Rollup merge of #115310 - RalfJung:panic-and-format, r=scottmcm
Document panic behavior across editions, and improve xrefs This revives (parts of) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96518. r? `@scottmcm` Cc `@ijackson`
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2eff0deca3
4 changed files with 45 additions and 7 deletions
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@ -79,10 +79,12 @@ macro_rules! vec {
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///
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/// The first argument `format!` receives is a format string. This must be a string
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/// literal. The power of the formatting string is in the `{}`s contained.
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///
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/// Additional parameters passed to `format!` replace the `{}`s within the
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/// formatting string in the order given unless named or positional parameters
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/// are used; see [`std::fmt`] for more information.
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/// are used.
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///
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/// See [the formatting syntax documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details.
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///
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/// A common use for `format!` is concatenation and interpolation of strings.
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/// The same convention is used with [`print!`] and [`write!`] macros,
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@ -91,7 +93,6 @@ macro_rules! vec {
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/// To convert a single value to a string, use the [`to_string`] method. This
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/// will use the [`Display`] formatting trait.
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///
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/// [`std::fmt`]: ../std/fmt/index.html
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/// [`print!`]: ../std/macro.print.html
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/// [`write!`]: core::write
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/// [`to_string`]: crate::string::ToString
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@ -849,7 +849,8 @@ pub(crate) mod builtin {
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/// assert_eq!(display, debug);
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/// ```
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///
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/// For more information, see the documentation in [`std::fmt`].
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/// See [the formatting documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details of the macro argument syntax, and further information.
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///
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/// [`Display`]: crate::fmt::Display
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/// [`Debug`]: crate::fmt::Debug
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@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ tests. `panic!` is closely tied with the `unwrap` method of both
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[`Option`][ounwrap] and [`Result`][runwrap] enums. Both implementations call
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`panic!` when they are set to [`None`] or [`Err`] variants.
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When using `panic!()` you can specify a string payload, that is built using
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the [`format!`] syntax. That payload is used when injecting the panic into
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When using `panic!()` you can specify a string payload that is built using
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[formatting syntax]. That payload is used when injecting the panic into
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the calling Rust thread, causing the thread to panic entirely.
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The behavior of the default `std` hook, i.e. the code that runs directly
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@ -18,6 +18,7 @@ after the panic is invoked, is to print the message payload to
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call. You can override the panic hook using [`std::panic::set_hook()`].
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Inside the hook a panic can be accessed as a `&dyn Any + Send`,
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which contains either a `&str` or `String` for regular `panic!()` invocations.
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(Whether a particular invocation contains the payload at type `&str` or `String` is unspecified and can change.)
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To panic with a value of another other type, [`panic_any`] can be used.
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See also the macro [`compile_error!`], for raising errors during compilation.
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@ -55,7 +56,7 @@ For more detailed information about error handling check out the [book] or the
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[`panic_any`]: ../std/panic/fn.panic_any.html
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[`Box`]: ../std/boxed/struct.Box.html
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[`Any`]: crate::any::Any
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[`format!`]: ../std/macro.format.html
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[`format!` syntax]: ../std/fmt/index.html
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[book]: ../book/ch09-00-error-handling.html
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[`std::result`]: ../std/result/index.html
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@ -64,6 +65,29 @@ For more detailed information about error handling check out the [book] or the
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If the main thread panics it will terminate all your threads and end your
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program with code `101`.
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# Editions
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Behavior of the panic macros changed over editions.
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## 2021 and later
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In Rust 2021 and later, `panic!` always requires a format string and
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the applicable format arguments, and is the same in `core` and `std`.
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Use [`std::panic::panic_any(x)`](../std/panic/fn.panic_any.html) to
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panic with an arbitrary payload.
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## 2018 and 2015
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In Rust Editions prior to 2021, `std::panic!(x)` with a single
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argument directly uses that argument as a payload.
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This is true even if the argument is a string literal.
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For example, `panic!("problem: {reason}")` panics with a
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payload of literally `"problem: {reason}"` (a `&'static str`).
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`core::panic!(x)` with a single argument requires that `x` be `&str`,
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but otherwise behaves like `std::panic!`. In particular, the string
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need not be a literal, and is not interpreted as a format string.
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# Examples
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```should_panic
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@ -41,6 +41,9 @@ macro_rules! panic {
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/// Use `print!` only for the primary output of your program. Use
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/// [`eprint!`] instead to print error and progress messages.
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///
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/// See [the formatting documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details of the macro argument syntax.
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///
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/// [flush]: crate::io::Write::flush
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/// [`println!`]: crate::println
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/// [`eprint!`]: crate::eprint
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@ -103,6 +106,9 @@ macro_rules! print {
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/// Use `println!` only for the primary output of your program. Use
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/// [`eprintln!`] instead to print error and progress messages.
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///
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/// See [the formatting documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details of the macro argument syntax.
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///
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/// [`std::fmt`]: crate::fmt
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/// [`eprintln!`]: crate::eprintln
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/// [lock]: crate::io::Stdout
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@ -150,6 +156,9 @@ macro_rules! println {
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/// [`io::stderr`]: crate::io::stderr
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/// [`io::stdout`]: crate::io::stdout
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///
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/// See [the formatting documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details of the macro argument syntax.
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///
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/// # Panics
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///
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/// Panics if writing to `io::stderr` fails.
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@ -181,6 +190,9 @@ macro_rules! eprint {
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/// Use `eprintln!` only for error and progress messages. Use `println!`
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/// instead for the primary output of your program.
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///
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/// See [the formatting documentation in `std::fmt`](../std/fmt/index.html)
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/// for details of the macro argument syntax.
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///
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/// [`io::stderr`]: crate::io::stderr
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/// [`io::stdout`]: crate::io::stdout
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/// [`println!`]: crate::println
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