fix the false 'defined here' messages
Closes#80853.
Take this code:
```rust
struct S;
fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
thing();
}
```
Previously, the error message would be this:
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `S`
--> src/lib.rs:4:5
|
3 | fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
| ----- `S` defined here
4 | thing();
| ^^^^^--
| |
| call expression requires function
error: aborting due to previous error
```
This is incorrect as `S` is not defined in the function arguments, `thing` is defined there. With this change, the following is emitted:
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `S`
--> $DIR/80853.rs:4:5
|
LL | fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
| ----- is of type `S`
LL | thing();
| ^^^^^--
| |
| call expression requires function
|
= note: local variable `S` is not a function
error: aborting due to previous error
```
As you can see, this error message points out that `thing` is of type `S` and later in a note, that `S` is not a function. This change does seem like a downside for some error messages. Take this example:
```
LL | struct Empty2;
| -------------- is of type `Empty2`
```
As you can see, the error message shows that the definition of `Empty2` is of type `Empty2`. Although this isn't wrong, it would be more helpful if it would say something like this (which was there previously):
```
LL | struct Empty2;
| -------------- `Empty2` defined here
```
If there is a better way of doing this, where the `Empty2` example would stay the same as without this change, please inform me.
**Update: This is now fixed**
CC `@camelid`
Fix ICE caused by suggestion with no code substitutions
Change suggestion logic to filter and checking _before_ creating
specific resolution suggestion.
Assert earlier that suggestions contain code substitions to make it
easier in the future to debug invalid uses. If we find this becomes too
noisy in the wild, we can always make the emitter resilient to these
cases and remove the assertions.
Fix#78651.
Make char and u8 methods const
char methods `len_utf8`, `len_utf16`, `to_ascii_lowercase`, `eq_ignore_ascii_case` can be made const.
`u8` methods `to_ascii_lowercase`, `to_ascii_uppercase` are required to be const as well.
`u8::eq_ignore_ascii_case` was additionally made const.
Rebase of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79549 originally authored by ``@YenForYang.`` Changes from that PR:
- Squashed all commits from #79549.
- rebased to latest upstream master.
- Removed const attributes for `char::escape_unicode` and `char::escape_default`.
- Updated `since` attributes for `const` stabilization to 1.52.0.
cc ``@m-ou-se.``
rustdoc: Name fields of `ResolutionFailure::WrongNamespace`
It makes it clearer that the `Namespace` is the one requested by the
disambiguator, rather than the actual namespace of the item. It said
that in the docs before, but now you can tell in the code so it reduces
the potential for confusion.
Make ptr::write const
~~The code in this PR as of right now is not much more than an experiment.~~
~~This should, if I am not mistaken, in theory compile and pass the tests once the bootstraping compiler is updated. Thus the PR is blocked on that which should happen some time after the February the 9th. Also we might want to wait for #79989 to avoid regressing performance due to using `mem::forget` over `intrinsics::forget`~~.
Add an impl of Error on `Arc<impl Error>`.
`Display` already exists so this should be a non-controversial change (famous last words).
Would have to be insta-stable.
Convert core/num/mod.rs to intra-doc links
Helps with #75080.
This can't convert the associated constants `MAX` and `MIN` until #74489 is merged.
r? `@poliorcetics`
Prevent to compute Item attributes twice
I came across this case when working on another part of rustdoc. Not a game changer but a nice little improvement.
cc `@camelid`
r? `@jyn514`
move upper_case_acronyms back to style, but make the default behaviour less aggressive by default (can be unleashed via config option)
Previous discussion in the bi-weekly clippy meeting for reference: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/Meeting.202021-02-23/near/227458019
Move the `upper_case_acronyms` lint back to the style group.
Only warn on fully-capitalized names by default.
Add add a clippy-config option `upper-case-acronyms-aggressive: true/false` to enabled more aggressive linting on
all substrings that could be capitalized acronyms.
---
changelog: reenable upper_case_acronyms by default but make the more aggressive linting opt-in via config option
This avoids naming collisions, particularly on Windows where the
dynamic library variable is PATH and setting it causes the in-tree
`tidy` to take precedence over the HTML tidy used by compiletest.
Expand FlattenCompat folds
The former `chain`+`chain`+`fold` implementation looked nice from a
functional-programming perspective, but it introduced unnecessary layers
of abstraction on every `flat_map`/`flatten` fold. It's straightforward
to just fold each part in turn, and this makes it look like a simplified
version of the existing `try_fold` implementation.
For the `iter::bench_flat_map*` benchmarks, I get a large improvement in
`bench_flat_map_chain_sum`, from 1,598,473 ns/iter to 499,889 ns/iter,
and the rest are unchanged.
Moves the lint back from pedantic to style group.
The lint default now only warns on names that are completely capitalized, like "WORD"
and only if the name is longer than 2 chars (so that names where each of the letter represents a word are still distinguishable).
For example: FP (false positive) would still be "valid" and not warned about (but EOF would warn).
A "upper_case_acronyms_aggressive: true/false" config option was added that restores the original lint behaviour to warn
on any kind of camel case name that had more than one capital letter following another capital letter.