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Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Anderson
a5be12ce7e Replace most ~exprs with 'box'. #11779 2014-05-02 23:00:58 -07:00
Huon Wilson
1403b35be7 std,syntax: make std::fmt::parse use Vecs. 2014-04-10 15:21:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9a3d04ae76 std: Switch field privacy as necessary 2014-03-31 15:17:12 -07:00
Patrick Walton
a424e84a3e libstd: Document the following modules:
* native::io
* std::char
* std::fmt
* std::fmt::parse
* std::io
* std::io::extensions
* std::io::net::ip
* std::io::net::udp
* std::io::net::unix
* std::io::pipe
* std::num
* std::num::f32
* std::num::f64
* std::num::strconv
* std::os
2014-03-25 10:12:49 -07:00
Daniel Micay
3829ac2a52 use TotalEq for HashMap
Closes #5283
2014-03-23 01:59:11 -04:00
Alex Crichton
02882fbd7e std: Change assert_eq!() to use {} instead of {:?}
Formatting via reflection has been a little questionable for some time now, and
it's a little unfortunate that one of the standard macros will silently use
reflection when you weren't expecting it. This adds small bits of code bloat to
libraries, as well as not always being necessary. In light of this information,
this commit switches assert_eq!() to using {} in the error message instead of
{:?}.

In updating existing code, there were a few error cases that I encountered:

* It's impossible to define Show for [T, ..N]. I think DST will alleviate this
  because we can define Show for [T].
* A few types here and there just needed a #[deriving(Show)]
* Type parameters needed a Show bound, I often moved this to `assert!(a == b)`
* `Path` doesn't implement `Show`, so assert_eq!() cannot be used on two paths.
  I don't think this is much of a regression though because {:?} on paths looks
  awful (it's a byte array).

Concretely speaking, this shaved 10K off a 656K binary. Not a lot, but sometime
significant for smaller binaries.
2014-02-28 23:01:54 -08:00
Huon Wilson
efaf4db24c Transition to new Hash, removing IterBytes and std::to_bytes. 2014-02-24 07:44:10 +11:00
Alex Crichton
454882dcb7 Remove std::condition
This has been a long time coming. Conditions in rust were initially envisioned
as being a good alternative to error code return pattern. The idea is that all
errors are fatal-by-default, and you can opt-in to handling the error by
registering an error handler.

While sounding nice, conditions ended up having some unforseen shortcomings:

* Actually handling an error has some very awkward syntax:

    let mut result = None;
    let mut answer = None;
    io::io_error::cond.trap(|e| { result = Some(e) }).inside(|| {
        answer = Some(some_io_operation());
    });
    match result {
        Some(err) => { /* hit an I/O error */ }
        None => {
            let answer = answer.unwrap();
            /* deal with the result of I/O */
        }
    }

  This pattern can certainly use functions like io::result, but at its core
  actually handling conditions is fairly difficult

* The "zero value" of a function is often confusing. One of the main ideas
  behind using conditions was to change the signature of I/O functions. Instead
  of read_be_u32() returning a result, it returned a u32. Errors were notified
  via a condition, and if you caught the condition you understood that the "zero
  value" returned is actually a garbage value. These zero values are often
  difficult to understand, however.

  One case of this is the read_bytes() function. The function takes an integer
  length of the amount of bytes to read, and returns an array of that size. The
  array may actually be shorter, however, if an error occurred.

  Another case is fs::stat(). The theoretical "zero value" is a blank stat
  struct, but it's a little awkward to create and return a zero'd out stat
  struct on a call to stat().

  In general, the return value of functions that can raise error are much more
  natural when using a Result as opposed to an always-usable zero-value.

* Conditions impose a necessary runtime requirement on *all* I/O. In theory I/O
  is as simple as calling read() and write(), but using conditions imposed the
  restriction that a rust local task was required if you wanted to catch errors
  with I/O. While certainly an surmountable difficulty, this was always a bit of
  a thorn in the side of conditions.

* Functions raising conditions are not always clear that they are raising
  conditions. This suffers a similar problem to exceptions where you don't
  actually know whether a function raises a condition or not. The documentation
  likely explains, but if someone retroactively adds a condition to a function
  there's nothing forcing upstream users to acknowledge a new point of task
  failure.

* Libaries using I/O are not guaranteed to correctly raise on conditions when an
  error occurs. In developing various I/O libraries, it's much easier to just
  return `None` from a read rather than raising an error. The silent contract of
  "don't raise on EOF" was a little difficult to understand and threw a wrench
  into the answer of the question "when do I raise a condition?"

