Commit Graph

28470 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Huon Wilson
de14a739ae regex: remove the use of ~[] & some unnecessary ~'s.
The AST doesn't need ~s everywhere, so we can save allocations this way
& the enum isn't particularly large (~4 words) nor are regexes
long (normally), so the space saved in the `Cat` vector is unlikely to
be very much.
2014-04-30 00:55:20 +10:00
bors
30e373390f auto merge of #13807 : ipetkov/rust/issue-13771, r=alexcrichton
All links inside docblocks will have their color set to `#4e8bca` (a light blue color to contrast against the black text). This color also offers a visible contrast from the surrounding text if viewed as grayscale, making it suitable for accessability.
    
Docblock links will also be underlined when hovered over.

Before:
![screen shot 2014-04-27 at 12 47 06 pm](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1638690/2812157/00e53a32-ce45-11e3-81e8-7b1dc692f6b7.png)



After (links underlined only on hover, cursor not shown in image):
![screen shot 2014-04-27 at 12 47 48 pm](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/1638690/2812158/04fa94b4-ce45-11e3-9ead-2344753c251d.png)

Fix #13771
2014-04-29 00:26:48 -07:00
bors
cbe6bd0a9d auto merge of #13829 : alexcrichton/rust/dead-strip, r=thestinger
This flag to the linker asks it to strip away all dead code during linking, as
well as dead data. This reduces the size of hello world from 1.7MB to 458K on my
system (70% reduction).

I have not seen this impact link times negatively, and I have seen this pass
'make check' successfully. I am slightly wary of adding this option, but the
benefits are so huge tha I think we should work hard to work around any issues
rather than avoid using the flag entirely.
2014-04-28 23:06:50 -07:00
Ivan Petkov
3a0d8fd980 rustdoc: #13771: Make html links inside paragraphs more readable
All links inside docblocks will have their color set to `#4e8bca` (a
light blue color to contrast against the black text). This color also
offers a visible contrast from the surrounding text if viewed as
grayscale, making it suitable for accessability.

Docblock links will also be underlined when hovered over.
2014-04-28 20:55:10 -07:00
bors
8fdf1e2cb8 auto merge of #13834 : nick29581/rust/str_fix, r=luqmana 2014-04-28 19:41:47 -07:00
Nick Cameron
f3c33893b6 Remove internal support for fixed length strings 2014-04-29 13:10:23 +12:00
bors
a72a6ec897 auto merge of #13830 : noamraph/rust/doc-browser-history, r=kballard
Currently, in both chrome and firefox, if I type something in the search box in the reference docs I get immediately the search results. That's great. However, if I want to go back to the doc I was reading and try to press the back button, I am immediately forwarded again to the search results. This is caused by the fact that the search term is (deliberately) left in the search box, and the search() function is called as if I typed the search term again.
I disabled calling the search() function if there's no search term in the URL, and now it seems to work fine.

I hope I'm sending the pull request correctly - I'm not really used to git and github.
2014-04-28 17:32:00 -07:00
bors
3cd6c1e008 auto merge of #13827 : lifthrasiir/rust/rustdoc-hidden-pub-field, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #13806. Also adds a note to `HiddenStructField` about why it doesn't appear in the `clean` module itself.
2014-04-28 15:56:45 -07:00
Noam Yorav-Raphael
5b2e477629 rustdoc: Make going back in browser history work after typing a search term 2014-04-29 01:29:14 +03:00
Jonathan S
03609e5a5e Deprecate the rev_iter pattern in all places where a DoubleEndedIterator is provided (everywhere but treemap)
This commit deprecates rev_iter, mut_rev_iter, move_rev_iter everywhere (except treemap) and also
deprecates related functions like rsplit, rev_components, and rev_str_components. In every case,
these functions can be replaced with the non-reversed form followed by a call to .rev(). To make this
more concrete, a translation table for all functional changes necessary follows:

* container.rev_iter() -> container.iter().rev()
* container.mut_rev_iter() -> container.mut_iter().rev()
* container.move_rev_iter() -> container.move_iter().rev()
* sliceorstr.rsplit(sep) -> sliceorstr.split(sep).rev()
* path.rev_components() -> path.components().rev()
* path.rev_str_components() -> path.str_components().rev()

In terms of the type system, this change also deprecates any specialized reversed iterator types (except
in treemap), opting instead to use Rev directly if any type annotations are needed. However, since
methods directly returning reversed iterators are now discouraged, the need for such annotations should
be small. However, in those cases, the general pattern for conversion is to take whatever follows Rev in
the original reversed name and surround it with Rev<>:

* RevComponents<'a> -> Rev<Components<'a>>
* RevStrComponents<'a> -> Rev<StrComponents<'a>>
* RevItems<'a, T> -> Rev<Items<'a, T>>
* etc.

