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2024-04-08Update search_index.rsMichael Howell-1/+0
2024-04-08rustdoc: improve comments based on feedbackMichael Howell-8/+13
2024-04-08rustdoc-search: single result for items with multiple pathsMichael Howell-22/+165
This change uses the same "exact" paths as trait implementors and type alias inlining to track items with multiple reachable paths. This way, if you search for `vec`, you get only the `std` exports of it, and not the one from `alloc`. It still includes all the items in the search index so that you can search for them by all available paths. For example, try `core::option` and `std::option`, and notice that the results page doesn't show duplicates, but still shows all the items in their respective crates.
2024-04-08Thread pattern types through the HIROli Scherer-1/+5
2024-04-03Default to light theme is JS is enabled but not workingGuillaume Gomez-3/+9
2024-04-02Rollup merge of #122614 - notriddle:notriddle/search-desc, r=GuillaumeGomezGuillaume Gomez-210/+751
rustdoc-search: shard the search result descriptions ## Preview This makes no visual changes to rustdoc search. It's a pure perf improvement. <details><summary>old</summary> Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc/std/index.html?search=vec> WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240317_AiDc61_2EM,240317_AiDcM0_2EN> Waterfall diagram: ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/39548f0c-7ad6-411b-abf8-f6668ff4da18) </details> Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc2/std/index.html?search=vec> WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240322_BiDcCH_13R,240322_AiDcJY_104> ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/4be1f9ff-c3ff-4b96-8f5b-b264df2e662d) ## Description r? `@GuillaumeGomez` The descriptions are, on almost all crates[^1], the majority of the size of the search index, even though they aren't really used for searching. This makes it relatively easy to separate them into their own files. Additionally, this PR pulls out information about whether there's a description into a bitmap. This allows us to sort, truncate, *then* download. This PR also bumps us to ES8. Out of the browsers we support, all of them support async functions according to caniuse. https://caniuse.com/async-functions [^1]: <https://microsoft.github.io/windows-docs-rs/>, a crate with 44MiB of pure names and no descriptions for them, is an outlier and should not be counted. But this PR should improve it, by replacing a long line of empty strings with a compressed bitmap with a single Run section. Just not very much. ## Detailed sizes ```console $ cat test.sh set -ex cp ../search-index*.js search-index.js awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js{,} | awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}' | sed -E "s:\\\\':':g" > search-index.json jq -c '.t' search-index.json > t.json jq -c '.n' search-index.json > n.json jq -c '.q' search-index.json > q.json jq -c '.D' search-index.json > D.json jq -c '.e' search-index.json > e.json jq -c '.i' search-index.json > i.json jq -c '.f' search-index.json > f.json jq -c '.c' search-index.json > c.json jq -c '.p' search-index.json > p.json jq -c '.a' search-index.json > a.json du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json $ bash test.sh + cp ../search-index1.78.0.js search-index.js + awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js search-index.js + awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}' + sed -E 's:\\'\'':'\'':g' + jq -c .t search-index.json + jq -c .n search-index.json + jq -c .q search-index.json + jq -c .D search-index.json + jq -c .e search-index.json + jq -c .i search-index.json + jq -c .f search-index.json + jq -c .c search-index.json + jq -c .p search-index.json + jq -c .a search-index.json + du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json 64K t.json 800K n.json 8.0K q.json 4.0K D.json 16K e.json 192K i.json 544K f.json 4.0K c.json 36K p.json 20K a.json ``` These are, roughly, the size of each section in the standard library (this tool actually excludes libtest, for parsing-json-with-awk reasons, but libtest is tiny so it's probably not important). t = item type, like "struct", "free fn", or "type alias". Since one byte is used for every item, this implies that there are approximately 64 thousand items in the standard library. n = name, and that's now the largest section of the search index with the descriptions removed from it q = parent *module* path, stored parallel to the items within D = the size of each description shard, stored as vlq hex numbers e = empty description bit flags, stored as a roaring bitmap i = parent *type* index as a link into `p`, stored as decimal json numbers; used only for associated types; might want to switch to vlq hex, since that's shorter, but that would be a separate pr f = function signature, stored as lists of lists that index into `p` c = deprecation flag, stored as a roaring bitmap p = parent *type*, stored separately and linked