error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:20:25 | 20 | fn add(self, other: T) -> T { self } | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` | = note: `-D use-self` implied by `-D warnings` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:20:31 | 20 | fn add(self, other: T) -> T { self } | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:23:26 | 23 | fn sub(&self, other: T) -> &T { self } // no error, self is a ref | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:23:33 | 23 | fn sub(&self, other: T) -> &T { self } // no error, self is a ref | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:24:21 | 24 | fn div(self) -> T { self } // no error, different #arguments | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:25:25 | 25 | fn rem(self, other: T) { } // no error, wrong return type | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: defining a method called `add` on this type; consider implementing the `std::ops::Add` trait or choosing a less ambiguous name --> $DIR/methods.rs:20:5 | 20 | fn add(self, other: T) -> T { self } | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D should-implement-trait` implied by `-D warnings` error: defining a method called `drop` on this type; consider implementing the `std::ops::Drop` trait or choosing a less ambiguous name --> $DIR/methods.rs:21:5 | 21 | fn drop(&mut self) { } | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: methods called `into_*` usually take self by value; consider choosing a less ambiguous name --> $DIR/methods.rs:28:17 | 28 | fn into_u16(&self) -> u16 { 0 } | ^^^^^ | = note: `-D wrong-self-convention` implied by `-D warnings` error: methods called `to_*` usually take self by reference; consider choosing a less ambiguous name --> $DIR/methods.rs:30:21 | 30 | fn to_something(self) -> u32 { 0 } | ^^^^ error: methods called `new` usually take no self; consider choosing a less ambiguous name --> $DIR/methods.rs:32:12 | 32 | fn new(self) {} | ^^^^ error: methods called `new` usually return `Self` --> $DIR/methods.rs:32:5 | 32 | fn new(self) {} | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D new-ret-no-self` implied by `-D warnings` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:76:24 | 76 | fn new() -> Option> { None } | ^^^^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:80:19 | 80 | type Output = T; | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:81:25 | 81 | fn mul(self, other: T) -> T { self } // no error, obviously | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:81:31 | 81 | fn mul(self, other: T) -> T { self } // no error, obviously | ^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: called `map(f).unwrap_or(a)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or(a, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:99:13 | 99 | let _ = opt.map(|x| x + 1) | _____________^ 100 | | 101 | | .unwrap_or(0); // should lint even though this call is on a separate line | |____________________________^ | = note: `-D option-map-unwrap-or` implied by `-D warnings` = note: replace `map(|x| x + 1).unwrap_or(0)` with `map_or(0, |x| x + 1)` error: called `map(f).unwrap_or(a)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or(a, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:103:13 | 103 | let _ = opt.map(|x| { | _____________^ 104 | | x + 1 105 | | } 106 | | ).unwrap_or(0); | |____________________________^ error: called `map(f).unwrap_or(a)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or(a, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:107:13 | 107 | let _ = opt.map(|x| x + 1) | _____________^ 108 | | .unwrap_or({ 109 | | 0 110 | | }); | |__________________^ error: called `map(f).unwrap_or_else(g)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or_else(g, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:116:13 | 116 | let _ = opt.map(|x| x + 1) | _____________^ 117 | | 118 | | .unwrap_or_else(|| 0); // should lint even though this call is on a separate line | |____________________________________^ | = note: `-D option-map-unwrap-or-else` implied by `-D warnings` = note: replace `map(|x| x + 1).unwrap_or_else(|| 0)` with `map_or_else(|| 0, |x| x + 1)` error: called `map(f).unwrap_or_else(g)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or_else(g, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:120:13 | 120 | let _ = opt.map(|x| { | _____________^ 121 | | x + 1 122 | | } 123 | | ).unwrap_or_else(|| 0); | |____________________________________^ error: called `map(f).unwrap_or_else(g)` on an Option value. This can be done more directly by calling `map_or_else(g, f)` instead --> $DIR/methods.rs:124:13 | 124 | let _ = opt.map(|x| x + 1) | _____________^ 125 | | .unwrap_or_else(|| 126 | | 0 127 | | ); | |_________________^ error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:153:24 | 153 | fn filter(self) -> IteratorFalsePositives { | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:157:22 | 157 | fn next(self) -> IteratorFalsePositives { | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:177:32 | 177 | fn skip(self, _: usize) -> IteratorFalsePositives { | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: called `filter(p).next()` on an `Iterator`. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `.find(p)` instead. --> $DIR/methods.rs:196:13 | 196 | let _ = v.iter().filter(|&x| *x < 0).next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D filter-next` implied by `-D warnings` = note: replace `filter(|&x| *x < 0).next()` with `find(|&x| *x < 0)` error: called `filter(p).next()` on an `Iterator`. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `.find(p)` instead. --> $DIR/methods.rs:199:13 | 199 | let _ = v.iter().filter(|&x| { | _____________^ 200 | | *x < 0 201 | | } 202 | | ).next(); | |___________________________^ error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with find. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:214:13 | 214 | let _ = v.iter().find(|&x| *x < 0).is_some(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D search-is-some` implied by `-D warnings` = note: replace `find(|&x| *x < 0).is_some()` with `any(|&x| *x < 0)` error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with find. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:217:13 | 217 | let _ = v.iter().find(|&x| { | _____________^ 218 | | *x < 0 219 | | } 220 | | ).is_some(); | |______________________________^ error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with position. