This commit adds a `no_std` and `no_core` check on `swap` lint and additionally suggest `core::mem::swap` whenever possible.
Remove warning if both `std` and `core` is not present.
So, some context for this, well, more a story. I'm not used to scripting, I've never really scripted anything, even if it's a valuable skill. I just never really needed it. Now, `@flip1995` correctly suggested using a script for this in `rust-clippy#7813`...
And I decided to write a script using nushell because why not? This was a mistake... I spend way more time on this than I would like to admit. It has definitely been more than 4 hours. It shouldn't take that long, but me being new to scripting and nushell just wasn't a good mixture... Anyway, here is the script that creates another script which adds the versions. Fun...
Just execute this on the `gh-pages` branch and the resulting `replacer.sh` in `clippy_lints` and it should all work.
```nu
mv v0.0.212 rust-1.00.0;
mv beta rust-1.57.0;
mv master rust-1.58.0;
let paths = (open ./rust-1.58.0/lints.json | select id id_span | flatten | select id path);
let versions = (
ls | where name =~ "rust-" | select name | format {name}/lints.json |
each { open $it | select id | insert version $it | str substring "5,11" version} |
group-by id | rotate counter-clockwise id version |
update version {get version | first 1} | flatten | select id version);
$paths | each { |row|
let version = ($versions | where id == ($row.id) | format {version})
let idu = ($row.id | str upcase)
$"sed -i '0,/($idu),/{s/pub ($idu),/#[clippy::version = "($version)"]\n pub ($idu),/}' ($row.path)"
} | str collect ";" | str find-replace --all '1.00.0' 'pre 1.29.0' | save "replacer.sh";
```
And this still has some problems, but at this point I just want to be done -.-
Fix `semicolon_if_nothing_returned` FP on `let-else` stmts
closes#7912
`semicolon_if_nothing_returned` now additionally checks if the statements ends in `;` , this will also prevent `let-else` statements to be linted.
changelog: fix [`semicolon_if_nothing_returned`] FP firing on `let-else`
`match_overlapping_arm` refactoring
The main purpose of this pull request is to remove the unneeded and scary `unimplented!()` in the `match_arm_overlapping` code.
The rest is gratuitous refactoring.
changelog: none
Fix `explicit_counter_loop` suggestion for non-usize types
changelog: Add a new suggestion for non-usize types in [`explicit_counter_loop`]
closes: #7920
Fix suggestion for deref expressions in redundant_pattern_matching
changelog: Fix suggestion for deref expressions in [`redundant_pattern_matching`]
closes: #7921
Only the end bounds of ranges can actually be included or excluded. This
commit changes the SpannedRange type to reflect that. Update `Kind::value`
to and `Kind::cmp` for this change. `Kind::cmp` gets flipped to check value
first and then the bound details and is much shorter.
This unbounded case never actually happens because `all_ranges(..)` uses
the scrutinee type bounds for open ranges. Switch to our own `Bound`
enum so that we don't have this case.
Introduce `expr_visitor` and `expr_visitor_no_bodies`
changelog: none
A couple utils that satisfy a *lot* of visitor use cases. Factoring in every possible usage would be really big so I just focused on cleaning clippy_utils.
Add `cargo dev lint` to manually run clippy on a file
I found the manual run command really useful, this makes it a bit easier to type
Not sure if this belongs in the changelog or not
changelog: Add `cargo dev lint` to manually run clippy on a file
Replace `in_macro` usage with `from_expansion`
changelog: none
Generally replace `in_macro(span)` with `span.from_expansion()`. If we're just trying to avoid expanded code, this seems more appropriate because any kind of expanded code is prone to false positives. One place I did not touch is `macro_use.rs`. I think this lint could use a rewrite so I moved `in_macro` there, the only place it is still used.