into from `i` and `f` a = alias, as [[key, value]] pairs ## Search performance http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-11/perf-shard/index.html For example, in stm32f4: <table><thead><tr><th>before<th>after</tr></thead> <tbody><tr><td> ``` Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 617 Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 198 Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 282 Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0 wall time = 426 Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0 wall time = 673 ``` </td><td> ``` Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 716 Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 207 Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200 wall time = 289 Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0 wall time = 418 Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0 wall time = 687 ``` </td></tr><tr><td> ``` user: 005.345 s sys: 002.955 s wall: 006.899 s child_RSS_high: 583664 KiB group_mem_high: 557876 KiB ``` </td><td> ``` user: 004.652 s sys: 000.565 s wall: 003.865 s child_RSS_high: 538696 KiB group_mem_high: 511724 KiB ``` </td></tr> </table> This perf tester is janky and unscientific enough that the apparent differences might just be noise. If it's not an order of magnitude, it's probably not real. ## Future possibilities * Currently, results are not shown until the descriptions are downloaded. Theoretically, the description-less results could be shown. But actually doing that, and making sure it works properly, would require extra work (we have to be careful to avoid layout jumps). * More than just descriptions can be sharded this way. But we have to be careful to make sure the size wins are worth the round trips. Ideally, data that’s needed only for display should be sharded while data needed for search isn’t. * [Full text search](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/full-text-search-for-rustdoc-and-doc-rs/20427) also needs this kind of infrastructure. A good implementation might store a compressed bloom filter in the search index, then download the full keyword in shards. But, we have to be careful not just of the amount readers have to download, but also of the amount that [publishers](https://gist.github.com/notriddle/c289e77f3ed469d1c0238d1d135d49e1) have to store.
2024-04-02Clean up src/librustdoc/html/render/search_index/encode.rsMichael Howell-24/+22
Co-authored-by: Guillaume Gomez <guillaume1.gomez@gmail.com>
2024-04-02Support type '/' to searchmu001999-2/+3
2024-03-28Make local_crate_source_file return a RealFileNameUrgau-1/+1
so it can be remapped (or not) by callers
2024-03-27Add rustdoc hackOli Scherer-2/+3
2024-03-27Remove `DefId`'s `Partial/Ord` implsOli Scherer-2/+2
2024-03-27rustdoc: Swap fields and variant documentationschloekek-2/+2
Previously, the documentation for a variant appeared after the documentation for each of its fields. This was inconsistent with structs and unions, and made little sense on its own; fields are subordinate to variants and should therefore appear later in the documentation.
2024-03-22rustdoc-search: address nitsMichael Howell-265/+297
2024-03-21rustdoc-search: compressed bitmap to sort, then load descMichael Howell-32/+391
This adds a bit more data than "pure sharding" by including information about which items have no description at all. This way, it can sort the results, then truncate, then finally download the description. With the "e" bitmap: 2380KiB Without the "e" bitmap: 2364KiB
2024-03-18Use promise.all to load sorted results in parallelMichael Howell-3/+8
2024-03-17Fix style errorsMichael Howell-1/+1
2024-03-17some minor code simplificationsMatthias Krüger-2/+2
2024-03-16rustdoc-search: shard the search result descriptionsMichael Howell-200/+347
The descriptions are, on almost all crates[^1], the majority of the size of the search index, even though they aren't really used for searching. This makes it relatively easy to separate them into their own files. This commit also bumps us to ES8. Out of the browsers we support, all of them support async functions according to caniuse. https://caniuse.com/async-functions [^1]: <https://microsoft.github.io/windows-docs-rs/>, a crate with 44MiB of pure names and no descriptions for them, is an outlier and should not be counted.
2024-03-15rustdoc: clean up formattingMichael Howell-1/+1
2024-03-15Rollup merge of #122495 - Manishearth:rustdoc-👻👻👻, r=GuillaumeGomezMatthias Krüger-51/+49
Visually mark 👻hidden👻 items with document-hidden-items Fixes #122485 This adds a 👻 in the item list (much like the :lock: used for private items), and also shows `#[doc(hidden)]` in the code view, where `pub(crate)` etc gets shown for private items. This does not do anything for enum variants, if people have ideas. I think we can just show the attribute.
2024-03-15Rollup merge of #122530 - klensy:as_str, r=fee1-deadGuillaume Gomez-3/+4
less symbol interner locks This reduces instructions under 1% (in rustdoc run), but essentially free.
