Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nick Cameron f7ff37e4c5 Replace full slice notation with index calls 2015-01-07 10:46:33 +13:00
Alex Crichton 4b359e3aee More test fixes! 2015-01-05 22:58:37 -08:00
Alex Crichton 7d8d06f86b Remove deprecated functionality
This removes a large array of deprecated functionality, regardless of how
recently it was deprecated. The purpose of this commit is to clean out the
standard libraries and compiler for the upcoming alpha release.

Some notable compiler changes were to enable warnings for all now-deprecated
command line arguments (previously the deprecated versions were silently
accepted) as well as removing deriving(Zero) entirely (the trait was removed).

The distribution no longer contains the libtime or libregex_macros crates. Both
of these have been deprecated for some time and are available externally.
2015-01-03 23:43:57 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio 91eeb641cd coretest: fix fallout 2015-01-03 09:34:05 -05:00
Alex Crichton 9ca8076cb7 rollup merge of #20386: frewsxcv/rm-reexports
Part of #19253

[breaking-change]
2015-01-02 09:22:37 -08:00
Nick Cameron 7e2b9ea235 Fallout - change array syntax to use `;` 2015-01-02 10:28:19 +13:00
Corey Farwell f9ce6f5ba4 Remove core::iter::MinMaxResult::* public reexport
Part of #19253

[breaking-change]
2014-12-31 19:28:01 -08:00
Patrick Walton ddb2466f6a librustc: Always parse `macro!()`/`macro![]` as expressions if not
followed by a semicolon.

This allows code like `vec![1i, 2, 3].len();` to work.

This breaks code that uses macros as statements without putting
semicolons after them, such as:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b)
        assert!(c == d)
        println(...);
    }

It also breaks code that uses macros as items without semicolons:

    local_data_key!(foo)

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

Add semicolons to fix this code. Those two examples can be fixed as
follows:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b);
        assert!(c == d);
        println(...);
    }

    local_data_key!(foo);

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

RFC #378.

Closes #18635.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-18 12:09:07 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio 778be74cbb libcoretest: use tuple indexing 2014-12-13 20:04:41 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio a50c587242 libcoretest: fix fallout 2014-12-13 17:03:45 -05:00
Alexis Beingessner 4a656062ee add Cloned iterator adaptor 2014-11-18 08:34:44 -05:00
Nick Cameron ca08540a00 Fix fallout from coercion removal 2014-11-17 22:41:33 +13:00
Brendan Zabarauskas c9e6bda9c7 Revert the need for initial values with arithmetic iterators 2014-11-14 15:35:44 +11:00
Brendan Zabarauskas de938b6ca1 Remove Signed trait and add SignedInt trait
The methods have been moved into Float and SignedInt
2014-11-13 03:46:03 +11:00
Brendan Zabarauskas e965ba85ca Remove lots of numeric traits from the preludes
Num, NumCast, Unsigned, Float, Primitive and Int have been removed.
2014-11-13 03:46:03 +11:00
Brendan Zabarauskas 46333d527b Deprecate Zero and One traits 2014-11-13 02:04:31 +11:00
Niko Matsakis 4af52eee59 Repair various cases where values of distinct types were being operated
upon (e.g., `&int` added to `int`).
2014-11-05 09:15:28 -05:00
Jakub Bukaj 696f72e84e Add a `repeat` function to the prelude
Implements a part of RFC 235.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-30 23:55:53 +01:00
Steve Klabnik 7828c3dd28 Rename fail! to panic!
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/221

The current terminology of "task failure" often causes problems when
writing or speaking about code. You often want to talk about the
possibility of an operation that returns a Result "failing", but cannot
because of the ambiguity with task failure. Instead, you have to speak
of "the failing case" or "when the operation does not succeed" or other
circumlocutions.

Likewise, we use a "Failure" header in rustdoc to describe when
operations may fail the task, but it would often be helpful to separate
out a section describing the "Err-producing" case.

We have been steadily moving away from task failure and toward Result as
an error-handling mechanism, so we should optimize our terminology
accordingly: Result-producing functions should be easy to describe.

To update your code, rename any call to `fail!` to `panic!` instead.
Assuming you have not created your own macro named `panic!`, this
will work on UNIX based systems:

    grep -lZR 'fail!' . | xargs -0 -l sed -i -e 's/fail!/panic!/g'

