Make all of the methods in `std::num::Float` take `self` and their other parameters by value.
Some of the `Float` methods took their parameters by value, and others took them by reference. This standardises them to one convention. The `Float` trait is intended for the built in IEEE 754 numbers only so we don't have to worry about the trait serving types of larger sizes.
[breaking-change]
Move the rounding functions into the `std::num::Float` trait and then remove `std::num::Round`.
This continues the flattening of the numeric traits tracked in #10387. The aim is to make `std::num` very simple and tied to the built in types, leaving the definition of more complex numeric towers to third-party libraries.
[breaking-change]
When calling a function, or anything with nested parens,
default to cindent's indent. The least error-prone way I
could think of identifying this is to look for a line
that ends with a ',', as well as a non-zero number of
any character except parens before the comma, and
then an open paren.
This will overlap with the previous rule accounting for
function definitions, but that should be fine because
it is also using cindent.
Configure required git be installed so this should be added to the dependencies list. If it's only required when using git, a note could also be added.
When calling a function, or anything with nested parens,
default to cindent's indent. The least error-prone way I
could think of identifying this is to look for a line
that ends with a ',', as well as a non-zero number of
any character except parens before the comma, and
then an open paren.
This will overlap with the previous rule accounting for
function definitions, but that should be fine because
it is also using cindent.
This removes all resizability support for ~[T] vectors in preparation of DST.
The only growable vector remaining is Vec<T>. In summary, the following methods
from ~[T] and various functions were removed. Each method/function has an
equivalent on the Vec type in std::vec unless otherwise stated.
* slice::OwnedCloneableVector
* slice::OwnedEqVector
* slice::append
* slice::append_one
* slice::build (no replacement)
* slice::bytes::push_bytes
* slice::from_elem
* slice::from_fn
* slice::with_capacity
* ~[T].capacity()
* ~[T].clear()
* ~[T].dedup()
* ~[T].extend()
* ~[T].grow()
* ~[T].grow_fn()
* ~[T].grow_set()
* ~[T].insert()
* ~[T].pop()
* ~[T].push()
* ~[T].push_all()
* ~[T].push_all_move()
* ~[T].remove()
* ~[T].reserve()
* ~[T].reserve_additional()
* ~[T].reserve_exect()
* ~[T].retain()
* ~[T].set_len()
* ~[T].shift()
* ~[T].shrink_to_fit()
* ~[T].swap_remove()
* ~[T].truncate()
* ~[T].unshift()
* ~str.clear()
* ~str.set_len()
* ~str.truncate()
Note that no other API changes were made. Existing apis that took or returned
~[T] continue to do so.
[breaking-change]
The original text stated that one should only return a unique or managed pointer if you were given one in the first place. This makes it sound as if the function *should* return a unique pointer if it were given a unique pointer. The rest of the section goes on to describe why this is bad, and the example of bad code does exactly what the rule just said to do.
I reworded the original rule into a reference to the more concise rule mentioned at the bottom of the section, which helps add emphasis (a la 'it bears repeating').
Renamed the methods in Bitv that test all bits to have names that, ehm, "roll off the tongue" a bit more easily. :)
Also added tests for them while at it, since they seemed to be missing.
Syntax-only crates are no longer registered with the cstore, so there's no need
to allocate crate numbers to them. This ends up leaving gaps in the crate
numbering scheme which is not expected in the rest of the compiler.
Closes#13560
The original text stated that one should only return a unique or managed pointer if you were given one in the first place. This makes it sound as if the function *should* return a unique pointer if it were given a unique pointer. The rest of the section goes on to describe why this is bad, and the example of bad code does exactly what the rule just said to do.
I reworded the original rule into a reference to the more concise rule mentioned at the bottom of the section, which helps add emphasis (a la 'it bears repeating').
Fix#12856.
I wanted to put this up first because I wanted to get feedback about the second commit in the series, commit 8599236. Its the more invasive part of the patch and is largely just belt-and-suspenders assertion checking; in the commit message I mentioned at least one other approach we could take here. Or we could drop the belt-and-suspenders and just rely on the guard added in the first patch, commit 8d6a005 (which is really quite trivial on its own).
So any feedback on what would be better is appreciated.
r? @nikomatsakis
This version of `is_to_be_inferred` double-checks the result from
`inferred_map` by querying the `named_region_map` and `ast_map` and
then asserts that the `inferred_map` state is consistent with its own
findings. (See issue 13261 for further discussion of the approaches).
