Commit Graph

166 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jorge Aparicio
57dd4ea78d fix #[cfg(test)] warnings 2015-01-27 22:58:45 -05:00
bors
1c87af2eba Auto merge of #21646 - dotdash:default_target_cpu, r=Aatch
Using `generic` as the target cpu limits the generated code to the bare basics for the arch, while we can probably assume that we'll actually be running on somewhat modern hardware. This updates the default target CPUs for the x86 and x86_64 archs to match clang's behaviour.

Refs #20777
2015-01-27 05:15:04 +00:00
Alex Crichton
3a07f859b8 Fallout of io => old_io 2015-01-26 16:01:16 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink
296c74de96 Default to Pentium 4 as the x86 target CPU on Windows/Linux/DragonFly
Limiting ourselves to a generic x86 instruction set doesn't seem useful.
Both users running those systems on original i386 hardware might as well
manually specify a target cpu ;-)

Clang uses the same default.
2015-01-26 09:58:56 +01:00
Björn Steinbrink
bca25aeeb4 Use more specific target CPUs on Darwin
Macs don't come with anything older than a Yonah (32bit) or Core2 (64bit),
so we can default to those targets. Clang does the same.
2015-01-26 09:58:55 +01:00
Huon Wilson
2e888d0341 Add the span of the operator itself to ast::BinOp. 2015-01-25 00:33:50 +11:00
Alex Crichton
df1cddf20a rollup merge of #20179: eddyb/blind-items
Conflicts:
	src/librustc/diagnostics.rs
	src/librustdoc/clean/mod.rs
	src/librustdoc/html/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/parser.rs
2015-01-21 11:56:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
87c3ee861e rollup merge of #21457: alexcrichton/issue-21436
Conflicts:
	src/liballoc/boxed.rs
	src/librustc/middle/traits/error_reporting.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mod.rs
2015-01-21 09:20:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a6780d8c6b rollup merge of #21414: ejjeong/aarch64-linux-android
Initial support for aarch64-linux-android (#18920)
- Add new configuration files
- Modify some options to compile & link succesfully.
  (PIE, disable tls on jemalloc, modify some external function linkage, ..)
- To build, refer to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/wiki/Doc-building-for-android.
   (tested with platform=21 and toolchain=aarch64-linux-android-4.9)
2015-01-21 09:15:59 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1646707c6e rollup merge of #21396: japaric/no-parens-in-range
Conflicts:
	src/libsyntax/parse/lexer/comments.rs
2015-01-21 09:15:15 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
e389ab18a2 rustc_back: fix fallout of merging ast::ViewItem into ast::Item. 2015-01-21 16:27:26 +02:00
Alex Crichton
3cb9fa26ef std: Rename Show/String to Debug/Display
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 565][rfc] which is a stabilization of
the `std::fmt` module and the implementations of various formatting traits.
Specifically, the following changes were performed:

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0565-show-string-guidelines.md

* The `Show` trait is now deprecated, it was renamed to `Debug`
* The `String` trait is now deprecated, it was renamed to `Display`
* Many `Debug` and `Display` implementations were audited in accordance with the
  RFC and audited implementations now have the `#[stable]` attribute
  * Integers and floats no longer print a suffix
  * Smart pointers no longer print details that they are a smart pointer
  * Paths with `Debug` are now quoted and escape characters
* The `unwrap` methods on `Result` now require `Display` instead of `Debug`
* The `Error` trait no longer has a `detail` method and now requires that
  `Display` must be implemented. With the loss of `String`, this has moved into
  libcore.
* `impl<E: Error> FromError<E> for Box<Error>` now exists
* `derive(Show)` has been renamed to `derive(Debug)`. This is not currently
  warned about due to warnings being emitted on stage1+

While backwards compatibility is attempted to be maintained with a blanket
implementation of `Display` for the old `String` trait (and the same for
`Show`/`Debug`) this is still a breaking change due to primitives no longer
implementing `String` as well as modifications such as `unwrap` and the `Error`
trait. Most code is fairly straightforward to update with a rename or tweaks of
method calls.