2024-03-15less symbols interner locksklensy-3/+4
2024-03-14Rollup merge of #122247 - notriddle:notriddle/search-unbox-limit, ↵Matthias Krüger-31/+107
r=GuillaumeGomez rustdoc-search: depth limit `T<U>` -> `U` unboxing Profiler output: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-unbox-limit/ (the only significant change is that one of the `rust` tests went from 378416ms to 16ms). This is a performance enhancement aimed at a problem I found while using type-driven search on the Rust compiler. It is caused by [`Interner`], a trait with 41 associated types, many of which recurse back to `Self` again. This caused search.js to struggle. It eventually terminates, after about 10 minutes of turning my PC into a space header, but it's doing `41!` unifications and that's too slow. [`Interner`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/ty/trait.Interner.html
2024-03-14fix polarityManish Goregaokar-2/+2
2024-03-14inlineManish Goregaokar-5/+9
2024-03-14Make compactManish Goregaokar-10/+10
2024-03-14print doc(hidden)Manish Goregaokar-5/+14
2024-03-14Refactor visibility_print_with_space to directly take an itemManish Goregaokar-44/+23
2024-03-14print ghostsManish Goregaokar-0/+6
2024-03-14Rollup merge of #119676 - notriddle:notriddle/rustdoc-search-hof, ↵Matthias Krüger-115/+229
r=GuillaumeGomez rustdoc-search: search types by higher-order functions This feature extends rustdoc with syntax and search index information for searching function pointers and closures (Higher-Order Functions, or HOF). Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60485 This PR adds two syntaxes: a high-level one for finding any kind of HOF, and a direct implementation of the parenthesized path syntax that Rust itself uses. ## Preview pages | Query | Results | |-------|---------| | [`option<T>, (fnonce (T) -> bool) -> option<T>`][optionfilter] | `Option::filter` | | [`option<T>, (T -> bool) -> option<T>`][optionfilter2] | `Option::filter` | Updated chapter of the book: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/rustdoc/read-documentation/search.html [optionfilter]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=option<T>%2C+(fnonce+(T)+->+bool)+->+option<T>&filter-crate=std [optionfilter2]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=option<T>%2C+(T+->+bool)+->+option<T>&filter-crate=std ## Motivation When type-based search was first landed, it was directly [described as incomplete][a comment]. [a comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/23289#issuecomment-79437386 Filling out the missing functionality is going to mean adding support for more of Rust's [type expression] syntax, such as references, raw pointers, function pointers, and closures. This PR adds function pointers and closures. [type expression]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/types.html#type-expressions There's been demand for something "like Hoogle, but for Rust" expressed a few times [1](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/y8sbid/is_there_a_website_like_haskells_hoogle_for_rust/) [2](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/rust-equivalent-of-haskells-hoogle/102280) [3](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/std-library-inclusion-policy/6852/2) [4](https://discord.com/channels/442252698964721669/448238009733742612/1109502307495858216). Some of them just don't realize what functionality already exists ([`Duration -> u64`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/?search=duration%20-%3E%20u64) already works), but a lot of them specifically want to search for higher-order functions like option combinators. ## Guide-level explanation (from the Rustdoc book) To search for a function that accepts a function as a parameter, like `Iterator::all`, wrap the nested signature in parenthesis, as in [`Iterator<T>, (T -> bool) -> bool`][iterator-all]. You can also search for a specific closure trait, such as `Iterator<T>, (FnMut(T) -> bool) -> bool`, but you need to know which one you want. [iterator-all]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=Iterator<T>%2C+(T+->+bool)+->+bool&filter-crate=std ## Reference-level description (also from the Rustdoc book) ### Primitives with Special Syntax <table> <thead> <tr> <th>Shorthand</th> <th>Explicit names</th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr><td colspan="2">Before this PR</td></tr> <tr> <td><code>[]</code></td> <td><code>primitive:slice</code> and/or <code>primitive:array</code></td> </tr> <tr> <td><code>[T]</code></td> <td><code>primitive:slice&lt;T&gt;</code> and/or <code>primitive:array&lt;T&gt;</code></td> </tr> <tr> <td><code>!