The reasoning behind this change is that it makes the standard API much simpler without reducing readability,
performance, or power. The presence of functions such as rev_iter adds more boilerplate code to libraries
(all of which simply call .iter().rev()), clutters up the documentation, and only helps code by saving two
characters. Additionally, the numerous type synonyms that were used to make the type signatures look nice
like RevItems add even more boilerplate and clutter up the docs even more. With this change, all that cruft
goes away.

[breaking-change]
2014-04-28 16:45:36 -05:00
Jonathan S
f58a8c9d76 Provide an implementation of DoubleEndedIterator for the results of &[T]::split and &[T]::rsplit
This makes the splitting functions in std::slice return DoubleEndedIterators. Unfortunately,
splitn and rsplitn cannot provide such an interface and so must return different types. As a
result, the following changes were made:

* RevSplits was removed in favor of explicitly using Rev
* Splits can no longer bound the number of splits done
* Splits now implements DoubleEndedIterator
* SplitsN was added, taking the role of what both Splits and RevSplits used to be
* rsplit returns Rev<Splits<'a, T>> instead of RevSplits<'a, T>
* splitn returns SplitsN<'a, T> instead of Splits<'a, T>
* rsplitn returns SplitsN<'a, T> instead of RevSplits<'a, T>

All functions that were previously implemented on each return value still are, so outside of changing
of type annotations, existing code should work out of the box. In the rare case that code relied
on the return types of split and splitn or of rsplit and rsplitn being the same, the previous
behavior can be emulated by calling splitn or rsplitn with a bount of uint::MAX.

The value of this change comes in multiple parts:

* Consistency. The splitting code in std::str is structured similarly to the new slice splitting code,
  having separate CharSplits and CharSplitsN types.
* Smaller API. Although this commit doesn't implement it, using a DoubleEndedIterator for splitting
  means that rsplit, path::RevComponents, path::RevStrComponents, Path::rev_components, and
  Path::rev_str_components are no longer needed - they can be emulated simply with .rev().
* Power. DoubleEndedIterators are able to traverse the list from both sides at once instead of only
  forwards or backwards.
* Efficiency. For the common case of using split instead of splitn, the iterator is slightly smaller
  and slightly faster.

[breaking-change]
2014-04-28 16:45:36 -05:00
bors
a3b28cb1f8 auto merge of #13819 : nick29581/rust/ty_str, r=pcwalton
Similar to my recent changes to ~[T]/&[T], these changes remove the vstore abstraction and represent str types as ~(str) and &(str). The Option<uint> in ty_str is the length of the string, None if the string is dynamically sized.
2014-04-28 14:26:48 -07:00
Alex Crichton
edd8bb0aa1 rustc: Pass -dead_strip on OSX
This flag to the linker asks it to strip away all dead code during linking, as
well as dead data. This reduces the size of hello world from 1.7MB to 458K on my
system (70% reduction).

I have not seen this impact link times negatively, and I have seen this pass
'make check' successfully. I am slightly wary of adding this option, but the
benefits are so huge tha I think we should work hard to work around any issues
rather than avoid using the flag entirely.
2014-04-28 13:20:08 -07:00
bors
23262a8390 auto merge of #13812 : alxgnon/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
This is a quick fix for repeated documentation descriptions in certain modules.
Following is a list of the faulty modules I found. I ran `pcregrep -r -M "<p>(.+)\n\1" doc` on the html documentation to help identify them.

- [rustuv::uvio](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/rustuv/uvio/index.html)
- [rustuv::uvll](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/rustuv/uvll/index.html)
- [std::rt::backtrace](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/backtrace/index.html)
- [std::rt::env](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/env/index.html)
- [std::rt::global_heap](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/global_heap/index.html)
- [std::rt::local_heap](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/local_heap/index.html)
- [std::rt::rtio](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/rtio/index.html)
- [std::rt::task](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/task/index.html)
- [std::rt::thread](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/thread/index.html)
- [std::rt::unwind](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/rt/unwind/index.html)
- [syntax::parse::classify](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/syntax/parse/classify/index.html)
- [syntax::parse::common](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/syntax/parse/common/index.html)

After a little testing, I discovered that moving the documentation inside (`//!`) instead of outside (`///`) modules fixed the immediate problem. I went through the trouble of moving the documentation, and with this commit there are no more repeated descriptions within those faulty modules.