[breaking-change]
Closes #21436
2015-01-20 22:36:13 -08:00
Barosl LEE
1d8b917811 Rollup merge of #20998 - estsauver:20984, r=steveklabnik
There are a large number of places that incorrectly refer
to deriving in comments, instead of derives.

If someone could look at src/etc/generate-deriving-span-tests.py,
I'm not sure how those tests were passing before/if they were.
2015-01-21 02:16:45 +09:00
Eunji Jeong
940080501b Initial support for aarch64-linux-android 2015-01-20 17:43:15 +09:00
Jorge Aparicio
49684850be remove unnecessary parentheses from range notation 2015-01-19 12:24:43 -05:00
Brian Anderson
6f3a80e411 Set allow(unstable) in crates that use unstable features
Lets them build with the -dev, -nightly, or snapshot compiler
2015-01-17 16:38:04 -08:00
Earl St Sauver
6ab95bdd62 s/deriving/derives in Comments/Docs
There are a large number of places that incorrectly refer
to deriving in comments, instead of derives.

Fixes #20984
2015-01-17 11:08:02 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
2cdc86c180 syntax: add fully qualified UFCS expressions. 2015-01-15 18:51:14 +02:00
bors
0c96037ec1 auto merge of #20980 : richo/rust/final-power, r=alexcrichton
Originally, this was going to be discussed and revisted, however I've been working on this for months, and a rebase on top of master was about 1 flight's worth of work so I just went ahead and did it.

This gets you as far as being able to target powerpc with, eg:

    LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/ x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin/rustc -C linker=powerpc-linux-gnu-gcc --target powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu hello.rs

Would really love to get this out before 1.0. r? @alexcrichton
2015-01-15 05:12:30 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
c1d48a8508 cleanup: &foo[0..a] -> &foo[..a] 2015-01-12 17:59:37 -05:00
Richo Healey
c055d99526 powerpc: Teach trans about powerpc 2015-01-11 21:14:31 -08:00
Richo Healey
33cd9cf9f4 powerpc: initialize llvm 2015-01-11 21:14:31 -08:00
Richo Healey
c8442afeb0 powerpc: Add backend support for powerpc 2015-01-11 21:14:30 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink
14b6c6d153 Default to "x86-64" as the target cpu for x86_64 builds
Using "generic" disables a number of features that are present on all
x86_64 cpus, the "x86-64" target cpu is the common denominator for that
arch.

Refs #20777
2015-01-11 12:26:54 +01:00
bors
87ed884a9c Merge pull request #20699 from vhbit/ios-archs
Better iOS support

Reviewed-by: alexcrichton
2015-01-09 17:35:09 +00:00
Valerii Hiora
577d0dbcb8 iOS: preliminary 64-bit archs support 2015-01-09 18:38:30 +02:00
Valerii Hiora
1fb91dc1c2 iOS: updated targets
- target_word_size -> target_pointer_width
- added armv7 and armv7s targets
- enabled building binaries so tests could be run on a jailbroken device
2015-01-09 18:23:42 +02:00
Alex Crichton
4281bd1932 rollup merge of #20754: nikomatsakis/int-feature
Conflicts:
	src/test/compile-fail/borrowck-move-out-of-overloaded-auto-deref.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/issue-2590.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/lint-stability.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/slice-mut-2.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/std-uncopyable-atomics.rs
2015-01-08 09:24:08 -08:00
Huon Wilson
4f5a57e80e Remove warning from the libraries.
This adds the int_uint feature to *every* library, whether or not it
needs it.
2015-01-08 11:02:23 -05:00
Brian Anderson
1f70acbf4c Improvements to feature staging
This gets rid of the 'experimental' level, removes the non-staged_api
case (i.e. stability levels for out-of-tree crates), and lets the
staged_api attributes use 'unstable' and 'deprecated' lints.

