Also, delete impls on non-Deref types.
Pin doesn't do anything useful for non-Deref types, so PinCoerceUnsized
on such types makes no sense.
This is a breaking change, since stable code can observe the deleted
`PinCoerceUnsized` impls by uselessly coercing between such types
inside a `Pin`.
There is still some strange behavior, such as `Pin<&mut i32>` being
able to coerce to `Pin<&dyn Send>`, but not being able to coerce to
`Pin<&i32>`. However, I don't think it's possible to fix this.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145081
Defer codegen for the VaList Drop impl to actual uses
This allows compiling libcore with codegen backends that don't actually implement VaList like cg_clif.
Add APIs for dealing with titlecase
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/354
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/153892
r? libs-api
@rustbot label T-libs -T-libs-api A-unicode
~~The last commit has some insta-stable `PartialEq` impls, therefore: @rustbot label -needs-fcp
Alternatively, I could split those out into a follow-up PR.~~ (Edit: will do in follow-up)
Lifted intersperse and intersperse_with Fused transformation and updated documentation + tests
This PR once again builds on top of rust-lang/rust#152855. From the discussion in rust-lang/rust#152855, libs team came to the conclusion that `intersperse`/`intersperse_with` shouldn't transform the given iterator to a fused iterator always and a separator should be emitted between `Some(_)` items for non fused iterators (particularly just right before the subsequent `Some(_)`).
On top of the change Zakarumych added in the PR, I lifted the `FusedIterator` trait and transformation of the inner `iter` for `Intersperse`/`IntersperseWith`, so that we can display this behavior. I've adjusted the documentation and tests accordingly to reflect this change as well.
r? @jhpratt
refactor RangeFromIter overflow-checks impl
Crates with different overflow-checks settings accessing the same RangeFromIter resulted in incorrect values being yielded
Fixesrust-lang/rust#154124
r? @tgross35
We've already stabilized float operations in const,
which means we've already accepted that a `const fn`
might behave differently in consteval vs at run time.
don't suggest non-deriveable traits for unions
Fixesrust-lang/rust#137587
Before, the compiler suggested adding `#[derive(Debug)]` (other traits too) for unions,
which is misleading because some traits can't be automatically derived.
Only traits that are still suggested are Copy and Clone.
I noticed the error label changed after removing the suggestion. I hope this isn't a big deal, but let me know if that's an issue.
original example:
```rs
union Union {
member: usize,
}
impl PartialEq<u8> for Union {
fn eq(&self, rhs: &u8) -> bool {
unsafe { self.member == (*rhs).into() }
}
}
fn main() {
assert_eq!(Union { member: 0 }, 0);
}
```
before:
```
error[E0277]: `Union` doesn't implement `Debug`
--> src\main.rs:13:5
|
13 | assert_eq!(Union { member: 0 }, 0);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `Debug` is not implemented for `Union`
|
= note: add `#[derive(Debug)]` to `Union` or manually `impl Debug for Union`
= note: this error originates in the macro `assert_eq` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
help: consider annotating `Union` with `#[derive(Debug)]`
|
2 + #[derive(Debug)]
3 | union Union {
|
```
after (the message doesn't suggest adding #[derive(Debug)] to unions)
```
error[E0277]: `Union` doesn't implement `Debug`
--> src\main.rs:13:5
|
13 | assert_eq!(Union { member: 0 }, 0);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ unsatisfied trait bound
|
help: the trait `Debug` is not implemented for `Union`
--> src\main.rs:2:1
|
2 | union Union {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
= note: manually `impl Debug for Union`
```
two smaller feature cleanups
Remove an unneeded feature gate for a private macro and sort the used features correctly by whether they are language or library features.
Derive Macro Eq: link to more detailed documentation
Match the other derive macros in the module (Ord, PartialEq, PartialOrd) by linking to the section in the trait documentation about how the derive macro works.
Split the `dec2flt::RawFloat` trait for easier reuse
`RawFloat` is an internal trait with quite a few useful float properties. It currently resides in the `dec2flt` module but is also used in parsing, and would be nice to reuse other places. Unfortunately it cannot be implemented on `f128` because of limitations with how the parsing API is implemented (mantissa must fit into a u64).
To make the trait easier to work with, split it into the following:
* `Float`: Anything that is reasonably applicable to all floating point types.
