The motivation here is to eliminate the `Option<(Delimiter,
DelimSpan)>`, which is `None` for the outermost token stream and `Some`
for all other token streams.
We are already treating the innermost frame specially -- this is the
`frame` vs `stack` distinction in `TokenCursor`. We can push that
further so that `frame` only contains the cursor, and `stack` elements
contain the delimiters for their children. When we are in the outermost
token stream `stack` is empty, so there are no stored delimiters, which
is what we want because the outermost token stream *has* no delimiters.
This change also shrinks `TokenCursor`, which shrinks `Parser` and
`LazyAttrTokenStreamImpl`, which is nice.
Sometimes the parser needs to desugar a doc comment into `#[doc =
r"foo"]`. Currently it does this in a hacky way: by pushing a "fake" new
frame (one without a delimiter) onto the `TokenCursor` stack.
This commit changes things so that the token stream itself is modified
in place. The nice thing about this is that it means
`TokenCursorFrame::delim_sp` is now only `None` for the outermost frame.
Improve diagnostic for missing space in range pattern
Improves the diagnostic in #107425 by turning it into a note explaining the parsing issue.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Revert "review comment: Remove AST AnonTy"
This reverts commit 020cca8d36.
Revert "Ensure macros are not affected"
This reverts commit 12d18e4031.
Revert "Emit fewer errors on patterns with possible type ascription"
This reverts commit c847a01a3b.
Revert "Teach parser to understand fake anonymous enum syntax"
This reverts commit 2d82420665.
The check previously matched this, and suggested adding a missing
`struct`:
pub Foo(...):
It was probably intended to match this instead (semicolon instead of
colon):
pub Foo(...);
Fix invalid float literal suggestions when recovering an integer
Only suggest adding a zero to integers with a preceding dot when the change will result in a valid floating point literal.
For example, `.0x0` should not be turned into `0.0x0`.
r? nnethercote
Only suggest adding a zero to integers with a preceding dot when the change will
result in a valid floating point literal.
For example, `.0x0` should not be turned into `0.0x0`.
Improve unexpected close and mismatch delimiter hint in TokenTreesReader
Fixes#103882Fixes#68987Fixes#69259
The inner indentation mismatching will be covered by outer block, the new added function `report_error_prone_delim_block` will find out the error prone candidates for reporting.
Recover from more const arguments that are not wrapped in curly braces
Recover from some array, borrow, tuple & arithmetic expressions in const argument positions that lack curly braces and provide a suggestion to fix the issue continuing where #92884 left off. Examples of such expressions: `[]`, `[0]`, `[1, 2]`, `[0; 0xff]`, `&9`, `("", 0)` and `(1 + 2) * 3` (we previously did not recover from them).
I am not entirely happy with my current solution because the code that recovers from `[0]` (coinciding with a malformed slice type) and `[0; 0]` (coinciding with a malformed array type) is quite fragile as the aforementioned snippets are actually successfully parsed as types by `parse_ty` since it itself already recovers from them (returning `[⟨error⟩]` and `[⟨error⟩; 0]` respectively) meaning I have to manually look for `TyKind::Err`s and construct a separate diagnostic for the suggestion to attach to (thereby emitting two diagnostics in total).
Fixes#81698.
`@rustbot` label A-diagnostics
r? diagnostics
Teach parser to understand fake anonymous enum syntax
Parse `Ty | OtherTy` in function argument and return types.
Parse type ascription in top level patterns.
Minimally address #100741.
Adds an additional hint to failures where we encounter an else keyword
while we're parsing an if-let block.
This is likely that the user has accidentally mixed if-let and let...else
together.
--wip-- [skip ci]
get the generic text and put it int he suggestion, but suggestion not working on derive subdiagnostic
refactor away from derives and use span_suggestion() instead. Show's the correct(?) generic contents, but overwrites the fn name :(
x fmt
drop commented code and s/todo/fixme
get the correct diagnostic for functions, at least
x fmt
remove some debugs
remove format
remove debugs
remove useless change
remove useless change
remove legacy approach
correct lookahead + error message contains the ident name
fmt
refactor code
tests
add tests
remoev debug
remove comment
Recognise double-equals homoglyph
Recognise `⩵` as a homoglyph for `==`.