This makes the transition period to the full feature staging design
a bit nicer.
2015-01-08 03:07:23 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0dc48b47a8 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2015-01-07 19:27:27 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6e806bdefd rollup merge of #20721: japaric/snap
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/vec.rs
	src/libcore/fmt/mod.rs
	src/librustc/lint/builtin.rs
	src/librustc/session/config.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/context.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/type_.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/_match.rs
	src/librustdoc/html/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/std_inject.rs
	src/libsyntax/util/interner.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/mut-pattern-mismatched.rs
2015-01-07 17:26:58 -08:00
Alex Crichton
dd38f46d71 rollup merge of #20708: aturon/new-int-modules
Conflicts:
	src/libserialize/lib.rs
2015-01-07 17:18:01 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6301c7878e rollup merge of #20680: nick29581/target-word
Closes #20421

[breaking-change]

r? @brson
2015-01-07 17:17:23 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f3b67afcab rollup merge of #20663: brson/feature-staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system do a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md

Next steps are to disable the existing out-of-tree behavior for stability attributes, and convert the remaining system to be feature-based per the RFC. During the first beta cycle we will set these lints to 'forbid'.
2015-01-07 17:17:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8bf3ee7c5c rollup merge of #20654: alexcrichton/stabilize-hash
This commit aims to prepare the `std::hash` module for alpha by formalizing its
current interface whileholding off on adding `#[stable]` to the new APIs.  The
current usage with the `HashMap` and `HashSet` types is also reconciled by
separating out composable parts of the design. The primary goal of this slight
redesign is to separate the concepts of a hasher's state from a hashing
algorithm itself.

The primary change of this commit is to separate the `Hasher` trait into a
`Hasher` and a `HashState` trait. Conceptually the old `Hasher` trait was
actually just a factory for various states, but hashing had very little control
over how these states were used. Additionally the old `Hasher` trait was
actually fairly unrelated to hashing.

This commit redesigns the existing `Hasher` trait to match what the notion of a
`Hasher` normally implies with the following definition:

    trait Hasher {
        type Output;
        fn reset(&mut self);
        fn finish(&self) -> Output;
    }

This `Hasher` trait emphasizes that hashing algorithms may produce outputs other
than a `u64`, so the output type is made generic. Other than that, however, very
little is assumed about a particular hasher. It is left up to implementors to
provide specific methods or trait implementations to feed data into a hasher.

The corresponding `Hash` trait becomes:

    trait Hash<H: Hasher> {
        fn hash(&self, &mut H);
    }

The old default of `SipState` was removed from this trait as it's not something
that we're willing to stabilize until the end of time, but the type parameter is
always required to implement `Hasher`. Note that the type parameter `H` remains
on the trait to enable multidispatch for specialization of hashing for
particular hashers.

Note that `Writer` is not mentioned in either of `Hash` or `Hasher`, it is
simply used as part `derive` and the implementations for all primitive types.

With these definitions, the old `Hasher` trait is realized as a new `HashState`
trait in the `collections::hash_state` module as an unstable addition for
now. The current definition looks like:

    trait HashState {
        type Hasher: Hasher;
        fn hasher(&self) -> Hasher;
    }

The purpose of this trait is to emphasize that the one piece of functionality
for implementors is that new instances of `Hasher` can be created.  This
conceptually represents the two keys from which more instances of a
`SipHasher` can be created, and a `HashState` is what's stored in a
`HashMap`, not a `Hasher`.

Implementors of custom hash algorithms should implement the `Hasher` trait, and
only hash algorithms intended for use in hash maps need to implement or worry
about the `HashState` trait.

The entire module and `HashState` infrastructure remains `#[unstable]` due to it
being recently redesigned, but some other stability decision made for the
`std::hash` module are:

* The `Writer` trait remains `#[experimental]` as it's intended to be replaced
  with an `io::Writer` (more details soon).
* The top-level `hash` function is `#[unstable]` as it is intended to be generic
  over the hashing algorithm instead of hardwired to `SipHasher`
* The inner `sip` module is now private as its one export, `SipHasher` is
  reexported in the `hash` module.

And finally, a few changes were made to the default parameters on `HashMap`.

