Rationale:
* The name was confusing.
* It was only used in one place.
* That place didn't actually need all the functionality of `get_type`;
rather, removing `get_type` makes that code clearer.
This commit removes the first of nine Clean impls on tuples, converting
it to a function instead.
The fact that these are impls causes several problems:
1. They are nameless, so it's unclear what they do.
2. It's hard to find where they're used apart from removing them and
seeing what errors occur (this applies to all Clean impls, not just
the tuple ones).
3. Rustc doesn't currently warn when impls are unused, so dead code
can accumulate easily (all Clean impls).
4. Their bodies often use tuple field indexing syntax (e.g., `self.1`)
to refer to their "arguments", which makes reading the code more
difficult.
As I noted, some of these problems apply to all Clean impls, but even
those problems are exacerbated by the tuple impls since they make
general understanding of the code harder.
Converting the impls to functions solves all four of these problems.
Rollup of 12 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #89954 (Fix legacy_const_generic doc arguments display)
- #91321 (Handle placeholder regions in NLL type outlive constraints)
- #91329 (Fix incorrect usage of `EvaluatedToOk` when evaluating `TypeOutlives`)
- #91364 (Improve error message for incorrect field accesses through raw pointers)
- #91387 (Clarify and tidy up explanation of E0038)
- #91410 (Move `#![feature(const_precise_live_drops)]` checks earlier in the pipeline)
- #91435 (Improve diagnostic for missing half of binary operator in `if` condition)
- #91444 (disable tests in Miri that take too long)
- #91457 (Add additional test from rust issue number 91068)
- #91460 (Document how `last_os_error` should be used)
- #91464 (Document file path case sensitivity)
- #91466 (Improve the comments in `Symbol::interner`.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Cleanup: Eliminate ConstnessAnd
This is almost a behaviour-free change and purely a refactoring. "almost" because we appear to be using the wrong ParamEnv somewhere already, and this is now exposed by failing a test using the unstable `~const` feature.
We most definitely need to review all `without_const` and at some point should probably get rid of many of them by using `TraitPredicate` instead of `TraitRef`.
This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90274.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@spastorino` `@ecstatic-morse`
Make `TypeFolder::fold_*` return `Result`
Implements rust-lang/compiler-team#432.
Initially this is just a rebase of `@LeSeulArtichaut's` work in #85469 (abandoned; see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/85485#issuecomment-908781112). At that time, it caused a regression in performance that required some further exploration... with this rebased PR bors can hopefully report some perf analysis from which we can investigate further (if the regression is indeed still present).
r? `@jackh726` cc `@nikomatsakis`
I would like to rename it to `Type::Path`, but then it can't be
re-exported since the name would conflict with the `Path` struct.
Usually enum variants are referred to using their qualified names in
Rust (and parts of rustdoc already do that with `clean::Type`), so this
is also more consistent with the language.
Before, if `register_res` were called on an associated item or enum
variant, it would return the parent's `DefId`. Now, it returns the
actual `DefId`.
This change is a step toward removing `Type::ResolvedPath.did` and
potentially removing `kind_side_channel` in rustdoc. It also just
simplifies rustdoc's behavior.
Avoid documenting top-level private imports
PR #88447 aimed to make rustdoc's `--document-private-items` mode only document imports that are visible outside the importing module. Unfortunately, I inadvertently set things up so that imports at the crate top-level are always documented, regardless of their visibility. This behavior was unintended and is [not desirable](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90865#issuecomment-971172649).
This PR treats top-level imports as never being visible outside their parent module. In practice, the only way a top-level import can be visible externally is if it's fully public, and there's a seperate check for that.
It's worth calling attention to the fact that this change means that `pub(crate)` imports will be visible in lower level modules, but not at the top-level. This is because, at the top level of the crate, `pub(crate)` means the same thing as `pub(self)`.
It turned out that there were existing tests checking for the only behavior, which I didn't notice at the time of my previous PR. I have updated them to check for the new behavior and substantially extended them to handle differences between the top-level module and lower level modules. I may have gone overboard, so please tell me if there's anything I should cut.
r? `@jyn514`
Fixes#90865.