Resolves all of issue #93240
Reproduces a similar change as #99086, but with improvements
In particular, this PR inlcludes:
* redesigning the crate-search selector so the background color matches its surroundings
* decrease the font of the dropdown menu to a reaonable size
* add a hover effect
* make the color of the arrow theme-dependent, using a surrounding div, with :after pseudo-element
that can then be transformed using CSS filters to approximate the desired color
* fix the text "in" to match the title font
* remove the "for xyz" in the "Results for xyz in [All crates]" title when
searching for search term "xyz"; you can already see what you're searching for
as it's typed in the search bar!
* in line with #99086, handle super-long crate names appropriately without a long <select>
element escaping the screen area; the improvement is that we also keep the title
within a single line now; uses some flex layout shenanigans...
* the margins / paddings are adjusted so the selected label of the <select> fits within
the rest of that title nicely; also some inconsistency in the way that Firefox renders
a <select> with "appearance: none" (roughly 4px more padding left and right of the text
than e.g. Chrome) is worked around, and it now produces a result that looks (essentially)
identical to Chrome
* the color of the help menu and settings menu border in light theme is made to match with
the color of the corresponding buttons, like they do (match) in the ayu theme
* the casing of "All crates" changes to "all crates"
* the new tests from #99086 are temporarily disabled, until they can be adapted later
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99573 (Stabilize backtrace)
- #100069 (Add error if link_ordinal used with unsupported link kind)
- #100086 (Add more `// unit-test`s to MIR opt tests)
- #100332 (Rename integer log* methods to ilog*)
- #100334 (Suggest a missing semicolon before an array)
- #100340 (Iterate generics_def_id_map in reverse order to fix P-critical issue)
- #100345 (docs: remove repetition in `is_numeric` function docs)
- #100352 (Update cargo)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add more `// unit-test`s to MIR opt tests
I only changed things which are hopefully completely uninteresting. I plan to submit more PRs that cover more files, but those cases will need some more complicated (and hence possibly controversial) changes, so I'll try and submit those in reasonably sized batches.
r? rust-lang/wg-mir-opt
Add error if link_ordinal used with unsupported link kind
The `link_ordinal` attribute only has an affect if the `raw-dylib` link kind is used, so add an error if it is used with any other link kind.
Stabilize backtrace
This PR stabilizes the std::backtrace module. As of #99431, the std::Error::backtrace item has been removed, and so the rest of the backtrace feature is set to be stabilized.
Previous discussion can be found in #72981, #3156.
Stabilized API summary:
```rust
pub mod std {
pub mod backtrace {
pub struct Backtrace { }
pub enum BacktraceStatus {
Unsupported,
Disabled,
Captured,
}
impl fmt::Debug for Backtrace {}
impl Backtrace {
pub fn capture() -> Backtrace;
pub fn force_capture() -> Backtrace;
pub const fn disabled() -> Backtrace;
pub fn status(&self) -> BacktraceStatus;
}
impl fmt::Display for Backtrace {}
}
}
```
`@yaahc`
Set tainted errors bit before emitting coerce suggestions.
Fixes#100246.
#89576 basically got 99% of the way there but the match typechecking code (which calls `coerce_inner`) also needed a similar fix.
Some "this expression has a field"-related fixes
Each commit does something different and is worth reviewing, but the final diff from `master..HEAD` contains the sum of the changes to the UI tests, since some commits added UI tests "regressions" which were later removed in other commits.
The only change I could see adding on top of this is suppressing `Clone::clone` from the "this expression has a field that has this method" suggestion, since it's so commonly implemented by types that it's not worthwhile suggesting in general.
rustdoc-json: Remove doc FIXME for Import::id and explain
Also add some test and refactor related code a bit.
``@rustbot`` labels +A-rustdoc-json +T-rustdoc
rustdoc: improve scroll locking in the rustdoc mobile sidebars
This PR prevents the main content area from scrolling while the mobile sidebar is open on documentation pages (porting the scroll locking behavior from the source sidebar to the regular sidebar), and also fixes some bad behavior where opening a "mobile" sidebar, and growing the viewport so that the "desktop" mode without scroll locking is activated, could potentially leave the page stuck.
This does not affect the behavior on larger screens. Only small ones, where the sidebar covers up the main content.
Split out from #98772
consider unnormalized types for implied bounds
extracted, and slightly modified, from #98900
The idea here is that generally, rustc is split into things which can assume its inputs are well formed[^1], and things which have verify that themselves.
Generally most predicates should only deal with well formed inputs, e.g. a `&'a &'b (): Trait` predicate should be able to assume that `'b: 'a` holds. Normalization can loosen wf requirements (see #91068) and must therefore not be used in places which still have to check well formedness. The only such place should hopefully be `WellFormed` predicates
fixes#87748 and #98543
r? `@jackh726` cc `@rust-lang/types`
[^1]: These places may still encounter non-wf inputs and have to deal with them without causing an ICE as we may check for well formedness out of order.
Don't ICE while suggesting updating item path.
When an item isn't found, we may suggest an appropriate import to `use`. Along with that, we also suggest updating the path to work with the `use`. Unfortunately, if the code in question originates from a macro, the span used to indicate which part of the path needs updating may not be suitable and cause an ICE (*). Since, such code is not adjustable directly by the user without modifying the macro, just skip the suggestion in such cases.
(*) The ICE happens because the emitter want to indicate to the user what code to delete by referencing a certain span. But in this case, said span has `lo == hi == 0` which means it thinks it's a dummy span. Adding a space before the proc macro attribute is enough to stop it from ICE'ing but even then the suggestion doesn't really make any sense:
```
help: if you import `DataStore`, refer to it directly
|
1 - #[dbstruct::dbstruct]
1 + #[dbstruct::dbstruct]
```
Since suggestions are best-effort, I just gated this one on `can_be_used_for_suggestions` which catches cases like this.
Fixes#100199
Don't document impossible to call default trait items on impls
Closes#100176
This only skips documenting _default_ trait items on impls, not ones that are written inside the impl block. This is a conservative approach, since I think we should document all items written in an impl block (I guess unless hidden or whatever), but the existence of this new query I added makes this easy to extend to other rustdoc cases.
Implement `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`
This PR implements a new stability attribute — `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`.
`#[rustc_default_body_unstable]` controls the stability of default bodies in traits.
For example:
```rust
pub trait Trait {
#[rustc_default_body_unstable(feature = "feat", isssue = "none")]
fn item() {}
}
```
In order to implement `Trait` user needs to either
- implement `item` (even though it has a default implementation)
- enable `#![feature(feat)]`
This is useful in conjunction with [`#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92164), we may want to relax requirements for a trait, for example allowing implementing either of `PartialEq::{eq, ne}`, but do so in a safe way — making implementation of only `PartialEq::ne` unstable.
r? `@Aaron1011`
cc `@nrc` (iirc you were interested in this wrt `read_buf`), `@danielhenrymantilla` (you were interested in the related `#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`)
P.S. This is my first time working with stability attributes, so I'm not sure if I did everything right 😅
Implement special-cased projection error message for some common traits
Not sure what the best phrasing is, but I feel like these are more clear than the plain `<Type as Iterator>::Output == Type` messages.
If this is actually a good idea, are there any other traits this could benefit?