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2015-01-23regex: Remove in-tree versionAlex Crichton-24/+0
The regex library was largely used for non-critical aspects of the compiler and various external tooling. The library at this point is duplicated with its out-of-tree counterpart and as such imposes a bit of a maintenance overhead as well as compile time hit for the compiler itself. The last major user of the regex library is the libtest library, using regexes for filters when running tests. This removal means that the filtering has gone back to substring matching rather than using regexes.
2015-01-06More test fixesAlex Crichton-1/+1
2015-01-03Remove deprecated functionalityAlex Crichton-18/+0
This removes a large array of deprecated functionality, regardless of how recently it was deprecated. The purpose of this commit is to clean out the standard libraries and compiler for the upcoming alpha release. Some notable compiler changes were to enable warnings for all now-deprecated command line arguments (previously the deprecated versions were silently accepted) as well as removing deriving(Zero) entirely (the trait was removed). The distribution no longer contains the libtime or libregex_macros crates. Both of these have been deprecated for some time and are available externally.
2014-12-18librustc: Always parse `macro!()`/`macro![]` as expressions if notPatrick Walton-2/+2
followed by a semicolon. This allows code like `vec![1i, 2, 3].len();` to work. This breaks code that uses macros as statements without putting semicolons after them, such as: fn main() { ... assert!(a == b) assert!(c == d) println(...); } It also breaks code that uses macros as items without semicolons: local_data_key!(foo) fn main() { println("hello world") } Add semicolons to fix this code. Those two examples can be fixed as follows: fn main() { ... assert!(a == b); assert!(c == d); println(...); } local_data_key!(foo); fn main() { println("hello world") } RFC #378. Closes #18635. [breaking-change]
2014-10-29Rename fail! to panic!Steve Klabnik-1/+1
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/221 The current terminology of "task failure" often causes problems when writing or speaking about code. You often want to talk about the possibility of an operation that returns a Result "failing", but cannot because of the ambiguity with task failure. Instead, you have to speak of "the failing case" or "when the operation does not succeed" or other circumlocutions. Likewise, we use a "Failure" header in rustdoc to describe when operations may fail the task, but it would often be helpful to separate out a section describing the "Err-producing" case. We have been steadily moving away from task failure and toward Result as an error-handling mechanism, so we should optimize our terminology accordingly: Result-producing functions should be easy to describe. To update your code, rename any call to `fail!` to `panic!` instead. Assuming you have not created your own macro named `panic!`, this will work on UNIX based systems: grep -lZR 'fail!' . | xargs -0 -l sed -i -e 's/fail!/panic!/g' You can of course also do this by hand. [breaking-change]
2014-06-09Use phase(plugin) in other cratesKeegan McAllister-1/+1
2014-05-25Change regex! macro to expand to a constexpr, allowing to put it in a staticMarvin Löbel-0/+3
2014-04-25Tests for dynamic regexes will now run during 'check-stage2'.Andrew Gallant-5/+15
Before, tests for dynamic regexes ran during stage1 and tests for native regexes ran during stage2. But the buildbots don't test stage1, so now both dynamic and native tests are run during stage2. Closes #13740.
2014-04-25Add a regex crate to the Rust distribution.Andrew Gallant-0/+29
Also adds a regex_macros crate, which provides natively compiled regular expressions with a syntax extension. Closes #3591. RFC: 0007-regexps