This does not fix the underlying problem though. We should look into why having the documentation outside instead of inside caused the descriptions to be repeated. I will create a separate issue with my findings on the subject if necessary.
In the meantime, this simple fix should be enough.
2014-04-28 12:56:49 -07:00
Kang Seonghoon
3b5d6b4de5 rustdoc: Make strip_hidden use a dedicated hidden item if any.
fixes #13806.
2014-04-29 04:01:55 +09:00
bors
1f4278d650 auto merge of #13797 : lifthrasiir/rust/std-mem-replace-doc, r=alexcrichton
Inspired by @steveklabnik's [comment](http://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/240p9s/eli5_stdmemreplace/ch2gxw8), this PR adds the practical use cases to the documentation of `std::mem::replace`.

Caveat: We need a `compile-fail` equivalent for doctest. :p
2014-04-28 11:32:07 -07:00
Adrien Tétar
2bf25a7fff rustdoc: fix a few inconsistencies 2014-04-28 19:29:43 +02:00
bors
3e284eeb21 auto merge of #13821 : aochagavia/rust/pr3, r=alexcrichton 2014-04-28 10:01:57 -07:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
ac170b100e Fixed typo in std::vec 2014-04-28 15:39:11 +02:00
Kang Seonghoon
1be93e61da std: Add more docs to std::mem::replace. 2014-04-28 22:28:47 +09:00
Niko Matsakis
4b80ff901c Remove default method implementations 2014-04-28 08:50:50 -04:00
bors
a1ad41b93d auto merge of #13791 : lifthrasiir/rust/mod-inner-span, r=huonw
This PR is primarily motivated by (and fixes) #12926.

We currently only have a span for the individual item itself and not for the referred contents. This normally does not cause a problem since both are located in the same file; it *is* possible that the contained statement or item is located in the other file (the syntax extension can do that), but even in that case the syntax extension should be located in the same file as the item. The module item (i.e. `mod foo;`) is the only exception here, and thus warrants a special treatment.

Rustdoc would now distinguish `mod foo;` from `mod foo {...}` by checking if the span for the module item and module contents is in different files. If it's the case, we'd prefer module contents over module item. There are alternative strategies, but as noted above we will have some corner cases if we don't record the contents span explicitly.
2014-04-28 05:21:46 -07:00
Nick Cameron
c0ff3caae1 Refactor ty_str to use a ~(str) representation.
Similar to my recent changes to ~[T]/&[T], these changes remove the vstore abstraction and represent str types as ~(str) and &(str). The Option<uint> in ty_str is the length of the string, None if the string is dynamically sized.
2014-04-28 21:02:18 +12:00
bors
7a19a82d11 auto merge of #13811 : alexcrichton/rust/closed-issues, r=sfackler
Closes #5518
Closes #7320
Closes #8391
Closes #8827
Closes #8983
Closes #10683
Closes #10802
Closes #11515
2014-04-27 23:06:41 -07:00
Alex Crichton
35f295d2a9 test: Add tests for closed issues
Closes #5518
Closes #7320
Closes #8391
Closes #8827
Closes #8983
Closes #10683
Closes #10802
Closes #11515
2014-04-27 20:35:51 -07:00
bors
4e55bc7ac3 auto merge of #13795 : klutzy/rust/win-make-check, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #12303.

Also contains a partial fix for `make check` failure.
2014-04-27 20:31:37 -07:00
klutzy
405861ed0a test: Fix run-make on windows 2014-04-28 11:45:30 +09:00
Alexandre Gagnon
6c41253a47 Fix repeated module documentation 2014-04-27 22:17:49 -04:00
bors
ff25d62165 auto merge of #13809 : prattmic/rust/tutorial_debug, r=alexcrichton
As of cc6ec8df, the Owned closures example uses println! instead of
debug!, making a note about seeing debug seem out-of-place in this
section.

Since debug! is not used elsewhere in the tutorial, remove the note
entirely.
2014-04-27 19:06:38 -07:00
Brian Anderson
3525bd8959 std: Rewrite crate docs
Also move prelude explanation to the prelude module.
2014-04-27 18:43:56 -07:00
bors
c2b6ab94e2 auto merge of #13801 : ryantm/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
The previous error message using assert_eq! was quite cryptic. This should be more clear. I also added a test for the underflow case.
2014-04-27 17:26:37 -07:00
bors
8b24964012 auto merge of #13799 : m-r-r/rust/patch-std-io-standard_error, r=alexcrichton
Hello,

With the latest version of Rust, calling to the function [`std::io::standard_error()`](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/io/fn.standard_error.html) succeeds only if the value of the argument is `EndOfFile`, `IoUnavailable` or `InvalidInput`. If the function is called with another value as argument, it fails without message.