* `FloatExt`: Items that should be part of `Float` but don't work for all float types. This will eventually be merged back into `Float` once it can be implemented on f128.
* `Lemire`: Items that are specific to the Lemire dec2flt algorithm.
These traits are then moved to places that make sense.
Builds on top of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/151900
Optimize 128-bit integer formatting
The compiler is unaware of the restricted range of the input, so it is unable to optimize out the final division and modulus. By doing this manually, we get a nontrivial performance gain.
r? @dtolnay
(copied from https://github.com/dtolnay/itoa/pull/68)
Add missing `track_caller` to overflowing trait methods
Fixesrust-lang/rust#152599 by adding `#[track_caller]` to arithmetic trait methods (`Neg`, `Shl`, `ShlAssign`, `Shr` and `ShrAssign`) so overflow panics report the correct call site instead of the trait definition.
The compiler is unaware of the restricted range of the input, so it is
unable to optimize out the final division and modulus. By doing this
manually, we get a nontrivial performance gain.
Remove string content from panics
String content can be useful for debugging panics, particularly when you are working on a small codebase where you can infer more about the path taken through your program based on the content of the string.
In production deployments that upload crashes for centralized debugging, string content poses a risk to user privacy. The string can accidentally contain information that the user is not expecting to share with the development team.
On balance it seems like the risks outweigh the benefits. It is easy to add a `dbg!()` statement to gather more information in development; but comparatively tricky to ensure panics are sanitized by every rust app that monitors their production deployments.
Ref https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/stop-including-string-content-in-index-panics/24067
r? @scottmcm
Add `From` impls for wrapper types
- ~`From<T: Copy> for ManuallyDrop<T>`~
- `From<T: UnwindSafe> for AssertUnwindSafe<T>`
- `From<T> for LazyCell<T, F>`
- `From<T> for LazyLock<T, F>`
- `From<T> for ThinBox<T>` (unstable)
- `From<T> for UniqueRc<T>` (unstable)
- `From<T> for UniqueArc<T>` (unstable)
@rustbot label T-libs-api needs-fcp
Also needs a crater run, as the insta-stable impls are technically breaking changes.
Gate `ConstParamTy_` trait behind `const_param_ty_trait` feature
Initially even when user wasn't using unsized const params, the only way to implement/name `ConstParamTy_` was to use `#![feature(unsized_const_params]`, now its gated under `const_param_ty_trait` feature, implied by `unsized_const_params`.
I've also changed use of `unsized_const_params` in tests which were using it only to implement `ConstParamTy_` without using unsized
r? BoxyUwU
Add overview documentation for `std::mem`.
I heard that `std::mem` sounds scary to some people, and how it’s described — “Basic functions for dealing with memory” — sounds even to me like something that should be avoided, not even because it would be unsafe, but because it is too low-level.
Let’s fix that by telling people about what they can actually find in the module, without having to read all the individual item descriptions.
The exact contents of the list are, of course, highly debatable, and I chose not to include any of the unstable or deprecated items, nor to include `Discriminant` as well as `discriminant`. I’m also not particularly happy with the wording of the introductory paragraph.
- `From<T> for ThinBox<T>`
- `From<T> for UniqueRc<T>`
- `From<T> for UniqueArc<T>`
- `From<T: UnwindSafe> for AssertUnwindSafe<T>`
- `From<T> for LazyCell<T, F>`
- `From<T> for LazyLock<T, F>`
`Float` and `FloatExt` are already used by both parsing and printing, so
move them out of `dec2flt` to a new module in `num::imp`. `Int` `Cast`
have the potential to be used more places in the future, so move them
there as well. `Lemire` is the only remaining trait; since it is small,
move it into the `dec2flt` root.
The `fmt::LowerExp` bound is removed from `Float` here since the trait
is moving into a module without `#[cfg(not(no_fp_fmt_parse))]` and it
isn't implemented with that config (it's not easily possible to add
`cfg` attributes to a single supertrait, unfortunately). This isn't a
problem since it isn't actually being used.
`RawFloat` is currently used specifically for the implementation of the
lemire algorithm, but it is useful for more than that. Split it into
three different traits:
* `Float`: Anything that is reasonably applicable to all floating point
types.
* `FloatExt`: Items that should be part of `Float` but don't work for
all float types. This will eventually be merged back into `Float`.
* `Lemire`: Items that are specific to the Lemire algorithm.