This PR is intended as alternative to #20958. It fixes the same grammar inconsistencies, but does not increase the operator precedence of `..`, leaving it at the same level as the assignment operator.
For previous discussion, see #20811 and #20958.
Grammar changes:
* allow `for _ in 1..i {}` (fixes#20241)
* allow `for _ in 1.. {}` as infinite loop
* prevent use of range notation in contexts where only operators of high precedence are expected (fixes#20811)
Parser code cleanup:
* remove `RESTRICTION_NO_DOTS`
* make `AS_PREC` const and follow naming convention
* make `min_prec` inclusive
r? nikomatsakis
Lifetime elision documentation was reference a previously existing function
that doesn't exist. After talking with Steve Klabnik, I confirmed the correct
function to be referenced and updated documentation accordingly.
Compiling won't produce an executable just yet because (as stated in the next
paragraph) there are errors. By removing this sentance, the reader won't get
confused when they expect a successful compile i.e. if they don't read ahead one
paragraph, they are going to be checking their code and wondering why it's not
compiling.
Grammar changes:
* allow 'for _ in 1..i {}' (fixes#20241)
* allow 'for _ in 1.. {}' as infinite loop
* prevent use of range notation in contexts where only operators of high
precedence are expected (fixes#20811)
Parser code cleanup:
* remove RESTRICTION_NO_DOTS
* make AS_PREC const and follow naming convention
* make min_prec inclusive
Compiling won't produce an executable just yet because (as stated in the next
paragraph) there are errors. By removing this sentance, the reader won't get
confused when they expect a successful compile i.e. if they don't read ahead one
paragraph, they are going to be checking their code and wondering why it's not
compiling.
After PR #19766 added implicit coersions `*mut T -> *const T`, the explicit casts can be removed.
(The number of such casts turned out to be relatively small).
This removes the extra "the" from the phrase "the the Rust Programming Language book", which isn't particularly grammatical, in stub documents introduced in #20802 to direct users from the old guides to the corresponding sections of the book.
There are a large number of places that incorrectly refer
to deriving in comments, instead of derives.
If someone could look at src/etc/generate-deriving-span-tests.py,
I'm not sure how those tests were passing before/if they were.
These two attributes are used to change the entry point into a Rust program, but
for now they're being put behind feature gates until we have a chance to think
about them a little more. The #[start] attribute specifically may have its
signature changed.
This is a breaking change to due the usage of these attributes generating errors
by default now. If your crate is using these attributes, add this to your crate
root:
#![feature(start)] // if you're using the #[start] attribute
#![feature(main)] // if you're using the #[main] attribute
cc #20064