Change the parameter name of From::from to `value`
The `From` trait is currently defined as:
```rust
pub trait From<T>: Sized {
fn from(_: T) -> Self;
}
```
The name of the argument is `_`. I am proposing to change it to `value`, ie.
```rust
pub trait From<T>: Sized {
fn from(value: T) -> Self;
}
```
This would be more consistent with the `TryFrom`, which looks like this:
```rust
pub trait TryFrom<T>: Sized {
type Error;
fn try_from(value: T) -> Result<Self, Self::Error>;
}
```
The reason for this proposal is twofold:
1. Consistency with the rest of the standard library. The `TryFrom` trait uses `value`, and no `From` implementation uses the default name (as it is quite useless).
2. When generating trait implementations with rust-analyzer/IntelliJ, the parameter name is copied, and it always has to be changed.
Optionally, another name like `x` could be used. I only propose `value` for consistency with `TryFrom`.
Changing parameter names is not a breaking change.
Note: this was originally posted as an internals thread [here](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/change-the-argument-name-of-from-from/17480)
rustdoc: remove font family CSS on `.rustdoc-toggle summary::before`
This rule became irrelevant since c58246efe4 made it so that the `summary::before` pseudo-element contains an SVG instead of text.
errors: rename `typeck.ftl` to `hir_analysis.ftl`
In #102306, `rustc_typeck` was renamed to `rustc_hir_analysis` but the diagnostic resources were not renamed - which is what this pull request changes.
Add T to PhantomData impl Debug
This add debug information for `PhantomData`, I believe it's make sense to add this to debug impl of `PhantomData` since `T` is what define what is the `PhantomData` just write `"PhantomData"` is not very useful for debugging.
Alternative:
* `PhantomData::<{}>`
* `PhantomData { t: "str_type" }`
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
introduce `{char, u8}::is_ascii_octdigit`
This feature adds two new APIs: `char::is_ascii_octdigit` and `u8::is_ascii_octdigit`, under the feature gate `is_ascii_octdigit`. These methods are shorthands for `char::is_digit(self, 8)` and `u8::is_digit(self, 8)`:
```rust
// core::char
impl char {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
// core::num
impl u8 {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
```
---
Couple of things I need help understanding:
- `const`ness: have I used the right attribute in this case?
- is there a way to run the tests for `core::char` alone, instead of `./x.py test library/core`?
docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
There are several issues with the current state of `AsRef` and `AsMut` as [discussed here on IRLO](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/semantics-of-asref/17016). See also #39397, #45742, #73390, #98905, and the FIXMEs [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L509-L515) and [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L530-L536). These issues are difficult to fix. This PR aims to update the documentation to better reflect the status-quo and to give advice on how `AsRef` and `AsMut` should be used.
In particular:
- Explicitly mention that `AsRef` and `AsMut` do not auto-dereference generally for all dereferencable types (but only if inner type is a shared and/or mutable reference)
- Give advice to not use `AsRef` or `AsMut` for the sole purpose of dereferencing
- Suggest providing a transitive `AsRef` or `AsMut` implementation for types which implement `Deref`
- Add new section "Reflexivity" in documentation comments for `AsRef` and `AsMut`
- Provide better example for `AsMut`
- Added heading "Relation to `Borrow`" in `AsRef`'s docs to improve structure
docs: be less harsh in wording for Vec::from_raw_parts
In particular, be clear that it is sound to specify memory not
originating from a previous `Vec` allocation. That is already suggested
in other parts of the documentation about zero-alloc conversions to Box<[T]>.
Incorporate a constraint from `slice::from_raw_parts` that was missing
but needs to be fulfilled, since a `Vec` can be converted into a slice.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98780.
Document the conditional existence of `alloc::sync` and `alloc::task`.
`alloc` declares
```rust
#[cfg(target_has_atomic = "ptr")]
pub mod sync;
```
but there is no public documentation of this condition. This PR fixes that, so that users of `alloc` can understand how to make their code compile everywhere `alloc` does, if they are writing a library with impls for `Arc`.
