2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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//@ aux-build:test-macros.rs
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2018-07-06 01:09:35 +00:00
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// gate-test-proc_macro_hygiene
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rustc: Tweak custom attribute capabilities
This commit starts to lay some groundwork for the stabilization of custom
attribute invocations and general procedural macros. It applies a number of
changes discussed on [internals] as well as a [recent issue][issue], namely:
* The path used to specify a custom attribute must be of length one and cannot
be a global path. This'll help future-proof us against any ambiguities and
give us more time to settle the precise syntax. In the meantime though a bare
identifier can be used and imported to invoke a custom attribute macro. A new
feature gate, `proc_macro_path_invoc`, was added to gate multi-segment paths
and absolute paths.
* The set of items which can be annotated by a custom procedural attribute has
been restricted. Statements, expressions, and modules are disallowed behind
two new feature gates: `proc_macro_expr` and `proc_macro_mod`.
* The input to procedural macro attributes has been restricted and adjusted.
Today an invocation like `#[foo(bar)]` will receive `(bar)` as the input token
stream, but after this PR it will only receive `bar` (the delimiters were
removed). Invocations like `#[foo]` are still allowed and will be invoked in
the same way as `#[foo()]`. This is a **breaking change** for all nightly
users as the syntax coming in to procedural macros will be tweaked slightly.
* Procedural macros (`foo!()` style) can only be expanded to item-like items by
default. A separate feature gate, `proc_macro_non_items`, is required to
expand to items like expressions, statements, etc.
Closes #50038
[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/help-stabilize-a-subset-of-macros-2-0/7252
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50038
2018-04-20 14:50:39 +00:00
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2018-08-04 00:37:14 +00:00
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#![feature(stmt_expr_attributes)]
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rustc: Tweak custom attribute capabilities
This commit starts to lay some groundwork for the stabilization of custom
attribute invocations and general procedural macros. It applies a number of
changes discussed on [internals] as well as a [recent issue][issue], namely:
* The path used to specify a custom attribute must be of length one and cannot
be a global path. This'll help future-proof us against any ambiguities and
give us more time to settle the precise syntax. In the meantime though a bare
identifier can be used and imported to invoke a custom attribute macro. A new
feature gate, `proc_macro_path_invoc`, was added to gate multi-segment paths
and absolute paths.
* The set of items which can be annotated by a custom procedural attribute has
been restricted. Statements, expressions, and modules are disallowed behind
two new feature gates: `proc_macro_expr` and `proc_macro_mod`.
* The input to procedural macro attributes has been restricted and adjusted.
Today an invocation like `#[foo(bar)]` will receive `(bar)` as the input token
stream, but after this PR it will only receive `bar` (the delimiters were
removed). Invocations like `#[foo]` are still allowed and will be invoked in
the same way as `#[foo()]`. This is a **breaking change** for all nightly
users as the syntax coming in to procedural macros will be tweaked slightly.
* Procedural macros (`foo!()` style) can only be expanded to item-like items by
default. A separate feature gate, `proc_macro_non_items`, is required to
expand to items like expressions, statements, etc.
Closes #50038
[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/help-stabilize-a-subset-of-macros-2-0/7252
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50038
2018-04-20 14:50:39 +00:00
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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#[macro_use]
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extern crate test_macros;
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rustc: Tweak custom attribute capabilities
This commit starts to lay some groundwork for the stabilization of custom
attribute invocations and general procedural macros. It applies a number of
changes discussed on [internals] as well as a [recent issue][issue], namely:
* The path used to specify a custom attribute must be of length one and cannot
be a global path. This'll help future-proof us against any ambiguities and
give us more time to settle the precise syntax. In the meantime though a bare
identifier can be used and imported to invoke a custom attribute macro. A new
feature gate, `proc_macro_path_invoc`, was added to gate multi-segment paths
and absolute paths.
* The set of items which can be annotated by a custom procedural attribute has
been restricted. Statements, expressions, and modules are disallowed behind
two new feature gates: `proc_macro_expr` and `proc_macro_mod`.
* The input to procedural macro attributes has been restricted and adjusted.
Today an invocation like `#[foo(bar)]` will receive `(bar)` as the input token
stream, but after this PR it will only receive `bar` (the delimiters were
removed). Invocations like `#[foo]` are still allowed and will be invoked in
the same way as `#[foo()]`. This is a **breaking change** for all nightly
users as the syntax coming in to procedural macros will be tweaked slightly.
* Procedural macros (`foo!()` style) can only be expanded to item-like items by
default. A separate feature gate, `proc_macro_non_items`, is required to
expand to items like expressions, statements, etc.
