Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Tribick
aa9837ba29 Add tests for rounding of ties during float formatting 2022-10-20 22:09:24 +02:00
Andrew Tribick
848744403a Fix inconsistent rounding of 0.5 when formatted to 0 decimal places 2022-10-11 23:09:23 +02:00
T-O-R-U-S
72a25d05bf Use implicit capture syntax in format_args
This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new syntax. The
documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).
2022-03-10 10:23:40 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
ca6798ab07
Rollup merge of #86479 - exphp-forks:float-debug-exponential, r=yaahc
Automatic exponential formatting in Debug

Context: See [this comment from the libs team](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2729#issuecomment-853454204)

---

Makes `"{:?}"` switch to exponential for floats based on magnitude. The libs team suggested exploring this idea in the discussion thread for RFC rust-lang/rfcs#2729. (**note:** this is **not** an implementation of the RFC; it is an implementation of one of the alternatives)

Thresholds chosen were 1e-4 and 1e16.  Justification described [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2729#issuecomment-864482954).

**This will require a crater run.**

---

As mentioned in the commit message of 8731d4dfb4, this behavior will not apply when a precision is supplied, because I wanted to preserve the following existing and useful behavior of `{:.PREC?}` (which recursively applies `{:.PREC}` to floats in a struct):

```rust
assert_eq!(
    format!("{:.2?}", [100.0, 0.000004]),
    "[100.00, 0.00]",
)
```

I looked around and am not sure where there are any tests that actually use this in the test suite, though?

All things considered, I'm surprised that this change did not seem to break even a single existing test in `x.py test --stage 2`.  (even when I tried a smaller threshold of 1e6)
2021-10-20 04:35:10 +09:00
Josh Triplett
199b33f0d7
Use a test value that doesn't depend on the handling of even/odd rounding 2021-10-03 20:15:12 -07:00
Fabian Wolff
e3996ffcb6 Fix Lower/UpperExp formatting for integers and precision zero 2021-10-03 23:05:03 +02:00
Fabian Wolff
79adda930f Ignore automatically derived impls of Clone and Debug in dead code analysis 2021-09-09 19:49:07 +02:00
Michael Lamparski
8731d4dfb4 Automatic exponential formatting in Debug
* {:.PREC?} already had legitimately useful behavior (recursive formatting of structs using
  fixed precision for floats) and I suspect that changes to the output there would be unwelcome.

  (besides, precision introduces sinister edge cases where a number can be rounded up to one
  of the thresholds)

  Thus, the new behavior of Debug is, "dynamically switch to exponential, but only if there's
  no precision."

* This could not be implemented in terms of float_to_decimal_common without repeating the branch
  on precision, so 'float_to_general_debug' is a new function.  The name is '_debug' instead of
  '_common' because the considerations in the previous bullet make this logic pretty specific
  to Debug.

* 'float_to_decimal_common' is now only used by Display, so I inlined the min_precision argument
  and renamed the function accordingly.
2021-06-19 20:53:26 -04:00
Mara Bos
82dc73b1ae Format Struct { .. } on one line even with {:#?}. 2021-04-21 13:50:56 +02:00
mark
2c31b45ae8 mv std libs to library/ 2020-07-27 19:51:13 -05:00