This change adds --soft-float option for generating
software floating point library calls.
It also implies using soft float ABI, that is the same as llc.
It is useful for targets that have no FPU.
We're not outright removing fmt! just yet, but this prevents it from leaking
into the compiler further (it's still turned on by default for all other code).
the switch from package `hello` to `rust_pkg` is a little jarring; I'd use <var> but I don't see how. ALL_CAPS seems like a reasonable poor-man's <var>.
When a key is pressed and held, this now does the OS-style repeating after a bit
of a pause. Also fixes the width of search results to be correct (was changed
beforehand and didn't catch this).
This modifies the command-line usage of rustdoc to intake its own JSON output as
well as a rust source file. This also alters the command line from
`rustdoc input file` to `rustdoc file` with the input/output formats specified
as -r and -w, respectively.
When using a JSON input, no passes or plugins are re-run over the json, instead
the output is generated directly from the JSON that was provided. Passes and
plugins are still run on rust source input, however.
This change adds -Z soft-float option for generating
software floating point library calls.
It also implies using soft float ABI, that is the same as llc.
It is useful for targets that have no FPU.
It was a little ambiguous before how explicitl positional parameters and
implicit positional parameters intermingled, and this clarifies how the two
intermingle. This also updates a little bit of documentation/code examples
elsewhere as well.
Creates a wrapper around a mutable reference to the iterator.
This is useful to allow applying iterator adaptors while still
retaining ownership of the original iterator value.
Example::
let mut xs = range(0, 10);
// sum the first five values
let partial_sum = xs.by_ref().take(5).fold(0, |a, b| a + b);
assert!(partial_sum == 10);
// xs.next() is now `5`
assert!(xs.next() == Some(5));
This is mostly an incremental change, picking off some uses of
@- or @mut-pointers that can be replaced by references.
Almost all of the builder functions in trans::build are updated,
mostly using `&Block` arguments instead of `@mut Block`.
Use &mut Block and &Block references where possible in the builder
functions in trans::build.
@mut Block remains in a few functions where I could not (not yet at
least) track down the runtime borrowck failures.