Add lint for 'field_reassign_with_default` #568
changelog: Add lint for field_reassign_with_default that checks if mutable object + field modification is used to edit a binding initialized with Default::default() instead of struct constructor.
Fixes#568
Notes:
- Checks for reassignment of one or more fields of a binding initialized with Default::default().
- Implemented using EarlyLintPass, might be future proofed better with LateLintPass.
- Does not trigger if Default::default() is used via another type implementing Default.
- This is a re-open of [PR#4761](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/4761), but I couldn't figure out how to re-open that one so here's a new one with the requested changes :S
Refactorings in preparation for const value trees
cc #72396
This PR changes the `Scalar::Bits { data: u128, size: u8 }` variant to `Scalar::Bits(ScalarInt)` where `ScalarInt` contains the same information, but is `repr(packed)`. The reason for using a packed struct is to allow enum variant packing to keep the original size of `Scalar` instead of adding another word to its size due to padding.
Other than that the PR just gets rid of all the inspection of the internal fields of `Scalar::Bits` which were frankly scary. These fields have invariants that we need to uphold and we can't do that without making the fields private.
r? `@ghost`
Use reparsed `TokenStream` if we captured any inner attributes
Fixes#78675
We now bail out of `prepend_attrs` if we ended up capturing any inner
attributes (which can happen in several places, due to token capturing
for `macro_rules!` arguments.
Use const sym where possible
I ran a regex search and replace to use const `sym` values where possible. This should give some performance boost by avoiding string interning at runtime.
Con: It is not as consistent as always using `sym!`.
I also changed an internal lint to suggest using `sym::{}`, making an assumption that this will always work for diagnostic items.
changelog: none
Clarify allow/warn/deny documentation. Remove enable/disable.
Disable and enable when not specifically explained were not clear to me
as an English language speaker, but I was able to figure it out fairly
easily due to the examples having A/W, which I assumed meant `allow` and
`warn`. I removed both words to be sure it was clear as well as
extending the note on what deny means. It now includes a statement on
exactly what each word means.
Documentation only update.
*Please keep the line below*
changelog: none
This adds a binary called `x` in `src/tools/x`. All it does is check the
current directory and its ancestors for a file called `x.py`, and if it
finds one, runs it.
By installing x, you can easily `x.py` from any subdirectory.
It can be installed globally with `cargo install --path src/tools/x`