Although `manual_inspect`'s PR started some months ago, the lint is only
available in the current nightly (1.81.0), rather than 1.78.0.
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
This change addresses cases where doc comments are separated
by blank lines, comments, or non-doc-comment attributes,
like this:
```rust
/// - first line
// not part of doc comment
/// second line
```
Before this commit, Clippy gave a pedantically-correct
warning about how you needed to indent the second line.
This is unlikely to be what the user intends, and has
been described as a "false positive" (since Clippy is
warning you about a highly unintuitive behavior that
Rustdoc actually has, we definitely want it to output
*something*, but the suggestion to indent was poor).
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12917
Eliminate the distinction between PREC_POSTFIX and PREC_PAREN precedence level
I have been tangling with precedence as part of porting some pretty-printer improvements from syn back to rustc (related to parenthesization of closures, returns, and breaks by the AST pretty-printer).
As far as I have been able to tell, there is no difference between the 2 different precedence levels that rustc identifies as `PREC_POSTFIX` (field access, square bracket index, question mark, method call) and `PREC_PAREN` (loops, if, paths, literals).
There are a bunch of places that look at either `prec < PREC_POSTFIX` or `prec >= PREC_POSTFIX`. But there is nothing that needs to distinguish PREC_POSTFIX and PREC_PAREN from one another.
d49994b060/compiler/rustc_ast/src/util/parser.rs (L236-L237)d49994b060/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/fn_ctxt/suggestions.rs (L2829)d49994b060/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/fn_ctxt/suggestions.rs (L1290)
In the interest of eliminating a distinction without a difference, this PR collapses these 2 levels down to 1.
There is exactly 1 case where an expression with PREC_POSTFIX precedence needs to be parenthesized in a location that an expression with PREC_PAREN would not, and that's when the receiver of ExprKind::MethodCall is ExprKind::Field. `x.f()` means a different thing than `(x.f)()`. But this does not justify having separate precedence levels because this special case in the grammar is not governed by precedence. Field access does not have "lower precedence than" method call syntax — you can tell because if it did, then `x.f[0].f()` wouldn't be able to have its unparenthesized field access in the receiver of a method call. Because this Field/MethodCall special case is not governed by precedence, it already requires special handling and is not affected by eliminating the PREC_POSTFIX precedence level.
d49994b060/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust/state/expr.rs (L217-L221)
resolve `clippy::invalid_paths` on `bool::then`
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: none
Fix incorrect suggestion for `manual_unwrap_or_default`
Fixes#12928.
If this not a "simple" pattern, better not emit the lint.
changelog: Fix incorrect suggestion for `manual_unwrap_or_default`
This removes the ICE codepaths for `f16` and `f128` in Clippy.
`rustc_apfloat` is used as a dependency for the parsing of these types,
since their `FromStr` implementation will not be available in the
standard library for a while.
Add more types to `is_from_proc_macro`
I've been running through going through all the lint implementations to clean them up. I'll be separating out the changes into small PRs to make reviewing easier.
changelog: none
Lint `manual_unwrap_or` for it let cases
This PR modifies `manual_unwrap_or` to lint for `if let` cases as well. This effort is part of the fixes desired by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12618
changelog:[`manual_unwrap_or`]: Lint for `if let` cases.
Rework `octal_escapes`
Main changes are not doing UTF-8 decoding, noting each occurrence as an individual lint emission, and narrowing the span to point to the escape itself.
changelog: none
Fix ICE in `upper_case_acronyms`
fixes#12284
The logic has been rewritten to avoid allocations. The old version allocated multiple vecs and strings for each identifier. The new logic allocates a single string only when the lint triggers.
This also no longer lints on strings which don't start with an uppercase letter (e.g. `something_FOO`).
changelog: none
* Delay the parsing of the use node
* Mark when the `SyntaxContext` changes rather than return `None`
* Return a default value if the HIR tree is broken rather than `None`
Avoid emitting `assigning_clones` when cloned data borrows from the place to clone into
Fixes#12444Fixes#12460Fixes#12749Fixes#12757Fixes#12929
I think the documentation for the function should describe what- and how this is fixing the issues well.
It avoids emitting a warning when the data being cloned borrows from the place to clone into, which is information that we can get from `PossibleBorrowerMap`. Unfortunately, it is a tiny bit tedious to match on the MIR like that and I'm not sure if this is possibly relying a bit too much on the exact MIR lowering for assignments.
Things left to do:
- [x] Handle place projections (or verify that they work as expected)
- [x] Handle non-`Drop` types
changelog: [`assigning_clones`]: avoid warning when the suggestion would lead to a borrow-check error
Fix doc nits
Clippy is wonderful, and reading its lints is a great way to learn about Rust. While doing this, I noticed a few little copyedits, such as adding trailing periods to sentences, or tweaking wording very slightly to improve its readability. I hope you will accept these suggestions as an act of love for the project, with my thanks for all the maintainers' hard work.
changelog: Docs [ mut_range_bound ]: fix doc nits
changelog: Docs [ needless_for_each ]: fix doc nits
changelog: Docs [ arc_with_non_send_sync ]: fix doc nits
changelog: Docs [ allow_attributes ]: fix doc nits
changelog: Docs [ allow_attributes_without_reason ]: fix doc nits
Let `qualify_min_const_fn` deal with drop terminators
Fixes#12677
The `method_accepts_droppable` check that was there seemed overly conservative.
> Returns true if any of the method parameters is a type that implements `Drop`.
> The method can't be made const then, because `drop` can't be const-evaluated.
Accepting parameters that implement `Drop` should still be fine as long as the parameter isn't actually dropped, as is the case in the linked issue where the droppable is moved into the return place. This more accurate analysis ("is there a `drop` terminator") is already done by `qualify_min_const_fn` [here](f5e250180c/clippy_utils/src/qualify_min_const_fn.rs (L298)), so I don't think this additional check is really necessary?
Fixing the other, second case in the linked issue was only slightly more involved, since `Vec::new()` is a function call that has the ability to panic, so there must be a `drop()` terminator for cleanup, however we should be able to freely ignore that. [Const checking ignores cleanup blocks](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/transform/check_consts/check.rs#L382-L388), so we should, too?
r? `@Jarcho`
----
changelog: [`missing_const_for_fn`]: continue linting on fns with parameters implementing `Drop` if they're not actually dropped
Don't lint indexing_slicing lints on proc macros
This pr fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12824
Even though the issue mentions the indexing case only, it was easy to apply the fix to the slicing case as well.
changelog: [`out_of_bounds_indexing`, `indexing_slicing`]: Don't lint on procedural macros.
Handle single chars with `to_string()` for `single_char_add_str`
Add support for single chars / literals with `to_string()` call for `push_str()` and `insert_str()`.
changelog: [`single_char_add_str`]: handle single chars with `to_string()` call
Closes#12775
Normalize type aliases when checking significant drops.
fixes#10750
No test as I'm not sure exactly how the type alias caused a stack overflow here. Also removes an unnecessary `HashSet`.
changelog: none