Many of these difficulties can be overcome through documentation, examples, and
general practice. In the end, all of these difficulties added together ended up
being too overwhelming and improving various aspects didn't end up helping that
much.

A result-based I/O error handling strategy also has shortcomings, but the
cognitive burden is much smaller. The tooling necessary to make this strategy as
usable as conditions were is much smaller than the tooling necessary for
conditions.

Perhaps conditions may manifest themselves as a future entity, but for now
we're going to remove them from the standard library.

Closes #9795
Closes #8968
2014-02-06 15:48:56 -08:00
Palmer Cox
3fd8c8b330 Rename iterators for consistency
Rename existing iterators to get rid of the Iterator suffix and to
give them names that better describe the things being iterated over.
2014-01-18 01:15:15 -05:00
Alex Crichton
4bea679dbe Remove std::either 2014-01-03 10:25:23 -08:00
Erik Price
5731ca3078 Make 'self lifetime illegal.
Also remove all instances of 'self within the codebase.

This fixes #10889.
2013-12-11 10:54:06 -08:00
Alex Crichton
ab387a6838 Register new snapshots 2013-11-28 20:27:56 -08:00
Marvin Löbel
24b316a3b9 Removed unneccessary _iter suffixes from various APIs 2013-11-26 10:02:26 +01:00
Alex Crichton
2fc337a7d6 Clarify which errors are format string errors
There were a few ambiguous error messages which look like they could have
cropped up from either the rust compiler for the format string parser. To
differentiate, the prefix 'invalid format string' is now added in front of all
format string errors.

cc #9970
2013-11-05 17:59:40 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a447c3ca16 Try to improve format! error messages
Instead of just saying "unterminated format string" and friends, instead print
information about what was expected and what was found.

Closes #9931
2013-10-18 21:28:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0adb41d0eb Register new snapshots 2013-10-17 10:12:23 -07:00
Alex Crichton
fc06f7922d Build a few extra features into format! parsing
* Allow named parameters to specify width/precision
* Intepret the format string '0$' as "width is the 0th argument" instead of
  thinking the lone '0' was the sign-aware-zero-padding flag. To get both you'd
  need to put '00$' which makes more sense if you want both to happen.

Closes #9669
2013-10-15 22:27:10 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a84c2999c9 Require module documentation with missing_doc
Closes #9824
2013-10-15 22:27:10 -07:00
Steven Fackler
b7fe83d573 Check enums in missing_doc lint
Closes #9671
2013-10-02 08:57:03 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a8ba31dbf3 std: Remove usage of fmt! 2013-09-30 23:21:18 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a018a5c343 Parse underscores in identifiers for format!
Closes #9119
2013-09-12 01:07:10 -07:00
Daniel Micay
6919cf5fe1 rename std::iterator to std::iter
The trait will keep the `Iterator` naming, but a more concise module
name makes using the free functions less verbose. The module will define
iterables in addition to iterators, as it deals with iteration in
general.
2013-09-09 03:21:46 -04:00
Alex Crichton
ba1f663bbd Raise errors on format strings with unmatched }
Otherwise extra stuff after a lone '}' character is simply ignored, which is
very bad.

Closes #8938
2013-09-03 23:02:59 -07:00
Erick Tryzelaar
91d6c60bed fix various warnings 2013-08-30 15:10:55 -07:00
bors
3e4f40ec5a auto merge of #8564 : alexcrichton/rust/ifmt+++, r=graydon
See discussion in #8489, but this selects option 3 by adding a `Default` trait to be implemented by various basic types.

Once this makes it into a snapshot I think it's about time to start overhauling all current use-cases of `fmt!` to move towards `ifmt!`. The goal is to replace `%X` with `{}` in 90% of situations, and this commit should enable that.
2013-08-19 01:42:05 -07:00
Alex Crichton
22c7bbfd0c Delegate {} to Default instead of Poly
By using a separate trait this is overridable on a per-type basis and makes room
for the possibility of even more arguments passed in for the future.
2013-08-16 16:09:33 -07:00
Huon Wilson
abe94f9b4d doc: correct spelling in documentation. 2013-08-16 15:41:28 +10:00
Alex Crichton
1f6afa887b Correct the padding on integer types for formatting 2013-08-12 23:18:51 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ffb670ffcd Add initial support for a new formatting syntax
The new macro is available under the name ifmt! (only an intermediate name)
2013-08-07 19:21:43 -07:00