The wording is copied from `std::sync::atomic::AtomicPtr`, with additional advice on how to `#[cfg]` for it.
I feel quite uncertain about whether the paragraph I added to `Arc`'s documentation should actually be there, as it is a distraction for anyone using `std`. On the other hand, maybe more reminders that no_std exists would benefit the ecosystem.
Note: `target_has_atomic` is [stabilized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32976) but [not yet documented in the reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1171).
Cleanup some error code explanations
E0045: Use a stable non-C ABI instead
E0092: Use an atomic intrinsic that actually exists
E0161: Don't use box_syntax
E0579: Format ranges in the rustfmt style
E0622: Use the rustfmt style
E0743: Remove feature gate as it's not needed
Fix ICE #101739
Fixes a part of #101739
This cannot cover the following case. It causes `too many args provided` error and obligation does not have references error. I want your advice to solve the following cases as well in this pull request or a follow-up.
```rust
#![crate_type = "lib"]
#![feature(transmutability)]
#![allow(dead_code, incomplete_features, non_camel_case_types)]
mod assert {
use std::mem::BikeshedIntrinsicFrom;
pub fn is_transmutable<
Src,
Dst,
Context,
const ASSUME_ALIGNMENT: bool,
const ASSUME_LIFETIMES: bool,
const ASSUME_VALIDITY: bool,
const ASSUME_VISIBILITY: bool,
>()
where
Dst: BikeshedIntrinsicFrom<
Src,
Context,
ASSUME_ALIGNMENT,
ASSUME_LIFETIMES,
ASSUME_VALIDITY,
ASSUME_VISIBILITY,
>,
{}
}
fn via_const() {
struct Context;
#[repr(C)] struct Src;
#[repr(C)] struct Dst;
const FALSE: bool = false;
assert::is_transmutable::<Src, Dst, Context, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE>();
}
```
Improve documentation of `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_ptr_range_mut}`
Document panic conditions (`T` is a ZST) and sync docs of shared/unique version.
cc `@wx-csy`
Improve `FromStr` example
The `from_str` implementation from the example had an `unwrap` that would make it panic on invalid input strings. Instead of panicking, it nows returns an error to better reflect the intented behavior of the `FromStr` trait.
rustdoc: re-sugar more cross-crate trait bounds
Previously, we would only ever re-sugar cross-crate predicates like `Type: Trait, <Type as Trait>::Name == Rhs` to `Type: Trait<Name = Rhs>` if the `Type` was a generic parameter like `Self` or `T`. With this PR, `Type` can be any type.
Most notably, this means that we now re-sugar predicates involving associated types (where `Type` is of the form `Self::Name`) which are then picked up by the pre-existing logic that re-sugars them into bounds. As a result of that, the associated type `IntoIter` of `std`'s `IntoIterator` trait (re-exported from `core`) is no longer rendered as:
```rust
type IntoIter: Iterator
where
<Self::IntoIter as Iterator>::Item == Self::Item;
```
but as one would expect: `type IntoIter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>;`.
Cross-crate closure bounds like `F: Fn(i32) -> bool` are now also rendered properly (previously, the return type (`Self::Output`) would not be rendered and we would show the underlying equality predicate).
Fixes#77763.
Fixes#84579.
Fixes#102142.
`@rustbot` label T-rustdoc A-cross-crate-reexports
r? rustdoc
re-add git-commit-hash file to tarballs
rust-lang/rust#100557 removed the `git-commit-hash` file and replaced it with `git-commit-info`. However, build-manifest relies on the `git-commit-hash` file being present, so this adds it back.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
In #102306, `rustc_typeck` was renamed to `rustc_hir_analysis` but the
diagnostic resources were not renamed - which is what this commit
changes.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
new `implicit_saturating_add` lint
This fixes#9393
If you added a new lint, here's a checklist for things that will be
checked during review or continuous integration.
- \[x] Followed [lint naming conventions][lint_naming]
- \[x] Added passing UI tests (including committed `.stderr` file)
- \[x] `cargo test` passes locally
- \[x] Executed `cargo dev update_lints`
- \[x] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
---
changelog: add [`manual_saturating_add`] lint