Change `unnecessary_to_owned` `into_iter` suggestions to `MaybeIncorrect`
I am having a hard time finding a good solution for #8148, so I am wondering if is enough to just change the suggestion's applicability to `MaybeIncorrect`?
I apologize, as I realize this is a bit of a cop out.
changelog: none
changelog: none
Sorry, this is a big one. A lot of interrelated changes and I wanted to put the new utils to use to make sure they are somewhat battle-tested. We may want to divide some of the lint-specific refactoring commits into batches for smaller reviewing tasks. I could also split into more PRs.
Introduces a bunch of new utils at `clippy_utils::macros::...`. Please read through the docs and give any feedback! I'm happy to introduce `MacroCall` and various functions to retrieve an instance. It feels like the missing puzzle piece. I'm also introducing `ExpnId` from rustc as "useful for Clippy too". `@rust-lang/clippy`
Fixes#7843 by not parsing every node of macro implementations, at least the major offenders.
I probably want to get rid of `is_expn_of` at some point.
The `wrong_self_convention` lint uses a `SelfKind` type to decide
whether a method has the right kind of "self" for its name, or whether
the kind of "self" it has makes its name confusable for a method in
a common trait. One possibility is `SelfKind::No`, which is supposed
to mean "No `self`".
Previously, SelfKind::No matched everything _except_ Self, including
references to Self. This patch changes it to match Self, &Self, &mut
Self, Box<Self>, and so on.
For example, this kind of method was allowed before:
```
impl S {
// Should trigger the lint, because
// "methods called `is_*` usually take `self` by reference or no `self`"
fn is_foo(&mut self) -> bool { todo!() }
}
```
But since SelfKind::No matched "&mut self", no lint was triggered
(see #8142).
With this patch, the code above now gives a lint as expected.
Fixes#8142
changelog: [`wrong_self_convention`] rejects `self` references in more cases
Remove `SymbolStr`
This was originally proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74554#discussion_r466203544. As well as removing the icky `SymbolStr` type, it allows the removal of a lot of `&` and `*` occurrences.
Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@oli-obk`
By changing `as_str()` to take `&self` instead of `self`, we can just
return `&str`. We're still lying about lifetimes, but it's a smaller lie
than before, where `SymbolStr` contained a (fake) `&'static str`!
Fix `any()` not taking reference in `search_is_some` lint
`find` gives reference to the item, but `any` does not, so suggestion is broken in some specific cases.
Fixes: #7392
changelog: [`search_is_some`] Fix suggestion for `any()` not taking item by reference
Fix for #7889 and add new lint needless_splitn
fixes: #7889
1. Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior.
2. Add a new lint needless_splitn.
changelog: Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior and add a new lint needless_splitn.
1. Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior.
2. Add a new lint needless_splitn.
changelog: Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior and add a new lint needless_splitn.
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 -.-
Add `unwrap_or_else_default` lint
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: Add a new [`unwrap_or_else_default`] style lint. This will catch `unwrap_or_else(Default::default)` on Result and Option and suggest `unwrap_or_default()` instead.
Cleanup usage of `span_to_snippet` and `LintContext::sess`
- avoid using `SourceMap::span_to_snippet` directly and use `clippy_utils::source::snippet_opt` instead
- don't use `LintContext::sess()` on `EarlyContext`s which have a `sess` field directly available, saving the import of `LintContext`
changelog: none
It relaxes rules for `to_*` variant, so it doesn't lint in trait definitions
and implementations anymore.
Although, non-`Copy` type implementing trait's `to_*` method taking
`self` feels not good (consumes ownership, so should be rather named `into_`), it would be better if this case was a pedantic lint (allow-by-default) instead.
Fix FN in `iter_cloned_collect` with a large array
fixes#6808
changelog: Fix FN in `iter_cloned_collect` with a large array
I spotted that [is_iterable_array](a362a4d1d0/clippy_lints/src/loops/explicit_iter_loop.rs (L67-L75)) function that `explicit_iter_loop` lint is using only works for array sizes <= 32.
There is this comment:
> IntoIterator is currently only implemented for array sizes <= 32 in rustc
I'm a bit confused, because I read that [IntoIterator for arrays](https://doc.rust-lang.org/src/core/array/mod.rs.html#194-201) with const generic `N` is stable since = "1.0.0". Although Const Generics MVP were stabilized in Rust 1.51.