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:223:13 | 223 | let _ = v.iter().position(|&x| x < 0).is_some(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: replace `position(|&x| x < 0).is_some()` with `any(|&x| x < 0)` error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with position. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:226:13 | 226 | let _ = v.iter().position(|&x| { | _____________^ 227 | | x < 0 228 | | } 229 | | ).is_some(); | |______________________________^ error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with rposition. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:232:13 | 232 | let _ = v.iter().rposition(|&x| x < 0).is_some(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: replace `rposition(|&x| x < 0).is_some()` with `any(|&x| x < 0)` error: called `is_some()` after searching an `Iterator` with rposition. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `any()`. --> $DIR/methods.rs:235:13 | 235 | let _ = v.iter().rposition(|&x| { | _____________^ 236 | | x < 0 237 | | } 238 | | ).is_some(); | |______________________________^ error: unnecessary structure name repetition --> $DIR/methods.rs:252:21 | 252 | fn new() -> Foo { Foo } | ^^^ help: use the applicable keyword: `Self` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:270:5 | 270 | with_constructor.unwrap_or(make()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_constructor.unwrap_or_else(make)` | = note: `-D or-fun-call` implied by `-D warnings` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a call to `new` --> $DIR/methods.rs:273:5 | 273 | with_new.unwrap_or(Vec::new()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_new.unwrap_or_default()` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:276:5 | 276 | with_const_args.unwrap_or(Vec::with_capacity(12)); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_const_args.unwrap_or_else(|| Vec::with_capacity(12))` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:279:5 | 279 | with_err.unwrap_or(make()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_err.unwrap_or_else(|_| make())` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:282:5 | 282 | with_err_args.unwrap_or(Vec::with_capacity(12)); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_err_args.unwrap_or_else(|_| Vec::with_capacity(12))` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a call to `default` --> $DIR/methods.rs:285:5 | 285 | with_default_trait.unwrap_or(Default::default()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_default_trait.unwrap_or_default()` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a call to `default` --> $DIR/methods.rs:288:5 | 288 | with_default_type.unwrap_or(u64::default()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_default_type.unwrap_or_default()` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:291:5 | 291 | with_vec.unwrap_or(vec![]); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `with_vec.unwrap_or_else(|| < [ _ ] > :: into_vec ( box [ $ ( $ x ) , * ] ))` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:296:5 | 296 | without_default.unwrap_or(Foo::new()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `without_default.unwrap_or_else(Foo::new)` error: use of `or_insert` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:299:5 | 299 | map.entry(42).or_insert(String::new()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `map.entry(42).or_insert_with(String::new)` error: use of `or_insert` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:302:5 | 302 | btree.entry(42).or_insert(String::new()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `btree.entry(42).or_insert_with(String::new)` error: use of `unwrap_or` followed by a function call --> $DIR/methods.rs:305:13 | 305 | let _ = stringy.unwrap_or("".to_owned()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `stringy.unwrap_or_else(|| "".to_owned())` error: called `.iter().nth()` on a Vec. Calling `.get()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:316:23 | 316 | let bad_vec = some_vec.iter().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D iter-nth` implied by `-D warnings` error: called `.iter().nth()` on a slice. Calling `.get()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:317:26 | 317 | let bad_slice = &some_vec[..].iter().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.iter().nth()` on a slice. Calling `.get()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:318:31 | 318 | let bad_boxed_slice = boxed_slice.iter().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.iter().nth()` on a VecDeque. Calling `.get()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:319:29 | 319 | let bad_vec_deque = some_vec_deque.iter().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.iter_mut().nth()` on a Vec. Calling `.get_mut()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:324:23 | 324 | let bad_vec = some_vec.iter_mut().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.iter_mut().nth()` on a slice. Calling `.get_mut()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:327:26 | 327 | let bad_slice = &some_vec[..].iter_mut().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.iter_mut().nth()` on a VecDeque. Calling `.get_mut()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:330:29 | 330 | let bad_vec_deque = some_vec_deque.iter_mut().nth(3); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `skip(x).next()` on an iterator. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `nth(x)` --> $DIR/methods.rs:342:13 | 342 | let _ = some_vec.iter().skip(42).next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D iter-skip-next` implied by `-D warnings` error: called `skip(x).next()` on an iterator. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `nth(x)` --> $DIR/methods.rs:343:13 | 343 | let _ = some_vec.iter().cycle().skip(42).next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `skip(x).next()` on an iterator. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `nth(x)` --> $DIR/methods.rs:344:13 | 344 | let _ = (1..10).skip(10).next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `skip(x).next()` on an iterator. This is more succinctly expressed by calling `nth(x)` --> $DIR/methods.rs:345:14 | 345 | let _ = &some_vec[..].iter().skip(3).next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a slice. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:371:17 | 371 | let _ = boxed_slice.get(1).