rollup merge of #23901: steveklabnik/fix_links_str
Remove broken links that should just point to the current page, and while we're at it, re-wrap to 100 chars.
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9ab6cc9f32
@ -10,13 +10,12 @@
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//
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// ignore-lexer-test FIXME #15679
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//! Unicode string manipulation (the [`str`](../primitive.str.html) type).
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//! Unicode string manipulation (the `str` type).
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//!
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//! Rust's [`str`](../primitive.str.html) type is one of the core primitive
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//! types of the language. `&str` is the borrowed string type. This type of
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//! string can only be created from other strings, unless it is a `&'static str`
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//! (see below). It is not possible to move out of borrowed strings because they
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//! are owned elsewhere.
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//! Rust's `str` type is one of the core primitive types of the language. `&str` is the borrowed
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//! string type. This type of string can only be created from other strings, unless it is a
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//! `&'static str` (see below). It is not possible to move out of borrowed strings because they are
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//! owned elsewhere.
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//!
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//! # Examples
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//!
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@ -26,9 +25,8 @@
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//! let s = "Hello, world.";
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//! ```
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//!
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//! This `&str` is a `&'static str`, which is the type of string literals.
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//! They're `'static` because literals are available for the entire lifetime of
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//! the program.
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//! This `&str` is a `&'static str`, which is the type of string literals. They're `'static`
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//! because literals are available for the entire lifetime of the program.
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//!
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//! You can get a non-`'static` `&str` by taking a slice of a `String`:
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//!
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@ -39,13 +37,12 @@
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//!
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//! # Representation
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//!
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//! Rust's string type, `str`, is a sequence of Unicode scalar values encoded as
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//! a stream of UTF-8 bytes. All [strings](../../reference.html#literals) are
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//! guaranteed to be validly encoded UTF-8 sequences. Additionally, strings are
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//! not null-terminated and can thus contain null bytes.
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//! Rust's string type, `str`, is a sequence of Unicode scalar values encoded as a stream of UTF-8
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//! bytes. All [strings](../../reference.html#literals) are guaranteed to be validly encoded UTF-8
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//! sequences. Additionally, strings are not null-terminated and can thus contain null bytes.
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//!
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//! The actual representation of `str`s have direct mappings to slices: `&str`
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//! is the same as `&[u8]`.
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//! The actual representation of `str`s have direct mappings to slices: `&str` is the same as
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//! `&[u8]`.
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#![doc(primitive = "str")]
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#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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