Should I set MSRV for the current change? I will try to test with older compilers soon.
Fix FP in `wrong_self_convention` lint
Previously, this lint didn't check into impl block when it was implementing a trait.
Recent improvements (#6924) have moved this check and some impl blocks are now checked but they shouldn't, such as in #7032.
Fixes#7032
changelog: Fix FP when not taking `self` in impl block for `wrong_self_convention` lint
* Added expression check for shared_code_in_if_blocks
* Finishing touches for the shared_code_in_if_blocks lint
* Applying PR suggestions
* Update lints yay
* Moved test into subfolder
Lint: filter(Option::is_some).map(Option::unwrap)
Fixes#6061
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog:
* add new lint for filter(Option::is_some).map(Option::unwrap)
First Rust PR, so I'm sure I've violated some idioms. Happy to change anything.
I'm getting one test failure locally -- a stderr diff for `compile_test`. I'm having a hard time seeing how I could be causing it, so I'm tentatively opening this in the hopes that it's an artifact of my local setup against `rustc`. Hoping it can at least still be reviewed in the meantime.
I'm gathering that since this is a method lint, and `.filter(...).map(...)` is already checked, the means of implementation needs to be a little different, so I didn't exactly follow the setup boilerplate. My way of checking for method calls seems a little too direct (ie, "is the second element of the expression literally the path for `Option::is_some`?"), but it seems like that's how some other lints work, so I went with it. I'm assuming we're not concerned about, eg, closures that just end up equivalent to `Option::is_some` by eta reduction.
Lint on `_.clone().method()` when method takes self by value
Set applicability correctly
Correct suggestion when the cloned value is a macro call. e.g. `m!(x).clone()`
Don't lint when not using the `Clone` trait
Ignore str::len() in or_fun_call lint.
changelog: Changed `or_fun_call` to ignore `str::len`, in the same way it ignores `slice::len` and `array::len`
Closes#6943
Refactor lints in methods module
This PR refactors methods lints other than the lints I refactored in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/6826 and moves some functions to methods/utils.rs.
Basically, I follow the instruction described in #6680.
**For ease of review, I refactored step by step, keeping each commit small.**
closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/6886
cc: `@phansch,` `@flip1995,` `@Y-Nak`
changelog: Move lints in methods module to their own modules and some function to methods/utils.rs.
wrong_self_convention: fix lint in case of `to_*_mut` method
fixes#6758
changelog: wrong_self_convention: fix lint in case of `to_*_mut` method. When a method starts with `to_` and ends with `_mut`, clippy expects a `&mut self` parameter, otherwise `&self`.
Any feedback is welcome. I was also thinking if shouldn't we treat `to_` the same way as `as_`. Namely to accept `self` taken: `&self` or `&mut self`.
or_fun_call: fix suggestion for `or_insert(vec![])`
fixes#6748
changelog: or_fun_call: fix suggestion for `or_insert(vec![])` on `std::collections::hash_map::Entry` or `std::collections::btree_map::Entry`
Applies for `std::collections::hash_map::Entry` and `std::collections::btree_map::Entry`
Example:
Previously, for the following code:
`let _ = hash_map.entry("test".to_owned()).or_insert(vec![]);`
clippy would suggest to use:
`or_insert_with(vec![])`, which causes a compiler error (E0277).
Now clippy suggests:
`or_insert_with(Vec::new)`
Fix suggestions that need parens in `from_iter_instead_of_collect` lint
Fixes broken suggestions that need parens (i.e.: range)
Fixes: #6648
changelog: none
This renames the variants in HIR UnOp from
enum UnOp {
UnDeref,
UnNot,
UnNeg,
}
to
enum UnOp {
Deref,
Not,
Neg,
}
Motivations:
- This is more consistent with the rest of the code base where most enum
variants don't have a prefix.
- These variants are never used without the `UnOp` prefix so the extra
`Un` prefix doesn't help with readability. E.g. we don't have any
`UnDeref`s in the code, we only have `UnOp::UnDeref`.
- MIR `UnOp` type variants don't have a prefix so this is more
consistent with MIR types.
- "un" prefix reads like "inverse" or "reverse", so as a beginner in
rustc code base when I see "UnDeref" what comes to my mind is
something like "&*" instead of just "*".