch code like `let ref a = *"abcdef"` doesn't cause ICE anymore.
Required for #23121

There are still places in rustc_trans where pointers are always assumed to be thin. In particular, #19064 is not resolved by this patch.
2015-03-22 15:52:30 +00:00
Björn Steinbrink
d4ca1cffce Fix volatile / atomic ops on bools and small aggregates
Boolean values and small aggregates have a different type in
args/allocas than in SSA values but the intrinsics for volatile and
atomic ops were missing the necessary casts to handle that.

Fixes #23550
2015-03-21 10:46:52 +01:00
Florian Hahn
c48bb85702 Add tests checking that a number of feature gates are gating their features.
Namely:

 * `box_syntax`
 * `box_patterns`
 * `simd_ffi`
 * `macro_reexport`

 cc #22820
2015-03-21 10:18:28 +01:00
Barosl Lee
84b14c5dc9 Fix documentation for std::sync::mutex: into_guard -> into_inner 2015-03-21 14:38:23 +09:00
bors
ecf8c64e1b Auto merge of #23470 - alexcrichton:less-prelude, r=aturon
This commit removes the reexports of `old_io` traits as well as `old_path` types
and traits from the prelude. This functionality is now all deprecated and needs
to be removed to make way for other functionality like `Seek` in the `std::io`
module (currently reexported as `NewSeek` in the io prelude).

Closes #23377
Closes #23378
2015-03-21 05:25:21 +00:00
Alex Crichton
212e03181e std: Remove old_io/old_path from the prelude
This commit removes the reexports of `old_io` traits as well as `old_path` types
and traits from the prelude. This functionality is now all deprecated and needs
to be removed to make way for other functionality like `Seek` in the `std::io`
module (currently reexported as `NewSeek` in the io prelude).

Closes #23377
Closes #23378
2015-03-20 20:07:19 -07:00
bors
e2fa53e593 Auto merge of #23512 - oli-obk:result_ok_unwrap, r=alexcrichton
because then the call to `unwrap()` will not print the error object.
2015-03-20 23:16:47 +00:00
Ches Martin
92294e7aed guide: Improvements to language covering enums 2015-03-21 05:32:26 +07:00
Ches Martin
0c040b07f0 guide: minor copy edits 2015-03-21 05:32:07 +07:00
bors
68d6941563 Auto merge of #23267 - alexcrichton:issue-20012, r=aturon
This reverts commit aec67c2.

Closes #20012

This is temporarily rebased on #23245 as it would otherwise conflict, the last commit is the only one relevant to this PR though.
2015-03-20 20:19:42 +00:00
Steve Klabnik
9acdcba3d5 Remove manual numbers from TRPL
Rustbook already does this.
2015-03-20 15:27:55 -04:00
Alex Crichton
1cc9718fde Revert "Revert "std: Re-enable at_exit()""
This reverts commit aec67c2ee0.
2015-03-20 10:56:27 -07:00
Aaron Turon
5fe0bb743a Future-proof indexing on maps: remove IndexMut
This commit removes the `IndexMut` impls on `HashMap` and `BTreeMap`, in
order to future-proof the API against the eventual inclusion of an
`IndexSet` trait.

Ideally, we would eventually be able to support:

```rust
map[owned_key] = val;
map[borrowed_key].mutating_method(arguments);
&mut map[borrowed_key];
```

but to keep the design space as unconstrained as possible, we do not
currently want to support `IndexMut`, in case some other strategy will
eventually be needed.

Code currently using mutating index notation can use `get_mut` instead.

[breaking-change]

Closes #23448
2015-03-20 10:46:31 -07:00
bors
3900c089a1 Auto merge of #23471 - sae-bom:aarch64-linux-android, r=alexcrichton
Resolved #21773. (Aarch64 test has been broken again)
r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-20 17:45:15 +00:00
bors
ecdf792d1d Auto merge of #23537 - steveklabnik:gh22551, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #22551

('grammar' wasn't really used in the chapter at all)
2015-03-20 15:02:55 +00:00
Steve Klabnik
af09763cc1 Add AST to the glossary
Fixes #22551
2015-03-20 10:55:51 -04:00
Ms2ger
3bdb5c3078 Make librustc's markdown README.txt claim to be markdown.
This allows github to render it with formatting.
2015-03-20 13:29:13 +01:00
Ms2ger
41a7177d6a Update librustc's README.txt for some code changes and reformat it. 2015-03-20 13:29:01 +01:00
bors
cbc660bd1c Auto merge of #23522 - steveklabnik:gh22518, r=Manishearth
When investigating #22518, this chapter is really the only part that has `rand`, and the rest still works without it. We should have some examples like this, but for now, it's more important to be right than perfect.
2015-03-20 11:29:12 +00:00
Oliver Schneider
b4a1e59146 don't use Result::ok just to be able to use unwrap/unwrap_or 2015-03-20 08:19:13 +01:00
Manish Goregaokar
6107e4c0b8 Rollup merge of #23534 - steveklabnik:remove_sched_threads, r=alexcrichton
As @alexcrichton says, this was really a libgreen thing, and isn't
relevant now.

As this removes a technically-public function, this is a

[breaking-change]
2015-03-20 12:43:15 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
0711006694 Rollup merge of #23532 - steveklabnik:gh22002, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #22002
2015-03-20 12:43:14 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
17f3f3e3e6 Rollup merge of #23526 - mbrubeck:uppercase, r=steveklabnik
`uppercase` and `lowercase` are currently named `to_uppercase` and `to_lowercase`. Also adds a link to the `char` type documentation which has much more detail on these iterators.
2015-03-20 12:43:14 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
2ac03bceb4 Rollup merge of #23518 - farcaller:fix_quote_method, r=eddyb
This fixes several use cases that were broken after #23265 landed.
2015-03-20 12:43:13 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
90e7f472f7 Rollup merge of #23499 - mbrubeck:doc-edit, r=huonw
Multiple people have been suprised by this aspect of read_line's behavior, which is not obvious from the docs.
2015-03-20 12:43:13 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
dbe084b5bf Rollup merge of #23447 - kjpgit:kjp/pointerexample, r=steveklabnik
These two borrowing examples were confusing/misleading.  This changes it
to more clearly show how you _can_ borrow a box, and also uses & instead
of &*.
2015-03-20 12:43:12 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
1ceb26b48c Rollup merge of #22631 - aepsil0n:issue-22098, r=aturon
Fixes #22098.
2015-03-20 12:43:12 +05:30