| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018-09-06 | Migrated slew of run-pass tests to various subdirectories of `ui/run-pass/`. | Felix S. Klock II | -78/+0 | |
| 2018-08-05 | Convert unknown_features lint into an error | varkor | -2/+0 | |
| 2015-06-13 | Use `assert_eq!` instead of `assert!` in tests | petrochenkov | -1/+1 | |
| 2015-04-08 | Remove pretty-expanded from failing tests | Alex Crichton | -1/+0 | |
| This commit removes pretty-expanded from all tests that wind up calling panic! one way or another now that its internals are unstable. | ||||
| 2015-04-01 | Fallout in tests | Niko Matsakis | -1/+1 | |
| 2015-03-23 | rustdoc: Replace no-pretty-expanded with pretty-expanded | Brian Anderson | -0/+2 | |
| Now that features must be declared expanded source often does not compile. This adds 'pretty-expanded' to a bunch of test cases that still work. | ||||
| 2015-03-05 | Remove integer suffixes where the types in compiled code are identical. | Eduard Burtescu | -1/+1 | |
| 2015-01-25 | cleanup: s/impl Copy/#[derive(Copy)]/g | Jorge Aparicio | -2/+1 | |
| 2015-01-08 | fallout: run-pass tests that use box. (many could be ported to `Box::new` ↵ | Felix S. Klock II | -0/+3 | |
| instead in the future.) | ||||
| 2015-01-02 | Fix fallout in tests. | Niko Matsakis | -1/+1 | |
| 2014-12-08 | librustc: Make `Copy` opt-in. | Niko Matsakis | -0/+2 | |
| This change makes the compiler no longer infer whether types (structures and enumerations) implement the `Copy` trait (and thus are implicitly copyable). Rather, you must implement `Copy` yourself via `impl Copy for MyType {}`. A new warning has been added, `missing_copy_implementations`, to warn you if a non-generic public type has been added that could have implemented `Copy` but didn't. For convenience, you may *temporarily* opt out of this behavior by using `#![feature(opt_out_copy)]`. Note though that this feature gate will never be accepted and will be removed by the time that 1.0 is released, so you should transition your code away from using it. This breaks code like: #[deriving(Show)] struct Point2D { x: int, y: int, } fn main() { let mypoint = Point2D { x: 1, y: 1, }; let otherpoint = mypoint; println!("{}{}", mypoint, otherpoint); } Change this code to: #[deriving(Show)] struct Point2D { x: int, y: int, } impl Copy for Point2D {} fn main() { let mypoint = Point2D { x: 1, y: 1, }; let otherpoint = mypoint; println!("{}{}", mypoint, otherpoint); } This is the backwards-incompatible part of #13231. Part of RFC #3. [breaking-change] | ||||
| 2014-10-15 | Tests | Nick Cameron | -0/+75 | |
