Convert many files to intra-doc links
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75080
r? @poliorcetics
I recommend reviewing one commit at a time, but the diff is small enough you can do it all at once if you like :)
Move to intra-doc links for library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs
Helps with #75080.
@jyn514 We're almost finished with this issue. Thanks for mentoring. If you have other topics to work on just let me know, I will be around in Discord.
@rustbot modify labels: T-doc, A-intra-doc-links
Known issues:
* Link from `core` to `std` (#74481):
[`OsStr`]
[`String`]
[`VecDeque<T>`]
Rename and expose LoopState as ControlFlow
Basic PR for #75744. Addresses everything there except for documentation; lots of examples are probably a good idea.
Add `[T; N]::as_[mut_]slice`
Part of me trying to populate arrays with a couple of basic useful methods, like slices already have. The ability to add methods to arrays were added in #75212. Tracking issue: #76118
This adds:
```rust
impl<T, const N: usize> [T; N] {
pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T];
pub fn as_mut_slice(&mut self) -> &mut [T];
}
```
These methods are like the ones on `std::array::FixedSizeArray` and in the crate `arraytools`.
- Use intra-doc links for `std::io` in `std::fs`
- Use intra-doc links for File::read in unix/ext/fs.rs
- Remove explicit intra-doc links for `true` in `net/addr.rs`
- Use intra-doc links in alloc/src/sync.rs
- Use intra-doc links in src/ascii.rs
- Switch to intra-doc links in alloc/rc.rs
- Use intra-doc links in core/pin.rs
- Use intra-doc links in std/prelude
- Use shorter links in `std/fs.rs`
`io` is already in scope.
flt2dec: properly handle uninitialized memory
The float-to-str code currently uses uninitialized memory incorrectly (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76092). This PR fixes that.
Specifically, that code used `&mut [T]` as "out references", but it would be incorrect for the caller to actually pass uninitialized memory. So the PR changes this to `&mut [MaybeUninit<T>]`, and then functions return a `&[T]` to the part of the buffer that they initialized (some functions already did that, indirectly via `&Formatted`, others were adjusted to return that buffer instead of just the initialized length).
What I particularly like about this is that it moves `unsafe` to the right place: previously, the outermost caller had to use `unsafe` to assert that things are initialized; now it is the functions that do the actual initializing which have the corresponding `unsafe` block when they call `MaybeUninit::slice_get_ref` (renamed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76217 to `slice_assume_init_ref`).
Reviewers please be aware that I have no idea how any of this code actually works. My changes were purely mechanical and type-driven. The test suite passes so I guess I didn't screw up badly...
Cc @sfackler this is somewhat related to your RFC, and possibly some of this code could benefit from (a generalized version of) the API you describe there. But for now I think what I did is "good enough".
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76092.
Move to intra-doc links for library/core/src/panic.rs
Helps with #75080.
@rustbot modify labels: T-doc, A-intra-doc-links, T-rustdoc
Known issues:
* Link from `core` to `std` (#74481):
[`set_hook`]
[`String`]
Add more examples to lexicographic cmp on Iterators.
Given two arrays of T1 and T2, the most important rule of lexicographical comparison is that two arrays
of equal length will be compared until the first difference occured.
The examples provided only focuses on the second rule that says that the
shorter array will be filled with some T2 that is less than every T1.
Which is only possible because of the first rule.
rename get_{ref, mut} to assume_init_{ref,mut} in Maybeuninit
References #63568
Rework with comments addressed from #66174
Have replaced most of the occurrences I've found, hopefully didn't miss out anything
r? @RalfJung
(thanks @danielhenrymantilla for the initial work on this)
Get rid of bounds check in slice::chunks_exact() and related function…
…s during construction
LLVM can't figure out in
let rem = self.len() % chunk_size;
let len = self.len() - rem;
let (fst, snd) = self.split_at(len);
and
let rem = self.len() % chunk_size;
let (fst, snd) = self.split_at(rem);
that the index passed to split_at() is smaller than the slice length and
adds a bounds check plus panic for it.
Apart from removing the overhead of the bounds check this also allows
LLVM to optimize code around the ChunksExact iterator better.
Use intra-doc links for `core/src/slice.mod.rs`
partial help in #75080
r? @jyn514
- most are using primitive types links, which cannot be used with intra links at the moment
- also `std` cannot be referenced in any link, `std::ptr::NonNull` and `std::slice` could not be referenced
Make some Ordering methods const
Constify the following methods of `core::cmp::Ordering`:
- `reverse`
- `then`
Possible because of #49146 (Allow `if` and `match` in constants).
Tracking issue: #76113
LLVM can't figure out in
let rem = self.len() % chunk_size;
let len = self.len() - rem;
let (fst, snd) = self.split_at(len);
and
let rem = self.len() % chunk_size;
let (fst, snd) = self.split_at(rem);
that the index passed to split_at() is smaller than the slice length and
adds a bounds check plus panic for it.
Apart from removing the overhead of the bounds check this also allows
LLVM to optimize code around the ChunksExact iterator better.
These are unsafe variants of the non-unchecked functions and don't do
any bounds checking.
For the time being these are not public and only a preparation for the
following commit. Making it public and stabilization can follow later
and be discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76014 .