* The `RandomSipHasher` default type parameter was renamed to `RandomState`.
  This renaming emphasizes that it is not a hasher, but rather just state to
  generate hashers. It also moves away from the name "sip" as it may not always
  be implemented as `SipHasher`. This type lives in the
  `std::collections::hash_map` module as `#[unstable]`

* The associated `Hasher` type of `RandomState` is creatively called...
  `Hasher`! This concrete structure lives next to `RandomState` as an
  implemenation of the "default hashing algorithm" used for a `HashMap`. Under
  the hood this is currently implemented as `SipHasher`, but it draws an
  explicit interface for now and allows us to modify the implementation over
  time if necessary.

There are many breaking changes outlined above, and as a result this commit is
a:

[breaking-change]
2015-01-07 17:17:19 -08:00
Brian Anderson
c27133e2ce Preliminary feature staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system to a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md
2015-01-07 15:34:56 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
517f1cc63c use slicing sugar 2015-01-07 17:35:56 -05:00
Alex Crichton
511f0b8a3d std: Stabilize the std::hash module
This commit aims to prepare the `std::hash` module for alpha by formalizing its
current interface whileholding off on adding `#[stable]` to the new APIs.  The
current usage with the `HashMap` and `HashSet` types is also reconciled by
separating out composable parts of the design. The primary goal of this slight
redesign is to separate the concepts of a hasher's state from a hashing
algorithm itself.

The primary change of this commit is to separate the `Hasher` trait into a
`Hasher` and a `HashState` trait. Conceptually the old `Hasher` trait was
actually just a factory for various states, but hashing had very little control
over how these states were used. Additionally the old `Hasher` trait was
actually fairly unrelated to hashing.

This commit redesigns the existing `Hasher` trait to match what the notion of a
`Hasher` normally implies with the following definition:

    trait Hasher {
        type Output;
        fn reset(&mut self);
        fn finish(&self) -> Output;
    }

This `Hasher` trait emphasizes that hashing algorithms may produce outputs other
than a `u64`, so the output type is made generic. Other than that, however, very
little is assumed about a particular hasher. It is left up to implementors to
provide specific methods or trait implementations to feed data into a hasher.

The corresponding `Hash` trait becomes:

    trait Hash<H: Hasher> {
        fn hash(&self, &mut H);
    }

The old default of `SipState` was removed from this trait as it's not something
that we're willing to stabilize until the end of time, but the type parameter is
always required to implement `Hasher`. Note that the type parameter `H` remains
on the trait to enable multidispatch for specialization of hashing for
particular hashers.

Note that `Writer` is not mentioned in either of `Hash` or `Hasher`, it is
simply used as part `derive` and the implementations for all primitive types.

With these definitions, the old `Hasher` trait is realized as a new `HashState`
trait in the `collections::hash_state` module as an unstable addition for
now. The current definition looks like:

    trait HashState {
        type Hasher: Hasher;
        fn hasher(&self) -> Hasher;
    }

The purpose of this trait is to emphasize that the one piece of functionality
for implementors is that new instances of `Hasher` can be created.  This
conceptually represents the two keys from which more instances of a
`SipHasher` can be created, and a `HashState` is what's stored in a
`HashMap`, not a `Hasher`.

Implementors of custom hash algorithms should implement the `Hasher` trait, and
only hash algorithms intended for use in hash maps need to implement or worry
about the `HashState` trait.

The entire module and `HashState` infrastructure remains `#[unstable]` due to it
being recently redesigned, but some other stability decision made for the
`std::hash` module are:

* The `Writer` trait remains `#[experimental]` as it's intended to be replaced
  with an `io::Writer` (more details soon).
* The top-level `hash` function is `#[unstable]` as it is intended to be generic
  over the hashing algorithm instead of hardwired to `SipHasher`
* The inner `sip` module is now private as its one export, `SipHasher` is
  reexported in the `hash` module.

And finally, a few changes were made to the default parameters on `HashMap`.

