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path: root/src/libregex/compile.rs
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2014-10-07Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc.Nick Cameron-1/+1
2014-10-02Revert "Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc."Aaron Turon-1/+1
This reverts commit 40b9f5ded50ac4ce8c9323921ec556ad611af6b7.
2014-10-02Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc.Nick Cameron-1/+1
2014-09-24auto merge of #17438 : alexcrichton/rust/string-stable, r=aturonbors-1/+1
# Rationale When dealing with strings, many functions deal with either a `char` (unicode codepoint) or a byte (utf-8 encoding related). There is often an inconsistent way in which methods are referred to as to whether they contain "byte", "char", or nothing in their name. There are also issues open to rename *all* methods to reflect that they operate on utf8 encodings or bytes (e.g. utf8_len() or byte_len()). The current state of String seems to largely be what is desired, so this PR proposes the following rationale for methods dealing with bytes or characters: > When constructing a string, the input encoding *must* be mentioned (e.g. > from_utf8). This makes it clear what exactly the input type is expected to be > in terms of encoding. > > When a method operates on anything related to an *index* within the string > such as length, capacity, position, etc, the method *implicitly* operates on > bytes. It is an understood fact that String is a utf-8 encoded string, and > burdening all methods with "bytes" would be redundant. > > When a method operates on the *contents* of a string, such as push() or pop(), > then "char" is the default type. A String can loosely be thought of as being a > collection of unicode codepoints, but not all collection-related operations > make sense because some can be woefully inefficient. # Method stabilization The following methods have been marked #[stable] * The String type itself * String::new * String::with_capacity * String::from_utf16_lossy * String::into_bytes * String::as_bytes * String::len * String::clear * String::as_slice The following methods have been marked #[unstable] * String::from_utf8 - The error type in the returned `Result` may change to provide a nicer message when it's `unwrap()`'d * String::from_utf8_lossy - The returned `MaybeOwned` type still needs stabilization * String::from_utf16 - The return type may change to become a `Result` which includes more contextual information like where the error occurred. * String::from_chars - This is equivalent to iter().collect(), but currently not as ergonomic. * String::from_char - This method is the equivalent of Vec::from_elem, and has been marked #[unstable] becuase it can be seen as a duplicate of iterator-based functionality as well as possibly being renamed. * String::push_str - This *can* be emulated with .extend(foo.chars()), but is less efficient because of decoding/encoding. Due to the desire to minimize API surface this may be able to be removed in the future for something possibly generic with no loss in performance. * String::grow - This is a duplicate of iterator-based functionality, which may become more ergonomic in the future. * String::capacity - This function was just added. * String::push - This function was just added. * String::pop - This function was just added. * String::truncate - The failure conventions around String methods and byte indices isn't totally clear at this time, so the failure semantics and return value of this method are subject to change. * String::as_mut_vec - the naming of this method may change. * string::raw::* - these functions are all waiting on [an RFC][2] [2]: rust-lang/rfcs#240 The following method have been marked #[experimental] * String::from_str - This function only exists as it's more efficient than to_string(), but having a less ergonomic function for performance reasons isn't the greatest reason to keep it around. Like Vec::push_all, this has been marked experimental for now. The following methods have been #[deprecated] * String::append - This method has been deprecated to remain consistent with the deprecation of Vec::append. While convenient, it is one of the only functional-style apis on String, and requires more though as to whether it belongs as a first-class method or now (and how it relates to other collections). * String::from_byte - This is fairly rare functionality and can be emulated with str::from_utf8 plus an assert plus a call to to_string(). Additionally, String::from_char could possibly be used. * String::byte_capacity - Renamed to String::capacity due to the rationale above. * String::push_char - Renamed to String::push due to the rationale above. * String::pop_char - Renamed to String::pop due to the rationale above. * String::push_bytes - There are a number of `unsafe` functions on the `String` type which allow bypassing utf-8 checks. These have all been deprecated in favor of calling `.as_mut_vec()` and then operating directly on the vector returned. These methods were deprecated because naming them with relation to other methods was difficult to rationalize and it's arguably more composable to call .as_mut_vec(). * String::as_mut_bytes - See push_bytes * String::push_byte - See push_bytes * String::pop_byte - See push_bytes * String::shift_byte - See push_bytes # Reservation methods This commit does not yet touch the methods for reserving bytes. The methods on Vec have also not yet been modified. These methods are discussed in the upcoming [Collections reform RFC][1] [1]: https://github.com/aturon/rfcs/blob/collections-conventions/active/0000-collections-conventions.md#implicit-growth
2014-09-23Deal with the fallout of string stabilizationAlex Crichton-1/+1
2014-09-22librustc: Forbid private types in public APIs.Patrick Walton-1/+0
This breaks code like: struct Foo { ... } pub fn make_foo() -> Foo { ... } Change this code to: pub struct Foo { // note `pub` ... } pub fn make_foo() -> Foo { ... } The `visible_private_types` lint has been removed, since it is now an error to attempt to expose a private type in a public API. In its place a `#[feature(visible_private_types)]` gate has been added. Closes #16463. RFC #48. [breaking-change]
2014-09-21Fix fallout from Vec stabilizationAlex Crichton-1/+1
2014-09-19Add enum variants to the type namespaceNick Cameron-2/+2
Change to resolve and update compiler and libs for uses. [breaking-change] Enum variants are now in both the value and type namespaces. This means that if you have a variant with the same name as a type in scope in a module, you will get a name clash and thus an error. The solution is to either rename the type or the variant.
2014-09-16Fallout from renamingAaron Turon-1/+1
2014-06-10Fix more misspelled comments and strings.Joseph Crail-2/+2
2014-05-24core: rename strbuf::StrBuf to string::StringRicho Healey-4/+4
[breaking-change]
2014-05-14libregex: Remove all uses of `~str` from `libregex`Patrick Walton-4/+4
2014-04-30regex: remove the use of ~[] & some unnecessary ~'s.Huon Wilson-26/+25
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.
2014-04-25Add a regex crate to the Rust distribution.Andrew Gallant-0/+274
Also adds a regex_macros crate, which provides natively compiled regular expressions with a syntax extension. Closes #3591. RFC: 0007-regexps