The first commit switches `char` to `&str`, as all previous homoglyphs corresponded to a single ASCII character, while the second implements the fix.
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics +A-parser
make error emitted on `impl &Trait` nicer
Fixes#106694
Turned out to be simpler than I thought, also added UI test.
Before: ([playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=9bda53271ef3a8886793cf427b8cea91))
```text
error: expected one of `:`, ``@`,` or `|`, found `)`
--> src/main.rs:2:22
|
2 | fn foo(_: impl &Trait) {}
| ^ expected one of `:`, ``@`,` or `|`
|
= note: anonymous parameters are removed in the 2018 edition (see RFC 1685)
help: if this is a parameter name, give it a type
|
2 | fn foo(_: impl Trait: &TypeName) {}
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
help: if this is a type, explicitly ignore the parameter name
|
2 | fn foo(_: impl _: &Trait) {}
| ++
error: expected one of `!`, `(`, `)`, `,`, `?`, `for`, `~`, lifetime, or path, found `&`
--> src/main.rs:2:16
|
2 | fn foo(_: impl &Trait) {}
| -^ expected one of 9 possible tokens
| |
| help: missing `,`
error: expected one of `!`, `(`, `,`, `=`, `>`, `?`, `for`, `~`, lifetime, or path, found `&`
--> src/main.rs:3:11
|
3 | fn bar<T: &Trait>(_: T) {}
| ^ expected one of 10 possible tokens
```
After:
```text
error: expected a trait, found type
--> <anon>:2:16
|
2 | fn foo(_: impl &Trait) {}
| -^^^^^
| |
| help: consider removing the indirection
error: expected a trait, found type
--> <anon>:3:11
|
3 | fn bar<T: &Trait>(_: T) {}
| -^^^^^
| |
| help: consider removing the indirection
```
Emit only one nbsp error per file
Fixes#106101.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106098 for an explanation of how someone would end up with a large number of these nbsp characters in their source code, which is why I think rustc needs to handle this specific case in a friendlier way.
Emit a single error for contiguous sequences of unknown tokens
Closes#106101
On encountering a sequence of identical source characters which are unknown tokens, note the amount of subsequent characters and advance past them silently. The old behavior was to emit an error and 'help' note for every single one.
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics +A-parser
Recover from where clauses placed before tuple struct bodies
Open to any suggestions regarding the phrasing of the diagnostic.
Fixes#100790.
`@rustbot` label A-diagnostics
r? diagnostics
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104531 (Provide a better error and a suggestion for `Fn` traits with lifetime params)
- #105899 (`./x doc library --open` opens `std`)
- #106190 (Account for multiple multiline spans with empty padding)
- #106202 (Trim more paths in obligation types)
- #106234 (rustdoc: simplify settings, help, and copy button CSS by not reusing)
- #106236 (docs/test: add docs and a UI test for `E0514` and `E0519`)
- #106259 (Update Clippy)
- #106260 (Fix index out of bounds issues in rustdoc)
- #106263 (Formatter should not try to format non-Rust files)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Currently, given `Fn`-family traits with lifetime params like
`Fn<'a>(&'a str) -> bool`, many unhelpful errors show up. These are a
bit confusing.
This commit allows these situations to suggest simply using
higher-ranked trait bounds like `for<'a> Fn(&'a str) -> bool`.
Properly calculate best failure in macro matching
Previously, we used spans. This was not good. Sometimes, the span of the token that failed to match may come from a position later in the file which has been transcribed into a token stream way earlier in the file. If precisely this token fails to match, we think that it was the best match because its span is so high, even though other arms might have gotten further in the token stream.
We now try to properly use the location in the token stream.
This needs a little cleanup as the `best_failure` field is getting out of hand but it should be mostly good to go. I hope I didn't violate too many abstraction boundaries..
Always suggest as `MachineApplicable` in `recover_intersection_pat`
This resolves one FIXME in `recover_intersection_pat` by always applying `MachineApplicable` when suggesting, as `bindings_after_at` is now stable.
This also separates a test to apply `// run-rustfix`.
Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>