The path information was an optional "filename" component of crate
directive AST. It is now replaced by an attribute with metadata named
"path".
With this commit, a directive
mod foo = "foo.rs";
should be written as:
#[path = "foo.rs"]
mod foo;
Closes issue #906.
The reference now has an empty hole where the auth keyword used to be.
Changing the keyword table seems to require manually sorting the
keywords and putting them back into some kind of arcane interleaved
order. I'll open an issue to actually fix this.
Closes#1211
This makes it possible to omit the semicolon after the block, and will
cause the pretty-printer to properly print such calls (if
pretty-printing of blocks wasn't so broken). Block calls (with the
block outside of the parentheses) can now only occur at statement
level, and their value can not be used. When calling a block-style
function that returns a useful value, the block must be put insde the
parentheses.
Issue #1054
It assumed node_ids increased monotonically for locals, but macros
make this no longer the case, and it was a dubious assumption anyway.
It now numbers locals itself and uses that to determine which precede
which.
The syntax is
alt x {
mypat where mycond { ... }
}
The condition may refer to any of the variables bound by the pattern.
When a guard fails, pattern-matching continues with the next pattern.
Closes#857
This actually basically makes things worse, since we get less nice
type system guarentees but it will make doing type inferred blocks a
fair deal less painful. I'm not /really/ happy about this...
You can now say
let {bcx, val} = some_result_returner();
Similar for loop variables. Assigning to such variables is not safe
yet. Function arguments also remain a TODO.
This adds parser support and most of the machinery for
auto x = 10, y = 20;
However, the above still goes wrong somewhere in typestate, causing
the state checker to believe only the last variable in the list is
initialized after the statement.
Tim, if you have a moment, could you go over the changes to the tstate
code in this patch and see where I'm going wrong?
Multi-var-decls without the typestate extension
Add a loop
Programs with constrained types now parse and typecheck, but
typestate doesn't check them specially, so the one relevant test
case so far is XFAILed.
Also rewrote all of the constraint-related data structures in the
process (again), for some reason. I got rid of a superfluous
data structure in the context that was mapping front-end constraints
to resolved constraints, instead handling constraints in the same
way in which everything else gets resolved.