- Only run for `QPath::Resolved` with `Some` self parameter (`<X as Y>::T`)
- Fall back to the previous behavior if the path can't be resolved
- Show what the behavior is if the type can't be normalized
- Run `resolve_vars_if_possible`
It's not clear whether or not this is necessary. See
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77616 for more context.
- Add a test for cross-crate re-exports
- Use the same code for both `hir::Ty` and `Ty`
They can be derived directly from the `hir::Item`, there's no special
logic.
- TypeDef
- OpaqueTy
- Constant
- Static
- TraitAlias
- Enum
- Union
- Struct
- Add `Item::from_hir_id_and_kind` convenience wrapper
- Make name parameter mandatory
`tcx.opt_item_name` doesn't handle renames, so this is necessary
for any item that could be renamed, which is almost all of them.
- Override visibilities to be `Inherited` for enum variants
`tcx.visibility` returns the effective visibility, not the visibility
that was written in the source code. `pub enum E { A, B }` always has
public variants `A` and `B`, so there's no sense printing `pub` again.
- Don't duplicate handling of `Visibility::Crate`
Instead, represent it as just another `Restricted` path.
Visibility needs much less information than a full path, since modules
can never have generics. This allows constructing a Visibility from only
a DefId.
Note that this means that paths are now normalized to their DefPath.
In other words, `pub(self)` or `pub(super)` now always shows `pub(in
path)` instead of preserving the original text.
Remove duplicate `Trait::auto` field
It was exactly the same as `is_auto`.
I found this while working on #78082, but it's not required for that PR.
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
The discussion seems to have resolved that this lint is a bit "noisy" in
that applying it in all places would result in a reduction in
readability.
A few of the trivial functions (like `Path::new`) are fine to leave
outside of closures.
The general rule seems to be that anything that is obviously an
allocation (`Box`, `Vec`, `vec![]`) should be in a closure, even if it
is a 0-sized allocation.
Previously the [src] link on types defined by a macro
pointed to the macro definition.
This commit makes the Clean-Implementation for Spans
aware of macro defined types,
so that the link points to the invocation instead.
Use rebind instead of Binder::bind when possible
These are really only the easy places. I just searched for `Binder::bind` and replaced where it straightforward.
r? `@lcnr`
cc. `@nikomatsakis`
- Add `parent_module` to `DocFragment`
- Require the `parent_module` of the item being inlined
- Preserve the hir_id for ExternCrates so rustdoc can find the parent module later
- Take an optional `parent_module` for `build_impl` and `merge_attrs`.
Preserve the difference between parent modules for each doc-comment.
- Support arbitrarily many re-exports in from_ast. In retrospect this is
probably not used and could be simplified to a single
`Option<(Attrs, DefId)>`.
- Don't require the parent_module for all `impl`s, just inlined items
In particular, this will be `None` whenever the attribute is not on a
re-export.
- Only store the parent_module, not the HirId
When re-exporting a re-export, the HirId is not available. Fortunately,
`collect_intra_doc_links` doesn't actually need all the info from a
HirId, just the parent module.
Use `is_unstable_const_fn` instead of `is_min_const_fn` in rustdoc where appropriate
This closes#76501. Specifically, it allows for nightly users with the `#![feature(const_fn)]` flag enabled to still have their `const fn` declarations documented as such, while retaining the desired behavior that rustdoc *not* document functions that have the `rustc_const_unstable` attribute as `const`.