You can of course also do this by hand.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-29 11:43:07 -04:00
NODA, Kai f27ad3d3e9 Clean up rustc warnings.
compiletest: compact "linux" "macos" etc.as "unix".
liballoc: remove a superfluous "use".
libcollections: remove invocations of deprecated methods in favor of
    their suggested replacements and use "_" for a loop counter.
libcoretest: remove invocations of deprecated methods;  also add
    "allow(deprecated)" for testing a deprecated method itself.
libglob: use "cfg_attr".
libgraphviz: add a test for one of data constructors.
libgreen: remove a superfluous "use".
libnum: "allow(type_overflow)" for type cast into u8 in a test code.
librustc: names of static variables should be in upper case.
libserialize: v[i] instead of get().
libstd/ascii: to_lowercase() instead of to_lower().
libstd/bitflags: modify AnotherSetOfFlags to use i8 as its backend.
    It will serve better for testing various aspects of bitflags!.
libstd/collections: "allow(deprecated)" for testing a deprecated
    method itself.
libstd/io: remove invocations of deprecated methods and superfluous "use".
    Also add #[test] where it was missing.
libstd/num: introduce a helper function to effectively remove
    invocations of a deprecated method.
libstd/path and rand: remove invocations of deprecated methods and
    superfluous "use".
libstd/task and libsync/comm: "allow(deprecated)" for testing
    a deprecated method itself.
libsync/deque: remove superfluous "unsafe".
libsync/mutex and once: names of static variables should be in upper case.
libterm: introduce a helper function to effectively remove
    invocations of a deprecated method.

We still see a few warnings about using obsoleted native::task::spawn()
in the test modules for libsync.  I'm not sure how I should replace them
with std::task::TaksBuilder and native::task::NativeTaskBuilder
(dependency to libstd?)

Signed-off-by: NODA, Kai <nodakai@gmail.com>
2014-10-13 14:16:22 +08:00
Nick Cameron 3b0550c3a9 Rename slicing methods 2014-10-07 15:49:53 +13:00
Nick Cameron 59976942ea Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc. 2014-10-07 15:49:53 +13:00
Alex Crichton 7ae802f57b rollup merge of #17666 : eddyb/take-garbage-out
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/lib.rs
	src/libcore/lib.rs
	src/librustdoc/lib.rs
	src/librustrt/lib.rs
	src/libserialize/lib.rs
	src/libstd/lib.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-8898.rs
2014-10-02 14:53:18 -07:00
Aaron Turon d2ea0315e0 Revert "Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc."
This reverts commit 40b9f5ded5.
2014-10-02 11:48:07 -07:00
Aaron Turon c0c6c89589 Revert "Remove the `_` suffix from slice methods."
This reverts commit df2f1fa768.
2014-10-02 11:47:58 -07:00
Eduard Burtescu 58bea31ca0 tests: remove uses of Gc. 2014-10-02 17:02:15 +03:00
Nick Cameron df2f1fa768 Remove the `_` suffix from slice methods.
Deprecates slicing methods from ImmutableSlice/MutableSlice in favour of slicing syntax or the methods in Slice/SliceMut.

Closes #17273.
2014-10-02 13:19:45 +13:00
Nick Cameron 40b9f5ded5 Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc. 2014-10-02 13:19:45 +13:00
Aaron Turon fc525eeb4e Fallout from renaming 2014-09-16 14:37:48 -07:00
Jonas Hietala 248319a52e Flip arguments to `std::iter::iterate`.
Breaks `iterate(f, seed)`, use `iterate(seed, f)` instead.
The convention is to have the closure last.

Closes #17066.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-07 19:44:30 +02:00
Nick Cameron 52ef46251e Rebasing changes 2014-08-26 16:07:32 +12:00
Piotr Czarnecki a55149b84e core: Refactor iterators
Simplifying the code of methods: nth, fold, rposition
and iterators: Filter, FilterMap, SkipWhile
Adding basic benchmarks
2014-08-06 11:20:37 +01:00
Patrick Walton caa564bea3 librustc: Stop desugaring `for` expressions and translate them directly.
This makes edge cases in which the `Iterator` trait was not in scope
and/or `Option` or its variants were not in scope work properly.

This breaks code that looks like:

    struct MyStruct { ... }

    impl MyStruct {
        fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
    }

    for x in MyStruct { ... } { ... }

Change ad-hoc `next` methods like the above to implementations of the
`Iterator` trait. For example:

    impl Iterator<int> for MyStruct {
        fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
    }

Closes #15392.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-24 18:58:12 -07:00
Jakub Wieczorek ed54162e86 Add an iterate function to core::iter
Implementation by Kevin Ballard.

The function returns an Unfold iterator producing an infinite stream
of results of repeated applications of the function, starting from
the provided seed value.
2014-07-13 11:47:40 +02:00
Steven Fackler 55cae0a094 Implement RFC#28: Add PartialOrd::partial_cmp
I ended up altering the semantics of Json's PartialOrd implementation.
It used to be the case that Null < Null, but I can't think of any reason
for an ordering other than the default one so I just switched it over to
using the derived implementation.

This also fixes broken `PartialOrd` implementations for `Vec` and
`TreeMap`.

RFC: 0028-partial-cmp
2014-06-29 21:42:09 -07:00
Steven Fackler 1ed646eaf7 Extract tests from libcore to a separate crate
Libcore's test infrastructure is complicated by the fact that many lang
items are defined in the crate. The current approach (realcore/realstd
imports) is hacky and hard to work with (tests inside of core::cmp
haven't been run for months!).

Moving tests to a separate crate does mean that they can only test the
public API of libcore, but I don't feel that that is too much of an
issue. The only tests that I had to get rid of were some checking the
various numeric formatters, but those are also exercised through normal
format! calls in other tests.
2014-06-29 15:57:21 -07:00