core::slice was originally written to tolerate overflow (notably, with
slices of zero-sized elements), but it was never updated to use wrapping
arithmetic when overflow traps were added.
Also correctly handle the case of calling .nth() on an Iter with a
zero-sized element type. The iterator was assuming that the pointer
value of the returned reference was meaningful, but that's not true for
zero-sized elements.
Fixes#25016.
It is currently broken to use syntax such as `<T as Foo>::U::static_method()` where `<T as Foo>::U` is an associated type. I was able to fix this and simplify the parser a bit at the same time.
This also fixes the corresponding issue with associated types (#22139), but that's somewhat irrelevant because #22519 is still open, so this syntax still causes an error in type checking.
Similarly, although this fix applies to associated consts, #25046 forbids associated constants from using type parameters or `Self`, while #19559 means that associated types have to always have one of those two. Therefore, I think that you can't use an associated const from an associated type anyway.
The loop to load all the known impls from external crates seems to have been used because `ty::populate_implementations_for_trait_if_necessary` wasn't doing its job, and solely relying on it resulted in loading only impls in the same crate as the trait.
Coherence for `librustc` was reduced from 18.310s to 0.610s, from stage1 to stage2.
Interestingly, type checking also went from 46.232s to 42.003s, though that could be noise or unrelated improvements.
On a smaller scale, `fn main() {}` now spends 0.003s in coherence instead of 0.368s, which fixes#22068.
It also peaks at only 1.2MB, instead of 16MB of heap usage.
A few errors slipped through my filter. Markdown formatting is especially important now that http://doc.rust-lang.org/error-index.html is live!
Speaking of, the error index should probably be linked to from somewhere. It doesn't quite fit under any of the sections in the index, but I could create a new one for it? Or add it under "tools" despite it not exactly being an executable tool.
The functions BitSet::{iter,union,symmetric_difference} each had docs that claimed u32s were output when their actual output each end up being usizes.
r? @steveklabnik
Adds long diagnostic messages for:
- E0184
- E0204
- E0205
- E0206
- E0243
- E0244
- E0249
- E0250
This PR also adds some comments to the error codes in `librustc_typeck/diagnostics.rs`.
cc #24407
They're only enabled in debug builds, but a panic is usually more
welcome than UB in debug builds.
Previous review at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/22069
r? @Gankro
cc @huon
Rustdoc fixes for associated items
This is related to isssue #22442 and solves it partly.
This solves the search index links of associated types and constants,
so that they link to the trait page.
Also add an Associated Constants section if constants are present.
core::slice::Iter.ptr can be null when iterating a slice of zero-sized
elements, but the pointer value used for the slice itself cannot. Handle
this case by always returning a dummy pointer for slices of zero-sized
elements.
We don't need to copy any elements if `at` is behind the last element
in the map. The last element is at index `self.v.len() - 1`, so we
should not copy if `at` is greater **or equals** `self.v.len()`.
r? @Gankro
Hiiii, I've got another chunk of updates to the grammar documentation! ⭐🌟🌠
Chipping away at #22445, still have some more to go. I'm learning so much!!!
Maybe it's me, but I really needed an example to understand if let and refutable statements.
Playpen: http://is.gd/mjX3Gf
Let me know if the variable names are too, uh, culinary.
Several Minor API / Reference Documentation Fixes
- Fix a few small errors in the reference.
- Fix paper cuts in the API docs.
Fixes#24882Fixes#25233Fixes#25250
The reference was claiming all vectors all bounds-checked at run-time, when constant vectors are usually checked at compile-time.
For the changed example see http://is.gd/28ak9E
Also fixed a minor grammar issue.
We don't need to copy any elements if `at` is behind the last element
in the map. The last element is at index `self.v.len() - 1`, so we
should not copy if `at` is greater or equals `self.v.len()`.
core::slice was originally written to tolerate overflow (notably, with
slices of zero-sized elements), but it was never updated to use wrapping
arithmetic when overflow traps were added.
Also correctly handle the case of calling .nth() on an Iter with a
zero-sized element type. The iterator was assuming that the pointer
value of the returned reference was meaningful, but that's not true for
zero-sized elements.
Fixes#25016.
There were still some mentions of `~[T]` and `~T`, mostly in comments and debugging statements. I tried to do my best to preserve meaning, but I might have gotten some wrong-- I'm happy to fix anything :)
Between ffc5f1c, when grammar.md was created by copying parts of the
reference, and 8cf2552, when all EBNF was removed from reference.md,
there were parts of the grammar that were updated in reference.md but
not grammar.md, and then they weren't copied over because they existed
already, but they were slightly out of date.
Example: the `path_item : ident | "self" ;` rule in Use declarations was
changed from "mod" to "self" in the reference in 195fd9a but wasn't
updated in the grammar.