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zackmdavis:the_3rd_of_2_hardest_problems_in_computer_science, r=QuietMisdreavus
fix the doc-comment-decoration-trimming edge-case rustdoc ICE
This `horizontal_trim` function strips the leading whitespace from
doc-comments that have a left-asterisk-margin:
```
/**
* You know what I mean—
*
* comments like this!
*/
```
The index of the column of asterisks is `i`, and if trimming is deemed
possible, we slice each line from `i+1` to the end of the line. But if, in
particular, `i` was 0 _and_ there was an empty line (as in the example
given in the reporting issue), we ended up panicking trying to slice an
empty string from 0+1 (== 1).
Let's tighten our check to say that we can't trim when `i` is even the same
as the length of the line, not just when it's greater. (Any such cases
would panic trying to slice `line` from `line.len()+1`.)
Resolves #47197.
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Add help message for incorrect pattern syntax
When I was getting started with rust I often made the mistake of using `||` instead of `|` to match multiple patterns and spent a long time staring at my code wondering what was wrong.
for example:
```
fn main() {
let x = 1;
match x {
1 || 2 => println!("1 or 2"),
_ => println!("Something else"),
}
}
```
If you compile this with current rustc you will see
```
error: expected one of `...`, `..=`, `..`, `=>`, `if`, or `|`, found `||`
--> test.rs:5:11
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5 | 1 || 2 => println!("1 or 2"),
| -^^ unexpected token
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| expected one of `...`, `..=`, `..`, `=>`, `if`, or `|` here
error: aborting due to previous error
```
With my proposed change it will show:
```
error: unexpected token `||` after pattern
--> test.rs:5:11
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5 | 1 || 2 => println!("1 or 2"),
| ^^
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= help: did you mean to use `|` to specify multiple patterns instead?
error: aborting due to previous error
```
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- Recover from struct parse error on match and point out missing match
body.
- Point at struct when finding non-identifier while parsing its fields.
- Add label to "expected identifier, found {}" error.
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locals that mentioned "extern repr"
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Upgrade `log` to `0.4` in multiple crates.
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The `#[simd]` attribute has been deprecated since c8b6d5b23cc8b2d43ece9f06252c7e98280fb8e5 back in 2015. Any nightly crates using it have had ample time to switch to `#[repr(simd)]`, and if they didn't they're likely broken by now anyway.
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Previously, on a type mismatch (and if this wasn't preëmpted by a
higher-priority suggestion), we would look for argumentless methods
returning the expected type, and list them in a `help` note.
This had two major shortcomings. Firstly, a lot of the suggestions didn't
really make sense (if you used a &str where a String was expected,
`.to_ascii_uppercase()` is probably not the solution you were hoping
for). Secondly, we weren't generating suggestions from the most useful
traits!
We address the first problem with an internal
`#[rustc_conversion_suggestion]` attribute meant to mark methods that keep
the "same value" in the relevant sense, just converting the type. We
address the second problem by making `FnCtxt.probe_for_return_type` pass
the `ProbeScope::AllTraits` to `probe_op`: this would seem to be safe
because grep reveals no other callers of `probe_for_return_type`.
Also, structured suggestions are preferred (because they're pretty, but
also for RLS and friends).
Also also, we make the E0055 autoderef recursion limit error use the
one-time-diagnostics set, because we can potentially hit the limit a lot
during probing. (Without this,
test/ui/did_you_mean/recursion_limit_deref.rs would report "aborting due to
51 errors").
Unfortunately, the trait probing is still not all one would hope for: at a
minimum, we don't know how to rule out `into()` in cases where it wouldn't
actually work, and we don't know how to rule in `.to_owned()` where it
would. Issues #46459 and #46460 have been filed and are ref'd in a FIXME.
This is hoped to resolve #42929, #44672, and #45777.
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Support `extern` in paths
Implement the primary alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46613 + https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45771, achieving the same effect without requiring changes to other imports.
Both need to be experimentally evaluated before making further progress.
The PR also adds docs for all these related features into the unstable book.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44660
r? @nikomatsakis
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This `horizontal_trim` function strips the leading whitespace from
doc-comments that have a left-asterisk-margin:
/**
* You know what I mean—
*
* comments like this!
*/
The index of the column of asterisks is `i`, and if trimming is deemed
possible, we slice each line from `i+1` to the end of the line. But if, in
particular, `i` was 0 _and_ there was an empty line (as in the example
given in the reporting issue), we ended up panicking trying to slice an
empty string from 0+1 (== 1).
Let's tighten our check to say that we can't trim when `i` is even the same
as the length of the line, not just when it's greater. (Any such cases
would panic trying to slice `line` from `line.len()+1`.)
Resolves #47197.
