Turns out that even if the default is "enabled", that doesn't mean that the
CFG_ENABLE_DEBUG variable will be defined. Instead, test whether
CFG_DISABLE_DEBUG is defined and disable debug things if that's the case.
Removes old rustdoc, moves rustdoc_ng into its place instead (plus drops the _ng
suffix). Also shreds all reference to rustdoc_ng from the Makefile rules.
Nothin like deleting 7k lines from a repo!
Removes old rustdoc, moves rustdoc_ng into its place instead (plus drops the _ng
suffix). Also shreds all reference to rustdoc_ng from the Makefile rules.
First steps on toward a shiny new `std::rand`, this does a variety of relatively clean-up tasks, like:
- moving `std/rand.rs` to `std/rand/mod.rs` in preparation for (e.g.) splitting the large chunk that is the `Isaac` implementation into a separate file later.
- removing the now unused RNG code in the old rt (500 lines gone just like that!)
- merging Rng and RngUtil via default methods
- examples in the documentation for almost all methods.
And other things mentioned in the commit messages.
Also, documentation & general clean-up:
- remove `gen_char_from`: better served by `sample` or `choose`.
- `gen_bytes` generalised to `gen_vec`.
- `gen_int_range`/`gen_uint_range` merged into `gen_integer_range` and
made to be properly uniformly distributed. Fixes#8644.
Minor adjustments to other functions.
This was a dead end experiment, and not a sensible way of implementing
generic data parallelism. This also removes the `graph500-bfs.rs`
benchmark because it relies on `extra::par`.
Closes#5626
This large commit implements and `html` output option for rustdoc_ng. The
executable has been altered to be invoked as "rustdoc_ng html <crate>" and
it will dump everything into the local "doc" directory. JSON can still be
generated by changing 'html' to 'json'.
This also fixes a number of bugs in rustdoc_ng relating to comment stripping,
along with some other various issues that I found along the way.
The `make doc` command has been altered to generate the new documentation into
the `doc/ng/$(CRATE)` directories.
Previews
* http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~acrichto/doc/std/
* http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~acrichto/doc/extra/
Missing features
* Different versions of documentation on the same page (all possibly indexed as well?) I think that this needs to be thought out before action is taken. It's an awesome idea, but it should be done carefully.
* Source links are missing. This is a little dependent on getting versions working. In theory we should link back to github, but we should always link back to the exact version the documentation was generated from.
* Integration with other tools. It would be awesome to have rustpkg-style inference of the package name and version so they don't have to be specified anywhere. Additionally, I should be able to build documentation for a pkgid, not necessarily a crate file.
cc @cmr/@Seldaek
This large commit implements and `html` output option for rustdoc_ng. The
executable has been altered to be invoked as "rustdoc_ng html <crate>" and
it will dump everything into the local "doc" directory. JSON can still be
generated by changing 'html' to 'json'.
This also fixes a number of bugs in rustdoc_ng relating to comment stripping,
along with some other various issues that I found along the way.
The `make doc` command has been altered to generate the new documentation into
the `doc/ng/$(CRATE)` directories.
This was a dead end experiment, and not a sensible way of implementing
generic data parallelism. This also removes the `graph500-bfs.rs`
benchmark because it relies on `extra::par`.
Closes#5626
Resolves third bullet of #4691: if the functional-struct-update (FSU) expression `{ a: b, ..s }` causes `s` to move and `s` has a destructor, then the expression is illegal.
r? @nikomatsakis
Many people will be very confused that their debug! statements aren't working
when they first use rust only to learn that they should have been building with
`--cfg debug` the entire time. This inverts the meaning of the flag to instead
of enabling debug statements, now it disables debug statements.
This way the default behavior is a bit more reasonable, and requires less
end-user configuration. Furthermore, this turns on debug by default when
building the rustc compiler.
Many people will be very confused that their debug! statements aren't working
when they first use rust only to learn that they should have been building with
`--cfg debug` the entire time. This inverts the meaning of the flag to instead
of enabling debug statements, now it disables debug statements.
This way the default behavior is a bit more reasonable, and requires less
end-user configuration. Furthermore, this turns on debug by default when
building the rustc compiler.