</code></td> <td><code>primitive:never</code></td> </tr> <tr> <td><code>()</code></td> <td><code>primitive:unit</code> and/or <code>primitive:tuple</code></td> </tr> <tr> <td><code>(T)</code></td> <td><code>T</code></td> </tr> <tr> <td><code>(T,)</code></td> <td><code>primitive:tuple&lt;T&gt;</code></td> </tr> <tr><td colspan="2">After this PR</td></tr> <tr> <td><code>(T, U -> V, W)</code></td> <td><code>fn(T, U) -> (V, W)</code>, Fn, FnMut, and FnOnce</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> The `->` operator has lower precedence than comma. If it's not wrapped in brackets, it delimits the return value for the function being searched for. To search for functions that take functions as parameters, use parenthesis. ### Search query grammar ```ebnf ident = *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_") path = ident *(DOUBLE-COLON ident) [BANG] slice-like = OPEN-SQUARE-BRACKET [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-SQUARE-BRACKET tuple-like = OPEN-PAREN [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-PAREN arg = [type-filter *WS COLON *WS] (path [generics] / slice-like / tuple-like) type-sep = COMMA/WS *(COMMA/WS) nonempty-arg-list = *(type-sep) arg *(type-sep arg) *(type-sep) [ return-args ] generic-arg-list = *(type-sep) arg [ EQUAL arg ] *(type-sep arg [ EQUAL arg ]) *(type-sep) normal-generics = OPEN-ANGLE-BRACKET [ generic-arg-list ] *(type-sep) CLOSE-ANGLE-BRACKET fn-like-generics = OPEN-PAREN [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-PAREN [ RETURN-ARROW arg ] generics = normal-generics / fn-like-generics return-args = RETURN-ARROW *(type-sep) nonempty-arg-list exact-search = [type-filter *WS COLON] [ RETURN-ARROW ] *WS QUOTE ident QUOTE [ generics ] type-search = [ nonempty-arg-list ] query = *WS (exact-search / type-search) *WS ; unchanged parts of the grammar, like the full list of type filters, are omitted ``` ## Future direction ### The remaining type expression grammar As described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118194, this is another step in the type expression grammar: BareFunction, and the function-like mode of TypePath, are now supported. * RawPointerType and ReferenceType actually are a priority. * ImplTraitType and TraitObjectType (and ImplTraitTypeOneBound and TraitObjectTypeOneBound) aren't as much of a priority, since they desugar pretty easily. ### Search subtyping and traits This is the other major factor that makes it less useful than it should be. * `iterator<result<t>> -> result<t>` doesn't find `Result::from_iter`. You have to search [`intoiterator<result<t>> -> result<t>`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=intoiterator%3Cresult%3Ct%3E%3E%20-%3E%20result%3Ct%3E&filter-crate=std). Nobody's going to search for IntoIterator unless they basically already know about it and don't need the search engine anyway. * Iterator combinators are usually structs that happen to implement Iterator, like `std::iter::Map`. To solve these cases, it needs to look at trait implementations, knowing that Iterator is a "subtype of" IntoIterator, and Map is a "subtype of" Iterator, so `iterator -> result` is a subtype of `intoiterator -> result` and `iterator<t>, (t -> u) -> iterator<u>` is a subtype of [`iterator<t>, (t -> u) -> map<t -> u>`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=iterator%3Ct%3E%2C%20(t%20-%3E%20u)%20-%3E%20map%3Ct%20-%3E%20u%3E&filter-crate=std).
2024-03-12rustdoc: do not preload fonts when browsing locallyElijah Riggs-0/+2
2024-03-11rustdoc-search: add search query syntax `Fn(T) -> U`Michael Howell-48/+65
This is implemented, in addition to the ML-style one, because Rust does it. If we don't, we'll never hear the end of it. This commit also refactors some duplicate parts of the parser into a dedicated function.
2024-03-11rustdoc: use `const` for the special type name idsMichael Howell-25/+11
Initialize them before the search index is loaded.
2024-03-11rustdoc: clean up search.js by removing empty sort caseMichael Howell-5/+0
It's going to be a no-op on the empty list anyway (we have plenty of test cases that return nothing) so why send extra code?
2024-03-11rustdoc-search: parse and search with ML-style HOFMichael Howell-45/+161
Option::map, for example, looks like this: option<t>, (t -> u) -> option<u> This syntax searches all of the HOFs in Rust: traits Fn, FnOnce, and FnMut, and bare fn primitives.
