This is a behavior that some find confusing, so it deserves its own example.
Fixes#31318
I think this wording might be a bit strange, but I couldn't come up with anything better. Feedback very welcome.
Fixes#31098
AFAICT this is the only place where rustdoc explicitly checks if we are on stable before emitting content, so I can't tell if this is the sane way to handle this, or if anything else should be done to make sure that nobody forgets to remove this check when `const` is stabilized.
Any documentation comments that contain raw-string-looking sequences may pretty-print invalid code when expanding them, as the current logic always uses the `r"literal"` form, without appending any `#`s.
This commit calculates the minimum number of `#`s required to wrap a comment correctly and appends `#`s appropriately.
Fixes#27489.
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.
As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
Pretty printing of macro with braces but without terminated semicolon
removed more boxes from stack than it put there, resulting in panic.
This fixes the issue #30731.
Some other shufflings as well:
* Three powerpc triples for Linux have been added recently
* An armv7 linux triple was added recently
* The 64-bit Solaris triple is now mentioned in tier 3
We are currently now also building nightlies for iOS, powerpc triples, and
armv7, but there hasn't been much vetting of the triples themselves so I've left
them in tier 3 for now.
Fixes#31334
This is just a quicker fix for this issue; since I'm working on the next draft of the book, I don't want to put a huuuge amount of work into improving it here.
When trying to run a specific test, I found the contributing docs a bit confusing and through a bit of googling found out that TESTNAME takes the fully qual'd name of the test.
I'm unsure if this can also take the source file, but I was unable to get that to work.
`Drop` is not implemented for `Child`, so if it goes out of scope in Rust-land and gets deallocated the child process will continue to exist and execute. If users want a guarantee that the process has finished running and exited they must manually use `kill`, `wait`, or `wait_with_output`.
Fixes#31289.
r? @steveklabnik
E0507 can occur when you try to move out of a member of a mutably borrowed struct, in which case `mem::replace` can help. Mentioning that here hopefully saves future users a trip to Google.
Updated documentation to clarify the difference between `and_then` and `map`. This also explains why we need `and_then` in addition to `map`. Please look at the diff for more information.
r? @alexcrichton
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.
As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
Some other shufflings as well:
* Three powerpc triples for Linux have been added recently
* An armv7 linux triple was added recently
* The 64-bit Solaris triple is now mentioned in tier 3
We are currently now also building nightlies for iOS, powerpc triples, and
armv7, but there hasn't been much vetting of the triples themselves so I've left
them in tier 3 for now.