Here is a piece of code that reproduces the problem:

```rust
use std::io::{standard_error,EndOfFile,FileNotFound,PermissionDenied};

fn main() {
     println!("Error 1: {}", standard_error(EndOfFile)); // does not fail
     println!("Error 2: {}", standard_error(FileNotFound)); // fails
     println!("Error 3: {}", standard_error(PermissionDenied)); //fails
}
```
This was because the `IoErrorKind` passed as argument wasn't matched against all the possible values.

I added the missing branches in the `match` statement inside the function, and i removed the call to the `fail!()` macro. I rebuilt the crate with the latest `rustc` version and it seems to works.
2014-04-27 16:01:39 -07:00
Michael Pratt
bc330063d8 doc: Remove out-of-place debug! note
As of cc6ec8df, the Owned closures example uses println! instead of
debug!, making a note about seeing debug seem out-of-place in this
section.

Since debug! is not used elsewhere in the tutorial, remove the note
entirely.
2014-04-27 18:27:40 -04:00
bors
479b8a812c auto merge of #13792 : jacob-hegna/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Just modified the documentation for parse_bytes to make it more clear how the bytes were parsed (big endian) and to show an example of what it returned.  I also added documentation for the to_str_bytes which previously had no documentation (besides one stackoverflow post).
2014-04-27 14:36:41 -07:00
Nicolas Silva
02c45dece4 Fix test issue-4016.rs with the json API change 2014-04-27 23:09:57 +02:00
Nicolas Silva
a539b0d583 Update libworkcache with libserialize's json changes 2014-04-27 23:09:57 +02:00
Nicolas Silva
18bed22e5a Fix a code formatting issue in json.rs 2014-04-27 23:09:57 +02:00
Nicolas Silva
cd3b54a3f1 Add a streaming parser to serialize::json. 2014-04-27 23:09:56 +02:00
Jacob Hegna
b8f5090a9a Rewrote documentation for parse_bytes and to_str_bytes in {int, uint}_macros.rs 2014-04-27 15:49:47 -05:00
bors
02ba8e2754 auto merge of #13798 : aochagavia/rust/pr, r=alexcrichton 2014-04-27 13:11:43 -07:00
bors
1be19f9cc8 auto merge of #13796 : ema-fox/rust/patch-1, r=kballard 2014-04-27 11:46:46 -07:00
Ryan Mulligan
550c87e17d add BigUint subtraction underflow error message 2014-04-27 10:37:02 -07:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
af064c7bb0 Fixed typo in std::iter 2014-04-27 16:50:55 +02:00
m-r-r
a7b8a13e14 Added missing values in std::io::standard_error() 2014-04-27 14:45:28 +02:00
Emanuel Rylke
107da87996 Fix link to hashmap.rs and json.rs in sample code FAQ 2014-04-27 14:17:06 +02:00
Kang Seonghoon
c8a29c4c59 rustdoc: External module item links to the module contents. Fixes #12926.
the basic strategy is to distinguish `mod foo;` from `mod foo {...}`
by checking if the span for the module item and module contents is
in different files. if it's the case, we prefer module contents.

it is technically possible to fix #12926 without changing the AST,
probably by checking the individual items' span. this is not without
a problem though, since it is possible that some items inside
`mod foo {...}` may have originated from other file (e.g. `include!`).
therefore it is better to record both spans explicitly.
2014-04-27 19:54:31 +09:00
bors
b2a8fae84c auto merge of #13783 : wackywendell/rust/permfix, r=kballard
I filed bugs #13734 and #13759 recently, and then realized I could probably fix them myself. This does exactly that, with a couple additional modifications and additions to the test-suite to pick up on that.

I've never done this before, so please feel free to tell me all the things I'm doing wrong or could be doing better.
2014-04-26 23:41:31 -07:00
Adrien Tétar
076bbb38c7 rustdoc: style tweaks 2014-04-27 09:25:56 +03:00
klutzy
1efb668aaa test: Rename a test to bypass UAC on windows 2014-04-27 15:13:37 +09:00
Kang Seonghoon
dee21a67b8 syntax: Mod records the span for inner contents.
this is useful when the module item and module contents are defined
from different files (like rustdoc). in most cases the original span
for the module item would be used; in other cases, the span for
module contents is available separately at the `inner` field.
2014-04-27 14:52:30 +09:00