Commit graph

10 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jorge Aparicio
5a24058889 libcollections: remove unnecessary as_mut_slice() calls 2014-12-06 23:53:01 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
f2af07e6d5 libcollections: remove unnecessary as_slice() calls 2014-12-06 19:05:58 -05:00
Jakub Bukaj
bcd3a4f42b rollup merge of #19008: alex/collections-typos 2014-11-18 00:24:00 +01:00
Aaron Turon
ff88510535 libcollections: generalize BTree* to use BorrowFrom
Generalizes the BTree-based collections to use the new BorrowFrom
infrastructure for more flexible lookups and removals.
2014-11-17 11:26:48 -08:00
Steven Fackler
3dcd215740 Switch to purely namespaced enums
This breaks code that referred to variant names in the same namespace as
their enum. Reexport the variants in the old location or alter code to
refer to the new locations:

```
pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = A;
}
```
=>
```
pub use self::Foo::{A, B};

pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = A;
}
```
or
```
pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = Foo::A;
}
```

[breaking-change]
2014-11-17 07:35:51 -08:00
Alex Gaynor
33345dae0c Fixed several typos in libcollections 2014-11-16 08:28:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
21ac985af4 collections: Remove all collections traits
As part of the collections reform RFC, this commit removes all collections
traits in favor of inherent methods on collections themselves. All methods
should continue to be available on all collections.

This is a breaking change with all of the collections traits being removed and
no longer being in the prelude. In order to update old code you should move the
trait implementations to inherent implementations directly on the type itself.

Note that some traits had default methods which will also need to be implemented
to maintain backwards compatibility.

[breaking-change]
cc #18424
2014-11-01 11:37:04 -07:00
Steve Klabnik
7828c3dd28 Rename fail! to panic!
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/221

The current terminology of "task failure" often causes problems when
writing or speaking about code. You often want to talk about the
possibility of an operation that returns a Result "failing", but cannot
because of the ambiguity with task failure. Instead, you have to speak
of "the failing case" or "when the operation does not succeed" or other
circumlocutions.

Likewise, we use a "Failure" header in rustdoc to describe when
operations may fail the task, but it would often be helpful to separate
out a section describing the "Err-producing" case.

We have been steadily moving away from task failure and toward Result as
an error-handling mechanism, so we should optimize our terminology
accordingly: Result-producing functions should be easy to describe.

To update your code, rename any call to `fail!` to `panic!` instead.
Assuming you have not created your own macro named `panic!`, this
will work on UNIX based systems:

    grep -lZR 'fail!' . | xargs -0 -l sed -i -e 's/fail!/panic!/g'

You can of course also do this by hand.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-29 11:43:07 -04:00
Joseph Crail
30403204d6 Fix spelling mistakes in comments. 2014-10-25 23:11:17 -04:00
Alexis Beingessner
b6edc59413 complete btree rewrite
Replaces BTree with BTreeMap and BTreeSet, which are completely new implementations.
BTreeMap's internal Node representation is particularly inefficient at the moment to
make this first implementation easy to reason about and fairly safe. Both collections
are also currently missing some of the tooling specific to sorted collections, which
is planned as future work pending reform of these APIs. General implementation issues
are discussed with TODOs internally

Perf results on x86_64 Linux:

test treemap::bench::find_rand_100                         ... bench:        76 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test treemap::bench::find_rand_10_000                      ... bench:       163 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test treemap::bench::find_seq_100                          ... bench:        77 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test treemap::bench::find_seq_10_000                       ... bench:       115 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test treemap::bench::insert_rand_100                       ... bench:       111 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test treemap::bench::insert_rand_10_000                    ... bench:       996 ns/iter (+/- 18)
test treemap::bench::insert_seq_100                        ... bench:       486 ns/iter (+/- 20)
test treemap::bench::insert_seq_10_000                     ... bench:       800 ns/iter (+/- 15)

test btree::map::bench::find_rand_100                      ... bench:        74 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test btree::map::bench::find_rand_10_000                   ... bench:       153 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test btree::map::bench::find_seq_100                       ... bench:        82 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test btree::map::bench::find_seq_10_000                    ... bench:       108 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test btree::map::bench::insert_rand_100                    ... bench:       220 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test btree::map::bench::insert_rand_10_000                 ... bench:       620 ns/iter (+/- 16)
test btree::map::bench::insert_seq_100                     ... bench:       411 ns/iter (+/- 12)
test btree::map::bench::insert_seq_10_000                  ... bench:       534 ns/iter (+/- 14)

BTreeMap still has a lot of room for optimization, but it's already beating out TreeMap on most access patterns.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-27 10:25:46 -04:00