* The `RandomSipHasher` default type parameter was renamed to `RandomState`.
  This renaming emphasizes that it is not a hasher, but rather just state to
  generate hashers. It also moves away from the name "sip" as it may not always
  be implemented as `SipHasher`. This type lives in the
  `std::collections::hash_map` module as `#[unstable]`

* The associated `Hasher` type of `RandomState` is creatively called...
  `Hasher`! This concrete structure lives next to `RandomState` as an
  implemenation of the "default hashing algorithm" used for a `HashMap`. Under
  the hood this is currently implemented as `SipHasher`, but it draws an
  explicit interface for now and allows us to modify the implementation over
  time if necessary.

There are many breaking changes outlined above, and as a result this commit is
a:

[breaking-change]
2015-01-07 12:18:08 -08:00
Nick Cameron
dd3e89aaf2 Rename target_word_size to target_pointer_width
Closes #20421

[breaking-change]
2015-01-08 09:07:55 +13:00
Alex Crichton
b53e9f17d3 Register new snapshots 2015-01-07 10:27:52 -08:00
bors
c0216c8945 Merge pull request #20674 from jbcrail/fix-misspelled-comments
Fix misspelled comments.

Reviewed-by: steveklabnik
2015-01-07 15:35:30 +00:00
Joseph Crail
e3b7fedc20 Fix misspelled comments.
I cleaned up comments prior to the 1.0 alpha release.
2015-01-06 20:53:18 -05:00
Alex Crichton
e2f97f51ad Register new snapshots
Conflicts:
	src/librbml/lib.rs
	src/libserialize/json_stage0.rs
	src/libserialize/serialize_stage0.rs
	src/libsyntax/ast.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/deriving/generic/mod.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/token.rs
2015-01-06 15:24:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
5c3ddcb15d rollup merge of #20481: seanmonstar/fmt-show-string
Conflicts:
	src/compiletest/runtest.rs
	src/libcore/fmt/mod.rs
	src/libfmt_macros/lib.rs
	src/libregex/parse.rs
	src/librustc/middle/cfg/construct.rs
	src/librustc/middle/dataflow.rs
	src/librustc/middle/infer/higher_ranked/mod.rs
	src/librustc/middle/ty.rs
	src/librustc_back/archive.rs
	src/librustc_borrowck/borrowck/fragments.rs
	src/librustc_borrowck/borrowck/gather_loans/mod.rs
	src/librustc_resolve/lib.rs
	src/librustc_trans/back/link.rs
	src/librustc_trans/save/mod.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/callee.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/common.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/consts.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/controlflow.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/debuginfo.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/expr.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/monomorphize.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/astconv.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/method/mod.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/mod.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/regionck.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/collect.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/source_util.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/tt/transcribe.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/mod.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/token.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-8898.rs
2015-01-06 15:22:24 -08:00
Nick Cameron
0c7f7a5fb8 fallout 2015-01-07 12:02:52 +13:00
Sean McArthur
44440e5c18 core: split into fmt::Show and fmt::String
fmt::Show is for debugging, and can and should be implemented for
all public types. This trait is used with `{:?}` syntax. There still
exists #[derive(Show)].

fmt::String is for types that faithfully be represented as a String.
Because of this, there is no way to derive fmt::String, all
implementations must be purposeful. It is used by the default format
syntax, `{}`.

This will break most instances of `{}`, since that now requires the type
to impl fmt::String. In most cases, replacing `{}` with `{:?}` is the
correct fix. Types that were being printed specifically for users should
receive a fmt::String implementation to fix this.

Part of #20013

[breaking-change]
2015-01-06 14:49:42 -08:00
Nick Cameron
f7ff37e4c5 Replace full slice notation with index calls 2015-01-07 10:46:33 +13:00
Keegan McAllister
416137eb31 Modernize macro_rules! invocations
macro_rules! is like an item that defines a macro.  Other items don't have a
trailing semicolon, or use a paren-delimited body.

If there's an argument for matching the invocation syntax, e.g. parentheses for
an expr macro, then I think that applies more strongly to the *inner*
delimiters on the LHS, wrapping the individual argument patterns.
2015-01-05 18:21:14 -08:00
Keegan McAllister
c9f0ff3813 Reserve the keyword 'macro' 2015-01-05 18:21:14 -08:00