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
You can now say
expr_move(?dst, ?src) | expr_assign(?dst, ?src) { ... }
to match both expr_move and expr_assign. The names, types, and number
of bound names have to match in all the patterns.
Closes#449.
src/comp/syntax is currently just a sub-module of rustc, but it will,
in the near future, be its own crate. This includes:
- The AST data structure
- The parser
- The pretty-printer
- Visit, walk, and fold
- The syntax extension system
- Some utility stuff that should be in the stdlib*
*) Stdlib extensions currently require a snapshot before they can be
used, and the win build is very broken right now. This is temporary
and will be cleaned up when one of those problems goes away.
A lot of code was moved by this patch, mostly towards a more organized
layout. Some package paths did get longer, and I guess the new layout
will take some getting used to. Sorry about that!
Please try not to re-introduce any dependencies in syntax/ on any of
the other src/comp/ subdirs.
(Using the * operator.)
This makes tags more useful as nominal 'newtype' types, since you no
longer have to copy out their contents (or construct a cumbersome
boilerplate alt) to access them.
I could have gone with a scheme where you could dereference individual
arguments of an n-ary variant with ._0, ._1, etc, but opted not to,
since we plan to move to a system where all variants are unary (or, I
guess, nullary).
This is important since we are going to be making functions noncopyable
soon, which means we'll be seeing a lot of boxed functions.
(*f)(...) is really just too heavyweight.
Doing the autodereferencing was a very little bit tricky since
trans_call works with an *lval* of the function whereas existing
autoderef code was not for lvals.
This reduces some redundancy in the AST data structures and cruft in
the code that works with them. To get a def_id from a node_id, apply
ast::local_def, which adds the local crate_num to the given node_id.
Most code only deals with crate-local node_ids, and won't have to
create def_ids at all.
Revert "rustc: Export only what's needed from middle::ty"
This reverts commit 4255d58aa5.
Revert "rustc: Make name resolution errors less fatal"
This reverts commit b8ab9ea89c.
Revert "rustc: Make import resolution errors less fatal"
This reverts commit 92a8ae94b9.
Revert "rustc: Export only what's used from middle::resolve"
This reverts commit 4539a2cf7a.
Revert "rustc: Re-introduce session.span_err, session.err"
This reverts commit 7fe9a88e31.
Revert "rustc: Rename session.span_err -> span_fatal, err -> fatal"
This reverts commit c394a7f49a.
Most of the fields in an AST item were present in all variants. Things
could be simplified considerably by putting them in the rec rather
than in the variant tags.
I added a "resolved" version of the ast::constr type -- ty::constr_def
-- that has a def_id field instead of an ann_field. This is more
consistent with other types and eliminates some checking.
Incidentally, I removed the def_map argument to the top-level function
in middle::alias, since the ty::ctxt already has a def_map field.