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Merged
merged 15 commits into from
Nov 28, 2024
Merged

Rustup #13746

merged 15 commits into from
Nov 28, 2024

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flip1995
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r? @ghost

changelog: none

flip1995 and others added 15 commits November 14, 2024 19:35
the behavior of the type system not only depends on the current
assumptions, but also the currentnphase of the compiler. This is
mostly necessary as we need to decide whether and how to reveal
opaque types. We track this via the `TypingMode`.
take 2

open up coroutines

tweak the wordings

the lint works up until 2021

We were missing one case, for ADTs, which was
causing `Result` to yield incorrect results.

only include field spans with significant types

deduplicate and eliminate field spans

switch to emit spans to impl Drops

Co-authored-by: Niko Matsakis <[email protected]>

collect drops instead of taking liveness diff

apply some suggestions and add explantory notes

small fix on the cache

let the query recurse through coroutine

new suggestion format with extracted variable name

fine-tune the drop span and messages

bugfix on runtime borrows

tweak message wording

filter out ecosystem types earlier

apply suggestions

clippy

check lint level at session level

further restrict applicability of the lint

translate bid into nop for stable mir

detect cycle in type structure
…r-errors

remove is_trivially_const_drop

I'm not sure this still brings any perf benefits, so let's benchmark this.

r? `@compiler-errors`
Inline ExprPrecedence::order into Expr::precedence

The representation of expression precedence in rustc_ast has been an obstacle to further improvements in the pretty-printer (continuing from #119105 and #119427).

Previously the operation of *"does this expression have lower precedence than that one"* (relevant for parenthesis insertion in macro-generated syntax trees) consisted of 3 steps:

1. Convert `Expr` to `ExprPrecedence` using `.precedence()`
2. Convert `ExprPrecedence` to `i8` using `.order()`
3. Compare using `<`

As far as I can guess, the reason for the separation between `precedence()` and `order()` was so that both `rustc_ast::Expr` and `rustc_hir::Expr` could convert as straightforwardly as possible to the same `ExprPrecedence` enum, and then the more finicky logic performed by `order` could be present just once.

The mapping between `Expr` and `ExprPrecedence` was intended to be as straightforward as possible:

```rust
match self.kind {
    ExprKind::Closure(..) => ExprPrecedence::Closure,
    ...
}
```

although there were exceptions of both many-to-one, and one-to-many:

```rust
    ExprKind::Underscore => ExprPrecedence::Path,
    ExprKind::Path(..) => ExprPrecedence::Path,
    ...
    ExprKind::Match(_, _, MatchKind::Prefix) => ExprPrecedence::Match,
    ExprKind::Match(_, _, MatchKind::Postfix) => ExprPrecedence::PostfixMatch,
```

Where the nature of `ExprPrecedence` becomes problematic is when a single expression kind might be associated with multiple different precedence levels depending on context (outside the expression) and contents (inside the expression). For example consider what is the precedence of an ExprKind::Closure `$closure`. Well, on the left-hand side of a binary operator it would need parentheses in order to avoid the trailing binary operator being absorbed into the closure body: `($closure) + Rhs`, so the precedence is something lower than that of `+`. But on the right-hand side of a binary operator, a closure is just a straightforward prefix expression like a unary op, which is a relatively high precedence level, higher than binops but lower than method calls: `Lhs + $closure` is fine without parens but `($closure).method()` needs them. But as a third case, if the closure contains an explicit return type, then the precedence is an even higher level than that, never needing parenthesization even in a binop left-hand side or method call: `|| -> bool { false } + Rhs` or `|| -> bool { false }.method()`.

You can see that trying to capture all of this resolution about expressions into `ExprPrecedence` violates the intention of `ExprPrecedence` being a straightforward one-to-one correspondence from each AST and HIR `ExprKind` variant. It would be possible to attempt that by doing stuff like `ExprPrecedence::Closure(Side::Leading, ReturnType::No)`, but I don't foresee the original envisioned benefit of the `precedence()`/`order()` distinction being retained in this approach. Instead I want to move toward a model that Syn has been using successfully. In Syn, there is a Precedence enum but it differs from rustc in the following ways:

- There are [relatively few variants](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/precedence.rs#L11-L47) compared to rustc's `ExprPrecedence`. For example there is no distinction at the precedence level between returns and closures, or between loops and method calls.

- We distinguish between [leading](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/fixup.rs#L293) and [trailing](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/fixup.rs#L309) precedence, taking into account an expression's context such as what token follows it (for various syntactic bail-outs in Rust's grammar, like ambiguities around break-with-value) and how it relates to operators from the surrounding syntax tree.

- There are no hardcoded mysterious integer quantities like rustc's `PREC_CLOSURE = -40`. All precedence comparisons are performed via PartialOrd on a C-like enum.

This PR is just a first step in these changes. As you can tell from Syn, I definitely think there is value in having a dedicated type to represent precedence, instead of what `order()` is doing with `i8`. But that is a whole separate adventure because rustc_ast doesn't even agree consistently on `i8` being the type for precedence order; `AssocOp::precedence` instead uses `usize` and there are casts in both directions. It is likely that a type called `ExprPrecedence` will re-appear, but it will look substantially different from the one that existed before this PR.
@rustbot rustbot added the S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties label Nov 28, 2024
@flip1995 flip1995 enabled auto-merge November 28, 2024 18:02
@flip1995 flip1995 added this pull request to the merge queue Nov 28, 2024
Merged via the queue into rust-lang:master with commit ff4a26d Nov 28, 2024
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@flip1995 flip1995 deleted the rustup branch November 28, 2024 18:26
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9 participants