add 'mir' to rustc help menu and man doc
add 'mir' to '--emit' flag list for 'rustc'.
This is added because 'rustc' can now generate MIR (referencing to
"Teach rustc --emit=mir #39891").
Do not desugar if-let-else to match arm guards
Fixes#41272
Changed the desugaring code
**Before**
```rust
match <sub_expr> {
<pat> => <body>,
[_ if <else_opt_if_cond> => <else_opt_if_body>,]
_ => [<else_opt> | ()]
}
```
**After**
```rust
match <sub_expr> {
<pat> => <body>,
_ => [<else_opt> | ()]
}
```
With this fix, it doesn't cause E0301
Various improvements in std::collections docs
The meat of this PR are:
* changes to (almost all?) iterator struct docs in std::collections such that they use the standard iterator boilerplate and state where they are created
* a bunch of added links (at least as much as possible given std::collections mostly being a facade and whatnot 😅)
* an example for `Bound`
* changed phrasing for some summary sentences to be less redundant as well as more consistant with others in the module
There also are various other fixes, e.g. removing parens from method names in the module docs, changing some imperatives to 3rd person, etc.
r? @steveklabnik
Improve std::hash docs
Fixes#29357.
For details on what exactly I've done, see the commit descriptions.
There are some things I'm not sure about, but would like to address before merging this so the issue can be closed; any feedback on these points would really be appriciated:
* [x] ~I didn't touch the module level docs at all. On the one hand, I think they could use a short overview over the module; on the other hand, the module really isn't that big and I don't know if I could really do anything beyond just duplicating the type's summaries...~
* [x] ~I feel like the module-level examples are quite long-winded and not to the point, but I couldn't really think of anything better. Any ideas?~
* [x] ~Should `Hasher` get an example for implementing it? There is one in the module documentation, but it only "implements" it via `unimplemented!` and I'm not sure what the value of that is.~
* [x] ~Should `Hasher`'s `write_{int}` methods get examples?~
If there's anything else you'd like to see in std::hash's docs, please let me know!
r? @rust-lang/docs
I've added some explicit tests that negative impls are allowed to
overlap, and also to make sure that the feature doesn't interfere with
specialization. I've not added an explicit test for positive overlapping
with negative, as that's already tested elsewhere.
This patch allows overlap to occur between any two impls of a trait for
traits which have no associated items.
Several compile-fail tests around coherence had to be changed to add at
least one item to the trait they test against.
Ref #29864
Compile WASM as WASM instead of asm.js
Looks like the LinkerFlavor change introduced in #40018 accidentally uses GCC for the WebAssembly target, causing Rust to never actually pass the post link args to emscripten. This then causes the code to be compiled as asm.js instead of WebAssembly, because the Binaryen tools never run due to the missing linker argument.
Fix rustdoc infinitely recursing when an external crate reexports itself
Previously, rustdoc's LibEmbargoVisitor unconditionally visited the
child modules of an external crate. If a module re-exported its parent
via `pub use super::*`, rustdoc would re-walk the parent, leading to
infinite recursion.
This commit makes LibEmbargoVisitor store already visited modules in an
FxHashSet, ensuring that each module is only walked once.
Fixes#40936
Implement global_asm!() (RFC 1548)
This is a first attempt. ~~One (potential) problem I haven't solved is how to handle multiple usages of `global_asm!` in a module/crate. It looks like `LLVMSetModuleInlineAsm` overwrites module asm, and `LLVMAppendModuleInlineAsm` is not provided in LLVM C headers 😦~~
I can provide more detail as needed, but honestly, there's not a lot going on here.
r? @eddyb
CC @Amanieu @jackpot51
Tracking issue: #35119
* Bound:
* Added another example using RangeArgument to illustrate how Bound maps
to range endpoints.
* Added a note to the existing example that says that it's better to use
range syntax in most cases
* Added missing /// line
* binary_heap::PeakMut: s/Object representing/Structure wrapping
* added collections/hash_set/struct.HashSet.html to linkchecker whitelist
Looks like the LinkerFlavor change introduced in #40018 accidentally uses GCC for the WebAssembly target, causing Rust to never actually pass the post link args to emscripten. This then causes the code to be compiled as asm.js instead of WebAssembly, because the Binaryen tools never run due to the missing linker argument.