I ran across a comma splice.
I didn't set the "note:" off inside parenthesis. I looked around in other places and saw it both ways, but without surrounding parenthesis seemed to be the more common convention followed elsewhere in the docs. Let me know if you have an overriding preference about that and I'll change it.
r? @steveklabnik
This syncs the _Crates and Modules_ chapter of the book with current output:
* the runs are supposed to be in the project’s directory,
* `rustc` has slightly different error messages (and things like macro line:col numbers),
* Cargo now compiles things into `target/debug`.
Until I can figure out the correct way to configure jemalloc for Bitrig, this patch will correctly disable it. All other build targets remain unchanged.
MacOS X does not ship with Java installed by default. Instead it
includes binary stubs that upon execution pop up a message suggesting
the installation of the JDK.
Since `javac` is only used when `antlr4` is available, it is possible
to work around the popup by only probing for `javac` if `antlr4` has
been successfully detected (in which case the JDK is probably already
installed on the system).
Fixes#23138.
Right now comparing a `&String` (or a `&Cow`) to a `&str` requires redundant borrowing of the latter. Implementing `PartialEq<str>` tries to avoid this limitation.
```rust
struct Foo (String);
fn main () {
let s = Foo("foo".to_string());
match s {
Foo(ref x) if x == &"foo" => println!("foo!"),
// avoid this -----^
_ => {}
}
}
```
I was hoping that #23521 would solve this but it didn't work out.
Fixes#22757Fixes#22972Fixes#23044Fixes#23151Fixes#23597Fixes#23656Fixes#23929
It also fixes some other corner cases in range patterns, like incorrect spans or not accepting global paths after `...`.
It passes `make check` but needs some additional tests (then it will fix#22546 as well), I'll write them today or tomorrow.
MacOS X does not ship with Java installed by default. Instead it
includes binary stubs that upon execution pop up a message suggesting
the installation of the JDK.
Since `javac` is only used when `antlr4` is available, it is possible
to work around the popup by only probing for `javac` if `antlr4` has
been successfully detected (in which case the JDK is probably already
installed on the system).
Fixes#23138.
There are still some remnants we could remove from the compiler (e.g. references to "subtraitrefs"; traits still have variance entries in the variance table), but this removes all user-visible bits I believe.
r? @pnkfelix
Fixes#22806 (since such traits would no longer exist)
This means passing in e.g. a `Vec<u8>` or `String` will work as
intended, rather than deref-ing to `&mut [u8]` or `&mut str`.
[breaking-change]
Closes#23768
These constants are small and can fit even in `u8`, but semantically they have type `usize` because they denote sizes and are almost always used in `usize` context. The change of their type to `u32` during the integer audit led only to the large amount of `as usize` noise (see the second commit, which removes this noise).
This is a minor [breaking-change] to an unstable interface.
r? @aturon
affected struct:
- sockaddr_storage
- sockaddr_un
apply the same method used for linux for:
- bitrig/openbsd
- freebsd
- dragonfly
this commit unbreak build for openbsd (and bitrig, freebsd and dragonfly too I think)
r? @alexcrichton