closure kind, thereby detecting what happens if there are
mismatches. Simply removing the `:` annotations caused most of these
tests to pass or produce other errors, because the inference would
convert the closure into a more appropriate kind. (The ability to
override the inference by using the expected type is an important
backdoor partly for this reason.)
possible. There is some amount of duplication as a result (similar to
select) -- I am not happy about this but not sure how to fix it
without deeper rewrites.
The extra check caused by the expect() call can, in general, not be
optimized away, because the length of the iterator is unknown at compile
time, causing a noticable slow-down. Since the check only triggers if
the element isn't actually found in the iterator, i.e. it isn't
guaranteed to trigger for ill-behaved ExactSizeIterators, it seems
reasonable to switch to an implementation that doesn't need the check
and just always returns None if the value isn't found.
Benchmark:
````rust
let v: Vec<u8> = (0..1024*65).map(|_| 0).collect();
b.iter(|| {
v.as_slice().iter().rposition(|&c| c == 1)
});
````
Before:
````
test rposition ... bench: 49939 ns/iter (+/- 23)
````
After:
````
test rposition ... bench: 33306 ns/iter (+/- 68)
````
That is, when offering suggestions for unresolved method calls, avoid
suggesting traits for which implementing the trait for the receiver type
either makes little sense (e.g. type errors, or sugared unboxed
closures), or violates coherence.
The latter is approximated by ensuring that at least one of `{receiver
type, trait}` is local. This isn't precisely correct due to
multidispatch, but the error messages one encounters in such situation
are useless more often than not; it is better to be conservative and
miss some cases, than have overly many false positives (e.g. writing
`some_slice.map(|x| ...)` uselessly suggested that one should implement
`IteratorExt` for `&[T]`, while the correct fix is to call `.iter()`).
Closes#21420.
That is, when offering suggestions for unresolved method calls, avoid
suggesting traits for which implementing the trait for the receiver type
either makes little sense (e.g. type errors, or sugared unboxed
closures), or violates coherence.
The latter is approximated by ensuring that at least one of `{receiver
type, trait}` is local. This isn't precisely correct due to
multidispatch, but the error messages one encounters in such situation
are useless more often than not; it is better to be conservative and
miss some cases, than have overly many false positives (e.g. writing
`some_slice.map(|x| ...)` uselessly suggested that one should implement
`IteratorExt` for `&[T]`, while the correct fix is to call `.iter()`).
Closes#21420.
I’d kind of like to be able to use HashState in AnyMap, which I can’t do without a stability attribute on it. While I was at it I looked around and found a few more missing.
The existence of these two functions is at odds with our current [error
conventions][conventions] which recommend that panicking and `Result`-like
variants should not be provided together.
[conventions]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0236-error-conventions.md#do-not-provide-both-result-and-fail-variants
This commit adds a new `borrow_state` function returning a `BorrowState` enum to
`RefCell` which serves as a replacemnt for the `try_borrow` and `try_borrow_mut`
functions.
Now that associated types are fully implemented the iterator adaptors only need
type parameters which are associated with actual storage. All other type
parameters can either be derived from these (e.g. they are an associated type)
or can be bare on the `impl` block itself.
This is a breaking change due to the removal of type parameters on these
iterator adaptors, but code can fairly easily migrate by just deleting the
relevant type parameters for each adaptor. Other behavior should not be
affected.
Closes#21839
[breaking-change]
Unicode escapes were changed in [this RFC](28aeb3c391/text/0446-es6-unicode-escapes.md) to use the ES6 \u{00FFFF} syntax with a variable number of digits from 1-6, eliminating the need for two different syntaxes for unicode literals.
I have updated The Reference and grammar.md to reflect these changes.
For "symmetric" binary operators, meaning the types of two sides must be
equal, if the type of LHS doesn't know yet but RHS does, use that as an
hint to infer LHS' type.
Closes#21634
These methods were intended to be stable as of #16258 but the tags have since
been lost in various refactorings. This commit re-adds the `#[stable]`
attributes to each of these functions.
Previously if --extern was specified it would not override crates in the
standard distribution, leading to issues like #21771. This commit alters the
behavior such that if --extern is passed then it will always override any other
choice of crates and no previous match will be used (unless it is the same path
as --extern).
Closes#21771
Hi.
Here a commit in order to add OpenBSD support to rust.
- tests status:
run-pass: test result: ok. 1879 passed; 0 failed; 24 ignored; 0 measured
run-fail: test result: ok. 81 passed; 0 failed; 5 ignored; 0 measured
compile-fail: test result: ok. 1634 passed; 0 failed; 22 ignored; 0 measured
run-pass-fulldeps: test result: ok. 22 passed; 0 failed; 1 ignored; 0 measured
compile-fail-fulldeps: test result: ok. 13 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured
- The current implementation of load_self function (src/libstd/sys/unix/os.rs) isn't optimal as under OpenBSD I haven't found a reliable method to get the filename of a running process. The current implementation is enought for bootstrapping purpose.
- I have disable `run-pass/tcp-stress.rs` test under openbsd. When run manually, the test pass, but when run under `compiletest`, it timeout and echo continuoulsy `Too many open files`.
- For building with jemalloc, a more recent version of jemalloc would be mandatory. See https://github.com/jemalloc/jemalloc/pull/188 for more details.