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-rw-r--r--src/libcore/iter/range.rs10
-rw-r--r--src/libcore/ops/range.rs14
2 files changed, 11 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/src/libcore/iter/range.rs b/src/libcore/iter/range.rs
index 57e3e8084dd..bd7e6cfa5a7 100644
--- a/src/libcore/iter/range.rs
+++ b/src/libcore/iter/range.rs
@@ -619,15 +619,7 @@ impl<A: Step> Iterator for ops::RangeFrom<A> {
 
     #[inline]
     fn nth(&mut self, n: usize) -> Option<A> {
-        // If we would jump over the maximum value, panic immediately.
-        // This is consistent with behavior before the Step redesign,
-        // even though it's inconsistent with n `next` calls.
-        // To get consistent behavior, change it to use `forward` instead.
-        // This change should go through FCP separately to the redesign, so is for now left as a
-        // FIXME: make this consistent
-        let plus_n =
-            Step::forward_checked(self.start.clone(), n).expect("overflow in RangeFrom::nth");
-        // The final step should always be debug-checked.
+        let plus_n = Step::forward(self.start.clone(), n);
         self.start = Step::forward(plus_n.clone(), 1);
         Some(plus_n)
     }
diff --git a/src/libcore/ops/range.rs b/src/libcore/ops/range.rs
index d4e6048579a..d86f39c4550 100644
--- a/src/libcore/ops/range.rs
+++ b/src/libcore/ops/range.rs
@@ -151,10 +151,16 @@ impl<Idx: PartialOrd<Idx>> Range<Idx> {
 ///
 /// The `RangeFrom` `start..` contains all values with `x >= start`.
 ///
-/// *Note*: Currently, no overflow checking is done for the [`Iterator`]
-/// implementation; if you use an integer range and the integer overflows, it
-/// might panic in debug mode or create an endless loop in release mode. **This
-/// overflow behavior might change in the future.**
+/// *Note*: Overflow in the [`Iterator`] implementation (when the contained
+/// data type reaches its numerical limit) is allowed to panic, wrap, or
+/// saturate. This behavior is defined by the implementation of the [`Step`]
+/// trait. For primitive integers, this follows the normal rules, and respects
+/// the overflow checks profile (panic in debug, wrap in release). Note also
+/// that overflow happens earlier than you might assume: the overflow happens
+/// in the call to `next` that yields the maximum value, as the range must be
+/// set to a state to yield the next value.
+///
+/// [`Step`]: crate::iter::Step
 ///
 /// # Examples
 ///