One of the tests seems to have no current equivalent that's similar. Please let me know if that's incorrect, and I'll try fixing it instead of deleting it. I suppose a struct could be used instead of `any` and `match type`, but it seems like the original intent of the test was to exercise `match type`
r? @pcwalton
A month's worth of parser cleanup here. Much of this is new comments and renaming. A number of these commits also remove unneeded code. Probably the biggest refactor here is splitting "parse_item_or_view_item" into two functions; it turns out that the only overlap between items in foreign modules and items in regular modules was macros, so this refactor should make things substantially easier for future maintenance.
The existing adaptors like `map` in the `iter` module are very flawed because they only work for `BaseIter` implementations. There are many internal iterator implementations in the standard library like the set methods (`difference`, `symmetric_difference`, `intersection`, `union`) and the `range` functions that only share the `for` loop protocol in common.
The internal iterator adaptors should be implemented to work on any implementation of that protocol, rather than just a method called `each` taking `&self`.
This just moves `iter.rs` to `old_iter.rs` and begins work on documenting and implementing a nicer module.
before this change, the parser would parse 14.a() as a method call, but
would parse 14.ø() as the floating-point number 14. followed by a function
call. This is because it was checking is_alpha, rather than ident_start,
and was therefore wrong with respect to unicode.
In principle, it seems like a nice idea to abstract over the two
functions that parse blocks (one with inner attrs allowed, one not).
However, the existing one wound up making things more complex than
just having two separate functions, especially after the obsolete
syntax is (will be) removed.
prec.rs no longer had much to do with precedence; the token->binop
function fits better in token.rs, and the one-liner defining the
precedence of 'as' can go next to the other precedence stuff in
ast_util.rs
r? @brson mkdir_recursive creates a directory as well as any of its
parent directories that don't exist already. Seems like a useful
thing to have in core.
(Or r? anyone who gets to it first.)