From cf2dff2b1e3fa55fa5415d524200070d0d7aacfe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Albert Larsan <74931857+albertlarsan68@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 5 Jan 2023 09:13:28 +0100 Subject: Move /src/test to /tests --- src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs | 38 ---------------------------------- 1 file changed, 38 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs (limited to 'src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs') diff --git a/src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs b/src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs deleted file mode 100644 index daa08ec2582..00000000000 --- a/src/test/rustdoc-ui/coverage/traits.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,38 +0,0 @@ -// compile-flags:-Z unstable-options --show-coverage -// check-pass - -#![feature(trait_alias)] -#![feature(type_alias_impl_trait)] - -/// look at this trait right here -pub trait ThisTrait { - /// that's a trait all right - fn right_here(&self); - - /// even the provided functions show up as trait methods - fn aww_yeah(&self) {} - - /// gotta check those associated types, they're slippery - type SomeType; -} - -/// so what happens if we take some struct... -#[derive(Clone)] -pub struct SomeStruct; - -/// ...and slap this trait on it? -impl ThisTrait for SomeStruct { - /// nothing! trait impls are totally ignored in this calculation, sorry. - fn right_here(&self) {} - - type SomeType = String; -} - -/// but what about those aliases? i hear they're pretty exotic -pub trait MyAlias = ThisTrait + Send + Sync; - -/// woah, getting all opaque in here -pub type ThisExists = impl ThisTrait; - -/// why don't we get a little more concrete -pub fn defines() -> ThisExists { SomeStruct {} } -- cgit 1.4.1-3-g733a5