split up the first paragraph of doc comments for better summaries

This commit is contained in:
binarycat 2024-11-10 13:22:58 -06:00
parent 7028d9318f
commit ae3c68db34
5 changed files with 15 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -2931,7 +2931,9 @@ impl<T, I: iter::TrustedLen<Item = T>> ToRcSlice<T> for I {
}
/// `Weak` is a version of [`Rc`] that holds a non-owning reference to the
/// managed allocation. The allocation is accessed by calling [`upgrade`] on the `Weak`
/// managed allocation.
///
/// The allocation is accessed by calling [`upgrade`] on the `Weak`
/// pointer, which returns an <code>[Option]<[Rc]\<T>></code>.
///
/// Since a `Weak` reference does not count towards ownership, it will not

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@ -290,7 +290,9 @@ impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> Arc<T, A> {
}
/// `Weak` is a version of [`Arc`] that holds a non-owning reference to the
/// managed allocation. The allocation is accessed by calling [`upgrade`] on the `Weak`
/// managed allocation.
///
/// The allocation is accessed by calling [`upgrade`] on the `Weak`
/// pointer, which returns an <code>[Option]<[Arc]\<T>></code>.
///
/// Since a `Weak` reference does not count towards ownership, it will not

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@ -176,9 +176,11 @@ fn raw_waker<W: Wake + Send + Sync + 'static>(waker: Arc<W>) -> RawWaker {
)
}
/// An analogous trait to `Wake` but used to construct a `LocalWaker`. This API
/// works in exactly the same way as `Wake`, except that it uses an `Rc` instead
/// of an `Arc`, and the result is a `LocalWaker` instead of a `Waker`.
/// An analogous trait to `Wake` but used to construct a `LocalWaker`.
///
/// This API works in exactly the same way as `Wake`,
/// except that it uses an `Rc` instead of an `Arc`,
/// and the result is a `LocalWaker` instead of a `Waker`.
///
/// The benefits of using `LocalWaker` over `Waker` are that it allows the local waker
/// to hold data that does not implement `Send` and `Sync`. Additionally, it saves calls

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@ -153,6 +153,7 @@ use crate::panic::{RefUnwindSafe, UnwindSafe};
use crate::time::{Duration, Instant};
/// Creates a new asynchronous channel, returning the sender/receiver halves.
///
/// All data sent on the [`Sender`] will become available on the [`Receiver`] in
/// the same order as it was sent, and no [`send`] will block the calling thread
/// (this channel has an "infinite buffer", unlike [`sync_channel`], which will
@ -201,6 +202,7 @@ pub fn channel<T>() -> (Sender<T>, Receiver<T>) {
}
/// Creates a new synchronous, bounded channel.
///
/// All data sent on the [`Sender`] will become available on the [`Receiver`]
/// in the same order as it was sent. Like asynchronous [`channel`]s, the
/// [`Receiver`] will block until a message becomes available. `sync_channel`

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@ -483,6 +483,7 @@ pub enum TrySendError<T> {
}
/// Creates a new asynchronous channel, returning the sender/receiver halves.
///
/// All data sent on the [`Sender`] will become available on the [`Receiver`] in
/// the same order as it was sent, and no [`send`] will block the calling thread
/// (this channel has an "infinite buffer", unlike [`sync_channel`], which will
@ -527,6 +528,7 @@ pub fn channel<T>() -> (Sender<T>, Receiver<T>) {
}
/// Creates a new synchronous, bounded channel.
///
/// All data sent on the [`SyncSender`] will become available on the [`Receiver`]
/// in the same order as it was sent. Like asynchronous [`channel`]s, the
/// [`Receiver`] will block until a message becomes available. `sync_channel`