By default, closures inherit the generic parameters of their scope,
including `Self`. However, in most cases, the closures used to implement
iterators don't need to be generic on the iterator type, only its `Item`
type. We can reduce this genericity by redirecting such closures through
local functions.
This does make the closures more cumbersome to write, but it will
hopefully reduce duplication in their monomorphizations, as well as
their related type lengths.
Use internal iteration in the Sum and Product impls of Result and Option
This PR adds internal iteration to the `ResultShunt` iterator type underlying the `Sum` and `Product` impls of `Result`. I had to change `ResultShunt` to hold a mutable reference to an error instead, similar to `itertools::ProcessResults`, in order to be able to pass the `ResultShunt` itself by value (which is necessary for internal iteration).
`ResultShunt::process` can unfortunately no longer be an associated function because that would make it generic over the lifetime of the error reference, which wouldn't work, so I turned it into the free function `process_results`.
I removed the `OptionShunt` type and forwarded the `Sum` and `Product` impls of `Option` to their respective impls of `Result` instead, to avoid having to repeat the internal iteration logic.
Implement DoubleEndedIterator for iter::{StepBy, Peekable, Take}
Now that `DoubleEndedIterator::nth_back` has landed, `StepBy` and `Take` can have an efficient `DoubleEndedIterator` implementation. I don't know if there was any particular reason for `Peekable` not having a `DoubleEndedIterator` implementation, but it's quite trivial and I don't see any drawbacks to having it.
I'm not very happy about the implementation of `Peekable::try_rfold`, but I didn't see another way to only take the value out of `self.peeked` in case `self.iter.try_rfold` didn't exit early.
I only added `Peekable::rfold` (in addition to `try_rfold`) because its `Iterator` implementation has both `fold` and `try_fold` (and for similar reasons I added `Take::try_rfold` but not `Take::rfold`). Do we have any guidelines on whether we want both? If we do want both, maybe we should investigate which iterator adaptors override `try_fold` but not `fold` and add the missing implementations. At the moment I think that it's better to always have iterator adaptors implement both, because some iterators have a simpler `fold` implementation than their `try_fold` implementation.
The tests that I added may not be sufficient because they're all just existing tests where `next`/`nth`/`fold`/`try_fold` are replaced by their DEI counterparts, but I do think all paths are covered. Is there anything in particular that I should probably also test?
`partition_mut()` swaps `&mut T` items in-place to satisfy the
predicate, so all `true` items precede all `false` items. This requires
a `DoubleEndedIterator` so we can search from front and back for items
that need swapping.
`is_partitioned()` checks whether the predicate is already satisfied.
Only call the closure parameter of Iterator::is_sorted_by_key once per item
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53485#issuecomment-472314004.
This changes `Iterator::is_sorted_by_key` to only call the given closure once for each item, which allows us to pass the items to the closure by value instead of by reference.
**Important**: `is_sorted_by_key` for slices and slice iterators is now no longer implemented in terms of the custom `slice::Iter::is_sorted_by` implementation. It's a trade-off: we could forward `slice::Iter::is_sorted_by_key` to it directly for potential SIMD benefits, but that would mean that the closure is potentially called twice for (almost) every element of the slice.
The errors are either:
- The meta-variable used in the right-hand side is not bound (or defined) in the
left-hand side.
- The meta-variable used in the right-hand side does not repeat with the same
kleene operator as its binder in the left-hand side. Either it does not repeat
enough, or it uses a different operator somewhere.
This change should have no semantic impact.
Add Step::sub_usize
Required for #54054.
I'm aware that the `Step` trait needs a rework, but this still seems like a reasonable addition?
This currently doesn't compile because Chalk contains a type that implement this trait, and this is a breaking change. How can that be fixed?
Implement `iter::Sum` and `iter::Product` for `Option`
This is similar to the existing implementation for `Result`. It will take each item into the accumulator unless a `None` is returned.
I based a lot of this on #38580. From that discussion it didn't seem like this addition would be too controversial or difficult. One thing I still don't understand is picking the values for the `stable` attribute. This is my first non-documentation PR for rust so I am open to any feedback on improvements.
Updated the Iterator docs with information about overriding methods.
# Description
Updated the Iterator docs with information about overriding methods.
closes#60223
These `into_iter()` calls will change from iterating references to
values if we ever get `IntoIterator` for arrays, which may break the
code using that iterator. Calling `iter()` is future proof.
Add implementations of last in terms of next_back on a bunch of DoubleEndedIterators
Provided a `DoubleEndedIterator` has finite length, `Iterator::last` is equivalent to `DoubleEndedIterator::next_back`. But searching forwards through the iterator when it's unnecessary is obviously not good for performance. I ran into this on one of the collection iterators.
I tried adding appropriate overloads for a bunch of the iterator adapters like filter, map, etc, but I ran into a lot of type inference failures after doing so.
The other interesting case is what to do with `Repeat`. Do we consider it part of the contract that `Iterator::last` will loop forever on it? The docs do say that the iterator will be evaluated until it returns None. This is also relevant for the adapters, it's trivially easy to observe whether a `Map` adapter invoked its closure a zillion times or just once for the last element.
implement specialized nth_back() for Bytes, Fuse and Enumerate
Hi,
After my first PR has been successfully merged, here is my second pull request :-)
Also this PR contains some specializations for the problem discussed in #54054.