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Accept underscores in unicode escapes
Fixes #43692.
I don't know if this need an RFC, but at least the impl is here!
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Fixes #43692.
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Like #43008 (f668999), but _much more aggressive_.
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This PR kicks off the implementation of the [default binding modes RFC][1] by
introducing the `pat_binding_modes` typeck table mentioned in the [mentoring
instructions][2].
`pat_binding_modes` is populated in `librustc_typeck/check/_match.rs` and
used wherever the HIR would be scraped prior to this PR. Unfortunately, one
blemish, namely a two callers to `contains_explicit_ref_binding`, remains.
This will likely have to be removed when the second part of [1], the
`pat_adjustments` table, is tackled. Appropriate comments have been added.
See #42640.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2005
[2]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42640#issuecomment-313535089
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Add Span to ast::WhereClause
This PR adds `Span` field to `ast::WhereClause`. The motivation here is to make rustfmt's life easier when recovering comments before and after where clause.
r? @nrc
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This is then later used by `proc_macro` to generate a new
`proc_macro::TokenTree` which preserves span information. Unfortunately this
isn't a bullet-proof approach as it doesn't handle the case when there's still
other attributes on the item, especially inner attributes.
Despite this the intention here is to solve the primary use case for procedural
attributes, attached to functions as outer attributes, likely bare. In this
situation we should be able to now yield a lossless stream of tokens to preserve
span information.
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remove variant `Token::SubstNt` in favor of `quoted::TokenTree::MetaVar`.
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This is useful if parsing from stdin or a String and don't want to try and read in a module from another file. Instead we just leave a stub in the AST.
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This is mostly removing stray ampersands, needless returns and lifetimes.
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reproducible builds.
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`TokenStream`-based attributes, paths in attribute and derive macro invocations
This PR
- refactors `Attribute` to use `Path` and `TokenStream` instead of `MetaItem`.
- supports macro invocation paths for attribute procedural macros.
- e.g. `#[::foo::attr_macro] struct S;`, `#[cfg_attr(all(), foo::attr_macro)] struct S;`
- supports macro invocation paths for derive procedural macros.
- e.g. `#[derive(foo::Bar, super::Baz)] struct S;`
- supports arbitrary tokens as arguments to attribute procedural macros.
- e.g. `#[foo::attr_macro arbitrary + tokens] struct S;`
- supports using arbitrary tokens in "inert attributes" with derive procedural macros.
- e.g. `#[derive(Foo)] struct S(#[inert arbitrary + tokens] i32);`
where `#[proc_macro_derive(Foo, attributes(inert))]`
r? @nrc
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`tokenstream::TokenTree::Sequence`.
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This commit updates the version number to 1.17.0 as we're not on that version of
the nightly compiler, and at the same time this updates src/stage0.txt to
bootstrap from freshly minted beta compiler and beta Cargo.
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Refactor the parser to consume token trees
This is groundwork for efficiently parsing attribute proc macro invocations, bang macro invocations, and `TokenStream`-based attributes and fragment matchers.
This improves parsing performance by 8-15% and expansion performance by 0-5% on a sampling of the compiler's crates.
r? @nrc
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This commit introduces 128-bit integers. Stage 2 builds and produces a working compiler which
understands and supports 128-bit integers throughout.
The general strategy used is to have rustc_i128 module which provides aliases for iu128, equal to
iu64 in stage9 and iu128 later. Since nowhere in rustc we rely on large numbers being supported,
this strategy is good enough to get past the first bootstrap stages to end up with a fully working
128-bit capable compiler.
In order for this strategy to work, number of locations had to be changed to use associated
max_value/min_value instead of MAX/MIN constants as well as the min_value (or was it max_value?)
had to be changed to use xor instead of shift so both 64-bit and 128-bit based consteval works
(former not necessarily producing the right results in stage1).
This commit includes manual merge conflict resolution changes from a rebase by @est31.
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macros: fix the expected paths for a non-inline module matched by an `item` fragment
Fixes #38190.
r? @nrc
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fragment.
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to a Visitor
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places.
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Most of the Rust community agrees that the vec! macro is clearer when
called using square brackets [] instead of regular brackets (). Most of
these ocurrences are from before macros allowed using different types of
brackets.
There is one left unchanged in a pretty-print test, as the pretty
printer still wants it to have regular brackets.
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