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rustc: use {U,I}size instead of {U,I}s shorthands.
`Us`/`Is` come from a time when `us` and `is` were the literal suffixes that are now `usize` / `isize`.
r? @nikomatsakis
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These no longer work now that Cargo changes the cwd of rustc while it's running.
Instead use an absolute path that's set by rustbuild.
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Allow lifetimes in macros
This is a resurrection of PR #41927 which was a resurrection of #33135, which is intended to fix #34303.
In short, this allows macros_rules! to use :lifetime as a matcher to match 'lifetimes.
Still to do:
- [x] Feature gate
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Resolves #47073.
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made `parser::Parser::expect_lifetime` public, so it can be called from `macro_parser::parse_nt`
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Started rebasing @sgrif's PR #33135 off of current master. (Well, actually merging it into a new branch based off current master.)
The following files still need to be fixed or at least reviewed:
- `src/libsyntax/ext/tt/macro_parser.rs`: calls `Parser::parse_lifetime`, which doesn't exist anymore
- `src/libsyntax/parse/parser.rs`: @sgrif added an error message to `Parser::parse_lifetime`. Code has since been refactored, so I just took it out for now.
- `src/libsyntax/ext/tt/transcribe.rs`: This code has been refactored bigtime. Not sure whether @sgrif's changes here are still necessary. Took it out for this commit.
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Do not expand a derive invocation when derive is not allowed
Closes #46655.
The first commit is what actually closes #46655. The second one is just a refactoring I have done while waiting on a test.
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Do not panic on interpolated token inside quote macro
Closes #33469.
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Implements RFC 1937: `?` in `main`
This is the first part of the RFC 1937 that supports new
`Termination` trait in the rust `main` function.
Thanks @nikomatsakis, @arielb1 and all other people in the gitter channel for all your help!
The support for doctest and `#[test]` is still missing, bu as @nikomatsakis said, smaller pull requests are better :)
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Make the output of the column! macro 1 based
Fixes #46868.
I didn't add any regression tests as the change already had to change tests inside the codebase.
r? @dtolnay
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Use def span for non-ascii ident feature gate error
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1. Change the return type of `expand_invoc()` and its subroutines to
`Option<Expansion>` from `Expansion`.
2. Return `None` when expanding a derive invocation if the item cannot
have derive on it (in `expand_derive_invoc()`).
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Use span label instead of span note for single line spans in
"incompatible arm" diagnostic.
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Add a feature gate for nested uses of `impl Trait`
This allows us to delay stabilization of nested `impl Trait` until we have a plan to solve the problem posed [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/34511#issuecomment-350715858).
r? @nikomatsakis
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Work towards thread safety in rustc
This PR is split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45912. It contains changes which do not require the `sync` module.
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Do not emit type errors on recovered blocks
When a parse error occurs on a block, the parser will recover and create
a block with the statements collected until that point. Now a flag
stating that a recovery has been performed in this block is propagated
so that the type checker knows that the type of the block (which will be
identified as `()`) shouldn't be checked against the expectation to
reduce the amount of irrelevant diagnostic errors shown to the user.
Fix #44579.
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Rollup of 14 pull requests
- Successful merges: #46636, #46780, #46784, #46809, #46814, #46820, #46839, #46847, #46858, #46878, #46884, #46890, #46898, #46918
- Failed merges:
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When a parse error occurs on a block, the parser will recover and create
a block with the statements collected until that point. Now a flag
stating that a recovery has been performed in this block is propagated
so that the type checker knows that the type of the block (which will be
identified as `()`) shouldn't be checked against the expectation to
reduce the amount of irrelevant diagnostic errors shown to the user.
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Generics refactoring (groundwork for const generics)
These changes were suggested by @eddyb.
After this change, the `Generics` contain one `Vec` of an enum for the generic parameters, rather than two separate `Vec`s for lifetime and type parameters. Type params and const params will need to be in a shared `Vec` to preserve their ordering, and moving lifetimes into the same `Vec` should simplify the code that processes `Generics`.
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tweaks and fixes for doc(include)
This PR makes a handful of changes around `#[doc(include="file.md")]` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44732):
* Turns errors when loading files into full errors. This matches the original RFC text.
* Makes the `missing_docs` lint check for `#[doc(include="file.md")]` as well as regular `#[doc="text"]` attributes.
* Loads files included by `#[doc(include="file.md")]` into dep-info, mirroring the behavior of `include_str!()` and friends.
* Adds or modifies tests to check for all of these.
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incr.comp.: Precompute small hash for filenames to save some work.
For each span we hash the filename of the file it points to. Since filenames can be quite long, especially with absolute paths, this PR pre-computes a hash of the filename and we then only hash the hash.
r? @nikomatsakis
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