This is the first snapshot build by mingw-w64 with the win32 threading model I believe (Closes#13501).
Curiously, this successfully built a snapshot on freebsd when the auto builder is continuously segfaulting. Who knew!
structure's Data2 and Data3 members expect WORD types instead of DWORD. I
discovered this discrepancy while experimenting with some bindings to
Microsoft's OLE2 api. The discrepancy was corrupting the contents of the
string returned by UuidToString after I used known GUIDs to test the
accuracy of the function binding. I didn't add test cases because it would
mean adding a dependency to my rather incomplete binding library. However,
the fix produces expected string values when tested.
Closes#13561. All definition lists have been converted to unordered lists. This is a temporary measure; please revert this when Sundown (or any replacement) gets a support for definition lists in the future.
Part of this required added an override of `fold_type_method` in the
Folder for Ctx impl; it follows the same pattern as `fold_method`.
Also, as a drive-by fix, I moved all of the calls to `folder.new_id`
in syntax::fold's no-op default traversal to really be the first
statement in each function.
* This is to uphold the invariant that `folder.new_id` is always
called first (an unfortunate requirement of the current `ast_map`
code), an invariant that we seemingly were breaking in e.g. the
previous `noop_fold_block`.
* Now it should be easier to see when adding new code that this
invariant must be upheld.
* (note that the breakage in `noop_fold_block` may not have mattered
so much previously, since the only thing that blocks can bind are
lifetimes, which I am only adding support for now.)
Before adding a variance constrant for a given early-bound param,
check if it was meant to be inferred.
To support the above, added `fn is_to_be_inferred` to
`variance::ConstraintContext`.
When instantiating trait default methods for certain implementation,
`typeck` correctly combined type parameters from trait bound with those
from method bound, but didn't do so for lifetime parameters. Applies
the same logic to lifetime parameters.
Closes#13204
Some of this documentation got a little out of date. There was no mention of a
`SyncSender`, and the entire "Outside the runtime" section isn't really true any
more (or really all that relevant).
This also updates a few other doc blocks and adds some examples.
* Use `setq-local` instead of `(set (make-local-variable 'var) value)`. Provides a version for older Emacsen.
* Remove use of `cl.el`.
* Use \' in file regexp instead of line end match $.
* Use type for `defcustom` and add parent group.
This commit changes the way move errors are reported when some value is
captured by a PatIdent. First, we collect all of the "cannot move out
of" errors before reporting them, and those errors with the same "move
source" are reported together. If the move is caused by a PatIdent (that
binds by value), we add a note indicating where it is and suggest the
user to put `ref` if they don't want the value to move. This makes the
"cannot move out of" error in match expression nicer (though the extra
note may not feel that helpful in other places :P). For example, with
the following code snippet,
```rust
enum Foo {
Foo1(~u32, ~u32),
Foo2(~u32),
Foo3,
}
fn main() {
let f = &Foo1(~1u32, ~2u32);
match *f {
Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
Foo2(num) => (),
Foo3 => ()
}
}
```
Errors before the change:
```rust
test.rs:10:9: 10:25 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:10 Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
test.rs:10:9: 10:25 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:10 Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
test.rs:11:9: 11:18 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:11 Foo2(num) => (),
^~~~~~~~~
```
After:
```rust
test.rs:9:11: 9:13 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:9 match *f {
^~
test.rs:10:14: 10:18 note: attempting to move value to here (to prevent the move, use `ref num1` or `ref mut num1` to capture value by reference)
test.rs:10 Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
^~~~
test.rs:10:20: 10:24 note: and here (use `ref num2` or `ref mut num2`)
test.rs:10 Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
^~~~
test.rs:11:14: 11:17 note: and here (use `ref num` or `ref mut num`)
test.rs:11 Foo2(num) => (),
^~~
```
Close#8064
structure's Data2 and Data3 members expect WORD types instead of DWORD. I
discovered this discrepancy while experimenting with some bindings to
Microsoft's OLE2 api. The discrepancy was corrupting the contents of the
string returned by UuidToString after I used known GUIDs to test the
accuracy of the function binding. I didn't add test cases because it would
mean adding a dependency to my rather incomplete binding library. However,
the fix produces expected string values when tested.
Syntax-only crates are no longer registered with the cstore, so there's no need
to allocate crate numbers to them. This ends up leaving gaps in the crate
numbering scheme which is not expected in the rest of the compiler.
Closes#13560