Fix spacing in for loop enumeration example
Add a space between the comma and j in (i, j) to make it look nice.
This addresses my recent issue #34624.
😀
update cargo doc link
updated proper link of cargo doc that contains details about list of options available in semantic versioninig for the dependencies section in Cargo.toml
update documentation of tuple/unit structs
I made the "tuple structs are useless" editorializing a bit weaker and moved it to the end. Feel free to overrule me on that.
I also added an example of how to unpack a tuple struct with dot notation, because it came up on IRC.
`braced_empty_structs` is stable now, so I updated the example for unit-like structs to use that syntax. Should we show both ways?
cc @ubsan
r? @steveklabnik or @GuillaumeGomez
Revert "Revert "Remove the return_address intrinsic.""
This reverts commit f698cd3a36.
Made possible by the merge of servo/servo#11872, this closes#34227 for good.
Fixes the formatting for inline assembly clobbers used in the book.
As this causes llvm to silently ignore the clobber an error is also
added to catch cases in which the wrong formatting was used.
Additionally a test case is added to confirm that this error works.
Avoid redundant downloads when bootstrapping
If the local file is available, then verify it against the hash we just
downloaded, and if it matches then we don't need to download it again.
Support `cfg_attr` on `path` attributes
Fixes#25544.
This is technically a [breaking-change]. For example, the following would break:
```rust
mod foo; // Suppose `foo.rs` existed in the appropriate location
```
The organization in rustbuild was a little odd at the moment where the `lib.rs`
was quite small but the binary `main.rs` was much larger. Unfortunately as well
there was a `build/` directory with the implementation of the build system, but
this directory was ignored by GitHub on the file-search prompt which was a
little annoying.
This commit reorganizes rustbuild slightly where all the library files (the
build system) is located directly inside of `src/bootstrap` and all the binaries
now live in `src/bootstrap/bin` (they're small). Hopefully this should allow
GitHub to index and allow navigating all the files while maintaining a
relatively similar layout to the other libraries in `src/`.
rustdoc: Remove paths from primitive page <title> tags
Currently primitive pages have a title like "std::u8 - Rust" this changes
it to "u8 - Rust" as "std::u8" is the name of a module not a primitive
type.
This commit changes the behavior of formatting string arguments
with both width and precision fields set.
Documentation says that the `width` field is the "minimum width"
that the format should take up. If the value's string does not
fill up this many characters, then the padding specified by
fill/alignment will be used to take up the required space.
This is true for all formatted types except string, which is truncated
down to `precision` number of chars and then all of `fill`, `align` and
`width` fields are completely ignored.
For example: `format!("{:/^10.8}", "1234567890);` emits "12345678".
In the contrast Python version works as the expected:
```python
>>> '{:/^10.8}'.format('1234567890')
'/12345678/'
```
This commit gives back the `Python` behavior by changing the `precision`
field meaning to the truncation and nothing more. The result string *will*
be prepended/appended up to the `width` field with the proper `fill` char.
However, this is the breaking change.
Also updated `std::fmt` docs about string precision.
Signed-off-by: Evgeny Safronov <division494@gmail.com>
Add x86 intrinsics for bit manipulation (BMI 1.0, BMI 2.0, and TBM).
This PR adds the LLVM x86 intrinsics for the bit manipulation instruction sets (BMI 1.0, BMI 2.0, and TBM).
The objective of this pull-request is to allow building a library that implements all the algorithms offered by those instruction sets, using compiler intrinsics for the targets that support them (by means of `target_feature`).
The target features added are:
- `bmi`: Bit Manipulation Instruction Set 1.0, available in Intel >= Haswell and AMD's >= Jaguar/Piledriver,
- `bmi2`: Bit Manipulation Instruction Set 2.0, available in Intel >= Haswell and AMD's >= Excavator,
- `tbm`: Trailing Bit Manipulation, available only in AMD's Piledriver (won't be available in newer CPUs).
The intrinsics added are:
- BMI 1.0:
- `bextr`: Bit field extract (with register).
- BMI 2.0:
- `bzhi`: Zero high bits starting with specified bit position.
- `pdep`: Parallel bits deposit.
- `pext`: Parallel bits extract.
- TBM:
- `bextri`: Bit field extract (with immediate).