Now that rustdoc understands proper language tags
as the code not being Rust, we can tag everything
properly.
This change tags examples in other languages by
their language. Plain notations are marked as `text`.
Console examples are marked as `console`.
Also fix markdown.rs to not highlight non-rust code.
This changes the parsing of the language string
in code examples so that unrecognized examples
are not considered Rust code. This was, for example,
the case when a code example was marked `sh` for shell
code.
This relieves authors of having to mark those samples
as `notrust`.
Also adds recognition of the positive marker `rust`.
By default, unmarked examples are still considered rust.
If any rust-specific tags are seen, code is considered
rust unless marked as "notrust".
Adds test cases for the detection logic.
This completes the last stage of the renaming of the comparison hierarchy of
traits. This change renames TotalEq to Eq and TotalOrd to Ord.
In the future the new Eq/Ord will be filled out with their appropriate methods,
but for now this change is purely a renaming change.
[breaking-change]
Cross crate links can target items which are not rendered in the documentation.
If the item is reexported at a higher level, the destination of the link (a
concatenation of the fully qualified name) may actually lead to nowhere. This
fixes this problem by altering rustdoc to emit pages which redirect to the local
copy of the reexported structure.
cc #14515Closes#14137
There is currently no way to query all impls for a type from an external crate,
and with primitive types in play this is also quite difficult. Instead of
filtering, just suck in all impls from upstream crates into the local AST, and
have them get stripped later.
This will allow population of all implementations of traits for primitive types,
as well as filling in some corner cases with inlining documentation in other
cases.
This commit adds support in rustdoc to recognize the `#[doc(primitive = "foo")]`
attribute. This attribute indicates that the current module is the "owner" of
the primitive type `foo`. For rustdoc, this means that the doc-comment for the
module is the doc-comment for the primitive type, plus a signal to all
downstream crates that hyperlinks for primitive types will be directed at the
crate containing the `#[doc]` directive.
Additionally, rustdoc will favor crates closest to the one being documented
which "implements the primitive type". For example, documentation of libcore
links to libcore for primitive types, but documentation for libstd and beyond
all links to libstd for primitive types.
This change involves no compiler modifications, it is purely a rustdoc change.
The landing pages for the primitive types primarily serve to show a list of
implemented traits for the primitive type itself.
The primitive types documented includes both strings and slices in a semi-ad-hoc
way, but in a way that should provide at least somewhat meaningful
documentation.
Closes#14474
When inlining documentation across crates, primitive implementors of traits were
not shown. This commit tweaks the infrastructure to treat primitive and
Path-like impls the same way, displaying all implementors everywhere.
cc #14462
Instead of one giant function, this breaks it up into several smaller functions
which have explicit dependencies among one another.
There are no code changes as a result of this commit.
This is part of the ongoing renaming of the equality traits. See #12517 for more
details. All code using Eq/Ord will temporarily need to move to Partial{Eq,Ord}
or the Total{Eq,Ord} traits. The Total traits will soon be renamed to {Eq,Ord}.
cc #12517
[breaking-change]
We already have into_string(), but it was implemented in terms of
into_owned(). Flip it around and deprecate into_owned().
Remove a few spurious calls to .into_owned() that existed in libregex
and librustdoc.
We already have into_string(), but it was implemented in terms of
into_owned(). Flip it around and deprecate into_owned().
Remove a few spurious calls to .into_owned() that existed in libregex
and librustdoc.
Previously this was adding one-too-many `..`s to the path for the
`gotosrc=...` links for local crates. Also, the `root_path` already ends
in `/`s so a trailing / shouldn't be added after the root (some servers
treat `...//...` different to `.../...` including the one running
doc.rust-lang.org).
This commit moves reflection (as well as the {:?} format modifier) to a new
libdebug crate, all of which is marked experimental.
This is a breaking change because it now requires the debug crate to be
explicitly linked if the :? format qualifier is used. This means that any code
using this feature will have to add `extern crate debug;` to the top of the
crate. Any code relying on reflection will also need to do this.
Closes#12019
[breaking-change]
These links work by hyperlinking back to the actual documentation page with a
query parameter which will be recognized and then auto-click the appropriate
[src] link.
Within the documentation for a crate, all hyperlinks to reexported items don't
go across crates, but rather to the items in the crate itself. This will allow
references to Option in the standard library to link to the standard library's
Option, instead of libcore's.
This does mean that other crate's links for Option will still link to libcore's
Option.
This commit teaches rustdoc to inline the documentation for the destination of a
`pub use` statement across crate boundaries. This is intended for the standard
library's facade to show the fact that the facade is just an implementation
detail rather than the api of the standard library itself.
This starts out by inlining traits and functions, but more items will come soon.
The current drawback of this system is that hyperlinks across crates sill go to
the original item's definition rather than the reexported location.
There's a fair number of attributes that have to be whitelisted since
they're either looked for by rustdoc, in trans, or as needed. These can
be cleaned up in the future.