Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Anderson
b44ee371b8 grandfathered -> rust1 2015-01-23 21:48:20 -08:00
Brian Anderson
94ca8a3610 Add 'feature' and 'since' to stability attributes 2015-01-21 16:16:18 -08:00
Patrick Walton
ddb2466f6a librustc: Always parse macro!()/macro![] as expressions if not
followed by a semicolon.

This allows code like `vec![1i, 2, 3].len();` to work.

This breaks code that uses macros as statements without putting
semicolons after them, such as:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b)
        assert!(c == d)
        println(...);
    }

It also breaks code that uses macros as items without semicolons:

    local_data_key!(foo)

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

Add semicolons to fix this code. Those two examples can be fixed as
follows:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b);
        assert!(c == d);
        println(...);
    }

    local_data_key!(foo);

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

RFC #378.

Closes #18635.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-18 12:09:07 -05:00
Aaron Turon
bdbc09ad48 libs: stabilize most numerics after RFC changes
This commit adds stability markers for the APIs that have recently been
aligned with [numerics
reform](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/369). For APIs that were
changed as part of that reform, `#[unstable]` is used to reflect the
recency, but the APIs will become `#[stable]` in a follow-up pass.

In addition, a few aspects of the APIs not explicitly covered by the RFC
are marked here -- in particular, constants for floats.

This commit does not mark the `uint` or `int` modules as `#[stable]`,
given the ongoing debate out the names and roles of these types.

Due to some deprecation (see the RFC for details), this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-11-18 20:07:58 -08:00
Brian Anderson
808b848eaf std: Add stability attributes to primitive numeric modules
The following are unstable:

- core::int, i8, i16, i32, i64
- core::uint, u8, u16, u32, u64
- core::int::{BITS, BYTES, MIN, MAX}, etc.
- std::int, i8, i16, i32, i64
- std::uint, u8, u16, u32, u64

The following are experimental:
- std::from_str::FromStr and impls - may need to return Result instead of Option
- std::int::parse_bytes, etc. - ditto
- std::num::FromStrRadix and impls - ditto
- std::num::from_str_radix - ditto

The following are deprecated:
- std::num::ToStrRadix and imples - Wrapper around fmt::radix. Wrong name (Str vs String)

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/wiki/Meeting-API-review-2014-06-23#uint
2014-06-24 17:23:05 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c2e3aa37da rustdoc: Create anchor pages for primitive types
This commit adds support in rustdoc to recognize the `#[doc(primitive = "foo")]`
attribute. This attribute indicates that the current module is the "owner" of
the primitive type `foo`. For rustdoc, this means that the doc-comment for the
module is the doc-comment for the primitive type, plus a signal to all
downstream crates that hyperlinks for primitive types will be directed at the
crate containing the `#[doc]` directive.

Additionally, rustdoc will favor crates closest to the one being documented
which "implements the primitive type". For example, documentation of libcore
links to libcore for primitive types, but documentation for libstd and beyond
all links to libstd for primitive types.

This change involves no compiler modifications, it is purely a rustdoc change.
The landing pages for the primitive types primarily serve to show a list of
implemented traits for the primitive type itself.

The primitive types documented includes both strings and slices in a semi-ad-hoc
way, but in a way that should provide at least somewhat meaningful
documentation.

Closes #14474
2014-05-31 21:59:50 -07:00
Piotr Jawniak
dd0d495f50 Move trait impls for primitives near trait definition
Closes #12925
2014-05-28 17:15:35 +02:00
Alex Crichton
104e285eb8 core: Get coretest working
This mostly involved frobbing imports between realstd, realcore, and the core
being test. Some of the imports are a little counterintuitive, but it mainly
focuses around libcore's types not implementing Show while libstd's types
implement Show.
2014-05-07 08:16:42 -07:00
Alex Crichton
be0a11729e core: Inherit the specific numeric modules
This implements all traits inside of core::num for all the primitive types,
removing all the functionality from libstd. The std modules reexport all of the
necessary items from the core modules.
2014-05-07 08:15:58 -07:00