2024-03-09rustdoc-search: depth limit `T<U>` -> `U` unboxingMichael Howell-31/+108
Profiler output: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-unbox-limit/ This is a performance enhancement aimed at a problem I found while using type-driven search on the Rust compiler. It is caused by [`Interner`], a trait with 41 associated types, many of which recurse back to `Self` again. This caused search.js to struggle. It eventually terminates, after about 10 minutes of turning my PC into a space header, but it's doing `41!` unifications and that's too slow. [`Interner`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/ty/trait.Interner.html
2024-03-05Rename `DiagnosticMessage` as `DiagMessage`.Nicholas Nethercote-4/+4
2024-03-01Correctly generate item info of trait itemsGuillaume Gomez-13/+14
2024-02-29Rollup merge of #121689 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-highlighting-whitespace, ↵Matthias Krüger-1/+2
r=notriddle [rustdoc] Prevent inclusion of whitespace character after macro_rules ident Discovered this bug randomly when looking at: ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/3050060/dca38047-9085-4377-bfac-f98890224be4) We were too eagerly trying to merge tokens that shouldn't be merged together (for example if you have a code comment followed by a code comment, we merge them in one attribute to reduce the DOM size). r? ``@notriddle``
2024-02-28Auto merge of #121489 - nnethercote:diag-renaming, r=davidtwcobors-2/+2
Diagnostic renaming Renaming various diagnostic types from `Diagnostic*` to `Diag*`. Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/722. There are more to do but this is enough for one PR. r? `@davidtwco`
2024-02-28Add regression test for inclusion of whitespace characters in rustdoc ↵Guillaume Gomez-1/+1
highlighting
2024-02-28Rename `DiagnosticBuilder` as `Diag`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+2
Much better! Note that this involves renaming (and updating the value of) `DIAGNOSTIC_BUILDER` in clippy.
2024-02-27Prevent inclusion of whitespace character after macro_rules identGuillaume Gomez-0/+1
2024-02-27Fix link generation for locate foreign macro in jump to definition featureGuillaume Gomez-1/+1
2024-02-26Rollup merge of #121590 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-js-changed, r=notriddleGuillaume Gomez-3/+11
Correctly handle if rustdoc JS script hash changed It's something that annoyed me for quite some time: I have nightly docs open (for both std and compiler). And often, I don't look at the page for some days. Then when I come back to it, I make a search... except nothing happens. Took me a while to figure out that it was because the hash of one of the JS files we load for the search (either `search.js` or `search-index.js`) was updated in the meantime, preventing the search to be done. To go around it, I added to press `ENTER` to make the form submitted (which would reload the same page but with the correct hashes this time and the search being run). r? `@notriddle`
2024-02-25Auto merge of #120393 - Urgau:rfc3373-non-local-defs, r=WaffleLapkinbors-5/+0
Implement RFC 3373: Avoid non-local definitions in functions This PR implements [RFC 3373: Avoid non-local definitions in functions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120363).
2024-02-25Correctly handle if rustdoc JS script hash changedGuillaume Gomez-3/+11
2024-02-24Rustdoc: include crate name in links for local primitivesGurinder Singh-2/+7
It makes the link easier to use in cases in which the path of the page where it will be embedded is not known beforehand such as when we generate impls dynamically from `register_type_impls` method in `main.js` Earlier for local primitives we would generate a path that was relative to the current page depth passed in `cx.current` . e.g if the current page was `std::simd::prelude::Simd` the generated path would be `../../primitive.<prim>.html` After this change the path will first take you to the the wesite root and add the crate name. e.g. for `std::simd::prelude::Simd` the path now will be `../../../std/primitive.<prim>.html`
2024-02-18Rollup merge of #121160 - fmease:rustdoc-fix-n-refactor-html-rendering, ↵León Orell Valerian Liehr-281/+173
r=GuillaumeGomez rustdoc: fix and refactor HTML rendering a bit * refactoring: get rid of a bunch of manual `f.alternate()` branches * not sure why this wasn't done so already, is this perf-sensitive? * fix an ICE in debug builds of rustdoc * rustdoc used to crash on empty outlives-bounds: `where 'a:` * properly escape const generic defaults * actually print empty trait and outlives-bounds (doesn't work for cross-crate reexports yet, will fix that at some other point) since they can have semantic significance * outlives-bounds: forces lifetime params to be early-bound instead of late-bound which is technically speaking part of the public API * trait-bounds: can affect the well-formedness, consider * makeshift “const-evaluatable” bounds under `generic_const_exprs` * bounds to force wf-checking in light of #100041 (quite artificial I know, I couldn't figure out something better), see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121160#discussion_r1491563816
2024-02-18Rollup merge of #120526 - GuillaumeGomez:mobile-long-crate-name, r=notriddleLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-7/+2
rustdoc: Correctly handle long crate names on mobile Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120471. It now renders like this: ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/3050060/065b4b8b-ba55-4163-a928-8d7bf735c111) r? `@notriddle`