Some bugs and some documentation is unrelated to the Applicability change, but
these bugs were serious and the documentation was kind of required to
understand what's going on.
Instead of searching for all the successive expressions after a vector
allocation, check only the first expression.
This is done to minimize the amount of false positives of the lint.
Add lint to detect slow zero-filled vector initialization. It detects
when a vector is zero-filled with extended with `repeat(0).take(len)`
or `resize(len, 0)`.
This zero-fillings are usually slower than simply using `vec![0; len]`.
I noticed that I suppress this lint in many of my projects.
https://github.com/search?q=needless_pass_by_value+user%3Adtolnay&type=Codehttps://github.com/search?q=needless_pass_by_value+user%3Aserde-rs&type=Code
Upon further inspection, this lint has a *long* history of false
positives (and several remaining).
Generally I feel that this lint is the definition of pedantic and should
not be linted by default.
#[derive(Debug)]
enum How {
ThisWay,
ThatWay,
}
// Are we really better off forcing the call sites to write f(&_)...?
fn f(how: How) {
println!("You want to do it {:?}", how);
}
fn main() {
f(How::ThatWay);
}
This finishes up the rewrite of `update_lints.py` in Rust. More
specifically, this
* adds the `--check` flag and handling to clippy_dev
* tracks file changes over the different calls to `replace_region_in_file`
* only writes changes to files if the `--check` flag is *not* used
* runs `./util/dev update_lints --check` on CI instead of the old script
* replaces usage of the `update_lints.py` script with an error
`./util/dev update_lints` behaves 99% the same as the python script.
The only difference that I'm aware of is an ordering change to
`clippy_lints/src/lib.rs` because underscores seem to be sorted
differently in Rust and in Python.
🏁
3353: float support added for mistyped_literal_suffixes lint r=mikerite a=Maxgy
I implemented the mistyped_literal_suffixes lint for float literals.
```
#![allow(unused_variables)]
fn main() {
let x = 1E2_32;
let x = 75.22_64;
}
```
Given the above, the additional check suggests the variables to be written as `let x = 1E2_f32` and `let x = 75.22_f64`.
Fixes#3167
Co-authored-by: Maxwell Anderson <maxwell.brayden.anderson@gmail.com>
`possible_missing_comma` should only trigger when the binary operator has
unary equivalent. Otherwise, it's not possible to insert a comma without
breaking compilation. The operators identified were `+`, `&`, `*` and `-`.
This fixes the specific examples given in issues #3244 and #3396
but doesn't address the conflict this lint has with the style of starting
a line with a binary operator.