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path: root/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/expr.rs
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2020-11-14Add underscore expressions for destructuring assignmentsFabian Zaiser-0/+3
Co-authored-by: varkor <github@varkor.com>
2020-11-11Implement destructuring assignment for structs and slicesFabian Zaiser-2/+8
Co-authored-by: varkor <github@varkor.com>
2020-10-27Fix typo in commentsRobert Grosse-1/+1
2020-10-27Auto merge of #77502 - varkor:const-generics-suggest-enclosing-braces, ↵bors-1/+13
r=petrochenkov Suggest that expressions that look like const generic arguments should be enclosed in brackets I pulled out the changes for const expressions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/71592 (without the trait object diagnostic changes) and made some small changes; the implementation is `@estebank's.` We're also going to want to make some changes separately to account for trait objects (they result in poor diagnostics, as is evident from one of the test cases here), such as an adaption of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72273. Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70753. r? `@petrochenkov`
2020-10-26Suggest expressions that look like const generic arguments should be ↵varkor-1/+13
enclosed in brackets Co-Authored-By: Esteban Kuber <github@kuber.com.ar>
2020-10-24Auto merge of #77255 - Aaron1011:feature/collect-attr-tokens, r=petrochenkovbors-1/+1
Unconditionally capture tokens for attributes. This allows us to avoid synthesizing tokens in `prepend_attr`, since we have the original tokens available. We still need to synthesize tokens when expanding `cfg_attr`, but this is an unavoidable consequence of the syntax of `cfg_attr` - the user does not supply the `#` and `[]` tokens that a `cfg_attr` expands to. This is based on PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77250 - this PR exposes a bug in the current `collect_tokens` implementation, which is fixed by the rewrite.
2020-10-22Make inline const work for half open rangesSantiago Pastorino-1/+1
2020-10-22Rename parse_const_expr to parse_const_blockSantiago Pastorino-1/+1
2020-10-22Don't create an empty `LazyTokenStream`Aaron Hill-1/+1
2020-10-19Rewrite `collect_tokens` implementations to use a flattened bufferAaron Hill-9/+10
Instead of trying to collect tokens at each depth, we 'flatten' the stream as we go allong, pushing open/close delimiters to our buffer just like regular tokens. One capturing is complete, we reconstruct a nested `TokenTree::Delimited` structure, producing a normal `TokenStream`. The reconstructed `TokenStream` is not created immediately - instead, it is produced on-demand by a closure (wrapped in a new `LazyTokenStream` type). This closure stores a clone of the original `TokenCursor`, plus a record of the number of calls to `next()/next_desugared()`. This is sufficient to reconstruct the tokenstream seen by the callback without storing any additional state. If the tokenstream is never used (e.g. when a captured `macro_rules!` argument is never passed to a proc macro), we never actually create a `TokenStream`. This implementation has a number of advantages over the previous one: * It is significantly simpler, with no edge cases around capturing the start/end of a delimited group. * It can be easily extended to allow replacing tokens an an arbitrary 'depth' by just using `Vec::splice` at the proper position. This is important for PR #76130, which requires us to track information about attributes along with tokens. * The lazy approach to `TokenStream` construction allows us to easily parse an AST struct, and then decide after the fact whether we need a `TokenStream`. This will be useful when we start collecting tokens for `Attribute` - we can discard the `LazyTokenStream` if the parsed attribute doesn't need tokens (e.g. is a builtin attribute). The performance impact seems to be neglibile (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77250#issuecomment-703960604). There is a small slowdown on a few benchmarks, but it only rises above 1% for incremental builds, where it represents a larger fraction of the much smaller instruction count. There a ~1% speedup on a few other incremental benchmarks - my guess is that the speedups and slowdowns will usually cancel out in practice.
2020-10-16Parse inline const expressionsSantiago Pastorino-0/+2
2020-10-16Rollup merge of #77780 - calebcartwright:cast-expr-attr-span, r=oli-obkDylan DPC-7/+17
rustc_parse: fix spans on cast and range exprs with attrs Currently the span for cast and range expressions does not include the span of attributes associated to the lhs which is causing some issues for us in rustfmt. ```rust fn foo() -> i64 { #[attr] 1u64 as i64 } fn bar() -> Range<i32> { #[attr] 1..2 } ``` This corrects the span for cast and range expressions to fully include the span of child nodes
2020-10-12rustc_parse: correct span on range expr with attrsCaleb Cartwright-1/+1
2020-10-12rustc_parse: correct span on cast expr with attrsCaleb Cartwright-6/+16
2020-10-11rustc_parse: More precise spans for `tuple.0.0`Vadim Petrochenkov-7/+33
2020-10-07Detect blocks that could be struct expr bodiesEsteban Küber-4/+12
This approach lives exclusively in the parser, so struct expr bodies that are syntactically correct on their own but are otherwise incorrect will still emit confusing errors, like in the following case: ```rust fn foo() -> Foo { bar: Vec::new() } ``` ``` error[E0425]: cannot find value `bar` in this scope --> src/file.rs:5:5 | 5 | bar: Vec::new() | ^^^ expecting a type here because of type ascription error[E0214]: parenthesized type parameters may only be used with a `Fn` trait --> src/file.rs:5:15 | 5 | bar: Vec::new() | ^^^^^ only `Fn` traits may use parentheses error[E0107]: wrong number of type arguments: expected 1, found 0 --> src/file.rs:5:10 | 5 | bar: Vec::new() | ^^^^^^^^^^ expected 1 type argument ``` If that field had a trailing comma, that would be a parse error and it would trigger the new, more targetted, error: ``` error: struct literal body without path --> file.rs:4:17 | 4 | fn foo() -> Foo { | _________________^ 5 | | bar: Vec::new(), 6 | | } | |_^ | help: you might have forgotten to add the struct literal inside the block | 4 | fn foo() -> Foo { Path { 5 | bar: Vec::new(), 6 | } } | ``` Partially address last part of #34255.
2020-08-30Use string literal directly when available in formatSasha-1/+1
Previous implementation used the `Parser::parse_expr` function in order to extract the format expression. If the first comma following the format expression was mistakenly replaced with a dot, then the next format expression was eaten by the function, because it looked as a syntactically valid expression, which resulted in incorrectly spanned error messages. The way the format expression is exctracted is changed: we first look at the first available token in the first argument supplied to the `format!` macro call. If it is a string literal, then it is promoted as a format expression immediatly, otherwise we fall back to the original `parse_expr`-related method. This allows us to ensure that the parser won't consume too much tokens when a typo is made. A test has been created so that it is ensured that the issue is properly fixed.
2020-08-30mv compiler to compiler/mark-0/+2293