For consistency with `Attribute::has_name` which doesn't mark the attribute as used either.
Replace all uses of `check_name` with `has_name` outside of rustc
This commit modifies the `substitute_normalize_and_test_predicates`
query, renaming it to `impossible_predicates` and only checking
predicates which do not require substs. By making this change,
polymorphization doesn't have to explicitly support vtables.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #70563 ([rustdoc] Page hash handling)
- #73856 (Edit librustc_lexer top-level docs)
- #73870 (typeck: adding type information to projection)
- #73953 (Audit hidden/short code suggestions)
- #73962 (libstd/net/tcp.rs: #![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)])
- #73969 (mir: mark mir construction temporaries as internal)
- #73974 (Move A|Rc::as_ptr from feature(weak_into_raw) to feature(rc_as_ptr))
- #74067 (rustdoc: Restore underline text decoration on hover for FQN in header)
- #74074 (Fix the return type of Windows' `OpenOptionsExt::security_qos_flags`.)
- #74078 (Always resolve type@primitive as a primitive, not a module)
- #74089 (Add rust-analyzer to the build manifest)
- #74090 (Remove unused RUSTC_DEBUG_ASSERTIONS)
- #74102 (Fix const prop ICE)
- #74112 (Expand abbreviation in core::ffi description)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
typeck: adding type information to projection
This commit modifies the Place as follow:
* remove 'ty' from ProjectionKind
* add type information into to Projection
* replace 'ty' in Place with 'base_ty'
* introduce 'ty()' in `Place` to return the final type of the `Place`
* introduce `ty_before_projection()` in `Place` to return the type of
a `Place` before i'th projection is applied
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
This commit modifies the Place as follow:
* remove 'ty' from ProjectionKind
* add type information into to Projection
* replace 'ty' in Place with 'base_ty'
* introduce 'ty()' in `Place` to return the final type of the `Place`
* introduce `ty_before_projection()` in `Place` to return the type of
a `Place` before i'th projection is applied
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
Rollup of 13 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #72620 (Omit DW_AT_linkage_name when it is the same as DW_AT_name)
- #72967 (Don't move cursor in search box when using arrows to navigate results)
- #73102 (proc_macro: Stop flattening groups with dummy spans)
- #73297 (Support configurable deny-warnings for all in-tree crates.)
- #73507 (Cleanup MinGW LLVM linkage workaround)
- #73588 (Fix handling of reserved registers for ARM inline asm)
- #73597 (Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind)
- #73629 (Make AssocOp Copy)
- #73681 (Update Chalk to 0.14)
- #73707 (Fix links in `SliceIndex` documentation)
- #73719 (emitter: column width defaults to 140)
- #73729 (disable collectionbenches for android)
- #73748 (Add code block to code in documentation of `List::rebase_onto`)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind
Context: this is needed for a fix of https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
Context: this is needed to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
For the following code
```rust
let c = || bar(foo.x, foo.x)
```
We generate two different `hir::Place`s for both `foo.x`.
Handling this adds overhead for analysis we need to do for RFC 2229.
We also want to store type information at each Projection to support
analysis as part of the RFC. This resembles what we have for
`mir::Place`
This commit modifies the Place as follows:
- Rename to `PlaceWithHirId`, where there `hir_id` is that of the
expressioin.
- Move any other information that describes the access out to another
struct now called `Place`.
- Removed `Span`, it can be accessed using the [hir
API](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/hir/map/struct.Map.html#method.span)
- Modify `Projection` to be a strucutre of its own, that currently only
contains the `ProjectionKind`.
Adding type information to projections wil be completed as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/3
Co-authored-by: Aman Arora <me@aman-arora.com>
Co-authored-by: Roxane Fruytier <roxane.fruytier@hotmail.com>
Stabilize Option::zip
This PR stabilizes the following API:
```rust
impl<T> Option<T> {
pub fn zip<U>(self, other: Option<U>) -> Option<(T, U)>;
}
```
This API has real world usage as seen in <https://grep.app/search?q=-%3E%20Option%3C%5C%28T%2C%5Cs%3FU%5C%29%3E®exp=true&filter[lang][0]=Rust>.
The `zip_with` method is left unstably as this API is kinda niche
and it hasn't received much usage in Rust repositories on GitHub.
cc #70086
Clean up type alias impl trait implementation
- Removes special case for top-level impl trait
- Removes associated opaque types
- Forbid lifetime elision in let position impl trait. This is consistent with the behavior for inferred types.
- Handle lifetimes in type alias impl trait more uniformly with other parameters
cc #69323
cc #63063Closes#57188Closes#62988Closes#69136Closes#73061
Make `PolyTraitRef::self_ty` return `Binder<Ty>`
This came up during review of #71618. The current implementation is the same as a call to `skip_binder` but harder to audit. Make it preserve binding levels and add a call to `skip_binder` at all use sites so they can be audited as part of #72507.
Literal error reporting cleanup
While doing some performance work, I noticed some code duplication in `librustc_parser/lexer/mod.rs`, so I cleaned it up.
This PR is probably best reviewed commit by commit.
I'm not sure what the API stability practices for `librustc_lexer` are. Four public methods in `unescape.rs` can be removed, but two are used by clippy, so I left them in for now.
I could open a PR for Rust-Analyzer when this one lands.
But how do I open a PR for clippy? (Git submodules are frustrating to work with)
New lint `match_vec_item`
Added new lint to warn a match on index item which can panic. It's always better to use `get(..)` instead.
Closes#5500
changelog: New lint `match_on_vec_items`
- Show just one error message with multiple suggestions in case of
using multiple times an OS in target family position
- Only suggest #[cfg(unix)] when the OS is in the Unix family
- Test all the operating systems
Don't trigger while_let_on_iterator when the iterator is recreated every iteration
r? @phansch
Fixes#1654
changelog: Fix false positive in [`while_let_on_iterator`]
Downgrade match_bool to pedantic
I don't quite buy the justification in https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/. The justification is:
> It makes the code less readable.
In the Rust codebases I've worked in, I have found people were comfortable using `match bool` (selectively) to make code more readable. For example, initializing struct fields is a place where the indentation of `match` can work better than the indentation of `if`:
```rust
let _ = Struct {
v: {
...
},
w: match doing_w {
true => ...,
false => ...,
},
x: Nested {
c: ...,
b: ...,
a: ...,
},
y: if doing_y {
...
} else { // :(
...
},
z: ...,
};
```
Or sometimes people prefer something a bit less pithy than `if` when the meaning of the bool doesn't read off clearly from the condition:
```rust
if set.insert(...) {
... // ???
} else {
...
}
match set.insert(...) {
// set.insert returns false if already present
false => ...,
true => ...,
}
```
Or `match` can be a better fit when the bool is playing the role more of a value than a branch condition:
```rust
impl ErrorCodes {
pub fn from(b: bool) -> Self {
match b {
true => ErrorCodes::Yes,
false => ErrorCodes::No,
}
}
}
```
And then there's plain old it's-1-line-shorter, which means we get 25% more content on a screen when stacking a sequence of conditions:
```rust
let old_noun = match old_binding.is_import() {
true => "import",
false => "definition",
};
let new_participle = match new_binding.is_import() {
true => "imported",
false => "defined",
};
```
Bottom line is I think this lint fits the bill better as a pedantic lint; I don't think linting on this by default is justified.
changelog: Remove match_bool from default set of enabled lints