Closes #50038
[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/help-stabilize-a-subset-of-macros-2-0/7252
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50038
2018-04-20 14:50:39 +00:00
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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fn _test_inner() {
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2020-11-18 22:49:20 +00:00
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#![empty_attr] //~ ERROR: inner macro attributes are unstable
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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}
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mod _test2_inner {
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2020-11-18 22:49:20 +00:00
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#![empty_attr] //~ ERROR: inner macro attributes are unstable
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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}
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2019-12-01 14:07:38 +00:00
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#[empty_attr = "y"] //~ ERROR: key-value macro attributes are not supported
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rustc: Tweak custom attribute capabilities
This commit starts to lay some groundwork for the stabilization of custom
attribute invocations and general procedural macros. It applies a number of
changes discussed on [internals] as well as a [recent issue][issue], namely:
* The path used to specify a custom attribute must be of length one and cannot
be a global path. This'll help future-proof us against any ambiguities and
give us more time to settle the precise syntax. In the meantime though a bare
identifier can be used and imported to invoke a custom attribute macro. A new
feature gate, `proc_macro_path_invoc`, was added to gate multi-segment paths
and absolute paths.
* The set of items which can be annotated by a custom procedural attribute has
been restricted. Statements, expressions, and modules are disallowed behind
two new feature gates: `proc_macro_expr` and `proc_macro_mod`.
* The input to procedural macro attributes has been restricted and adjusted.
Today an invocation like `#[foo(bar)]` will receive `(bar)` as the input token
stream, but after this PR it will only receive `bar` (the delimiters were
removed). Invocations like `#[foo]` are still allowed and will be invoked in
the same way as `#[foo()]`. This is a **breaking change** for all nightly
users as the syntax coming in to procedural macros will be tweaked slightly.
* Procedural macros (`foo!()` style) can only be expanded to item-like items by
default. A separate feature gate, `proc_macro_non_items`, is required to
expand to items like expressions, statements, etc.
Closes #50038
[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/help-stabilize-a-subset-of-macros-2-0/7252
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50038
2018-04-20 14:50:39 +00:00
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fn _test3() {}
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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fn attrs() {
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// Statement, item
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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#[empty_attr] // OK
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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struct S;
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// Statement, macro
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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#[empty_attr] //~ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to statements
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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println!();
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// Statement, semi
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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#[empty_attr] //~ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to statements
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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S;
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// Statement, local
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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#[empty_attr] //~ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to statements
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rustc: Tweak custom attribute capabilities
This commit starts to lay some groundwork for the stabilization of custom
attribute invocations and general procedural macros. It applies a number of
changes discussed on [internals] as well as a [recent issue][issue], namely:
* The path used to specify a custom attribute must be of length one and cannot
be a global path. This'll help future-proof us against any ambiguities and
give us more time to settle the precise syntax. In the meantime though a bare
identifier can be used and imported to invoke a custom attribute macro. A new
feature gate, `proc_macro_path_invoc`, was added to gate multi-segment paths
and absolute paths.
* The set of items which can be annotated by a custom procedural attribute has
been restricted. Statements, expressions, and modules are disallowed behind
two new feature gates: `proc_macro_expr` and `proc_macro_mod`.
* The input to procedural macro attributes has been restricted and adjusted.
Today an invocation like `#[foo(bar)]` will receive `(bar)` as the input token
stream, but after this PR it will only receive `bar` (the delimiters were
removed). Invocations like `#[foo]` are still allowed and will be invoked in
the same way as `#[foo()]`. This is a **breaking change** for all nightly
users as the syntax coming in to procedural macros will be tweaked slightly.
* Procedural macros (`foo!()` style) can only be expanded to item-like items by
default. A separate feature gate, `proc_macro_non_items`, is required to
expand to items like expressions, statements, etc.
Closes #50038
[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/help-stabilize-a-subset-of-macros-2-0/7252
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50038
2018-04-20 14:50:39 +00:00
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let _x = 2;
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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// Expr
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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let _x = #[identity_attr] 2; //~ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to expressions
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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// Opt expr
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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let _x = [#[identity_attr] 2]; //~ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to expressions
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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// Expr macro
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2019-05-21 22:09:58 +00:00
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let _x = #[identity_attr] println!();
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//~^ ERROR: custom attributes cannot be applied to expressions
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2018-04-29 22:13:54 +00:00
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}
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2020-11-12 20:42:42 +00:00
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fn test_case() {
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#![test] //~ ERROR inner macro attributes are unstable
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//~| WARN this was previously accepted
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}
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2020-01-31 22:02:31 +00:00
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fn main() {}
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