Swift has specific syntax that desugars to `Option<T>` similar to our
`?` operator, which means that people might try to use it in Rust. Parse
it and gracefully recover.
This reverts commit 059b68dd67.
Note that this was manually adjusted to retain some of the refactoring
introduced by commit 059b68dd67, so that it could
likewise retain the correction introduced in commit
5b4bc05fa5
- [x] Removed `?const` and change uses of `?const`
- [x] Added `~const` to the AST. It is gated behind const_trait_impl.
- [x] Validate `~const` in ast_validation.
- [ ] Add enum `BoundConstness` to the HIR. (With variants `NotConst` and
`ConstIfConst` allowing future extensions)
- [ ] Adjust trait selection and pre-existing code to use `BoundConstness`.
- [ ] Optional steps (*for this PR, obviously*)
- [ ] Fix#88155
- [ ] Do something with constness bounds in chalk
This adds recovery when in array type syntax user writes
[X; Y<Z, ...>]
instead of
[X; Y::<Z, ...>]
Fixes#82566
Note that whenever we parse an expression and know that the next token
cannot be `,`, we should be calling
check_mistyped_turbofish_with_multiple_type_params for this recovery.
Previously we only did this for statement parsing (e.g. `let x = f<a,
b>;`). We now also do it when parsing the length field in array type
syntax.