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&boxed_slice[1]` | = note: `-D get-unwrap` implied by `-D warnings` error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a slice. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:372:17 | 372 | let _ = some_slice.get(0).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&some_slice[0]` error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a Vec. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:373:17 | 373 | let _ = some_vec.get(0).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&some_vec[0]` error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a VecDeque. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:374:17 | 374 | let _ = some_vecdeque.get(0).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&some_vecdeque[0]` error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a HashMap. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:375:17 | 375 | let _ = some_hashmap.get(&1).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&some_hashmap[&1]` error: called `.get().unwrap()` on a BTreeMap. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:376:17 | 376 | let _ = some_btreemap.get(&1).unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&some_btreemap[&1]` error: called `.get_mut().unwrap()` on a slice. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:381:10 | 381 | *boxed_slice.get_mut(0).unwrap() = 1; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&mut boxed_slice[0]` error: called `.get_mut().unwrap()` on a slice. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:382:10 | 382 | *some_slice.get_mut(0).unwrap() = 1; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&mut some_slice[0]` error: called `.get_mut().unwrap()` on a Vec. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:383:10 | 383 | *some_vec.get_mut(0).unwrap() = 1; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&mut some_vec[0]` error: called `.get_mut().unwrap()` on a VecDeque. Using `[]` is more clear and more concise --> $DIR/methods.rs:384:10 | 384 | *some_vecdeque.get_mut(0).unwrap() = 1; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `&mut some_vecdeque[0]` error: used unwrap() on an Option value. If you don't want to handle the None case gracefully, consider using expect() to provide a better panic message --> $DIR/methods.rs:398:13 | 398 | let _ = opt.unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D option-unwrap-used` implied by `-D warnings` error: used unwrap() on a Result value. If you don't want to handle the Err case gracefully, consider using expect() to provide a better panic message --> $DIR/methods.rs:401:13 | 401 | let _ = res.unwrap(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D result-unwrap-used` implied by `-D warnings` error: called `ok().expect()` on a Result value. You can call `expect` directly on the `Result` --> $DIR/methods.rs:403:5 | 403 | res.ok().expect("disaster!"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D ok-expect` implied by `-D warnings` error: called `ok().expect()` on a Result value. You can call `expect` directly on the `Result` --> $DIR/methods.rs:409:5 | 409 | res3.ok().expect("whoof"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `ok().expect()` on a Result value. You can call `expect` directly on the `Result` --> $DIR/methods.rs:411:5 | 411 | res4.ok().expect("argh"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `ok().expect()` on a Result value. You can call `expect` directly on the `Result` --> $DIR/methods.rs:413:5 | 413 | res5.ok().expect("oops"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `ok().expect()` on a Result value. You can call `expect` directly on the `Result` --> $DIR/methods.rs:415:5 | 415 | res6.ok().expect("meh"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: you should use the `starts_with` method --> $DIR/methods.rs:427:5 | 427 | "".chars().next() == Some(' '); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: like this: `"".starts_with(' ')` | = note: `-D chars-next-cmp` implied by `-D warnings` error: you should use the `starts_with` method --> $DIR/methods.rs:428:5 | 428 | Some(' ') != "".chars().next(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: like this: `!"".starts_with(' ')` error: calling `.extend(_.chars())` --> $DIR/methods.rs:437:5 | 437 | s.extend(abc.chars()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `s.push_str(abc)` | = note: `-D string-extend-chars` implied by `-D warnings` error: calling `.extend(_.chars())` --> $DIR/methods.rs:440:5 | 440 | s.extend("abc".chars()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `s.push_str("abc")` error: calling `.extend(_.chars())` --> $DIR/methods.rs:443:5 | 443 | s.extend(def.chars()); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `s.push_str(&def)` error: using `clone` on a `Copy` type --> $DIR/methods.rs:454:5 | 454 | 42.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^ help: try removing the `clone` call: `42` | = note: `-D clone-on-copy` implied by `-D warnings` error: using `clone` on a `Copy` type --> $DIR/methods.rs:458:5 | 458 | (&42).clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try dereferencing it: `*(&42)` error: using '.clone()' on a ref-counted pointer --> $DIR/methods.rs:468:5 | 468 | rc.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `Rc::clone(&rc)` | = note: `-D clone-on-ref-ptr` implied by `-D warnings` error: using '.clone()' on a ref-counted pointer --> $DIR/methods.rs:471:5 | 471 | arc.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `Arc::clone(&arc)` error: using '.clone()' on a ref-counted pointer --> $DIR/methods.rs:474:5 | 474 | rcweak.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `Weak::clone(&rcweak)` error: using '.clone()' on a ref-counted pointer --> $DIR/methods.rs:477:5 | 477 | arc_weak.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `Weak::clone(&arc_weak)` error: using `clone` on a `Copy` type --> $DIR/methods.rs:484:5 | 484 | t.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^ help: try removing the `clone` call: `t` error: using `clone` on a `Copy` type --> $DIR/methods.rs:486:5 | 486 | Some(t).clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try removing the `clone` call: `Some(t)` error: using `clone` on a double-reference; this will copy the reference instead of cloning the inner type --> $DIR/methods.rs:492:22 | 492 | let z: &Vec<_> = y.clone(); | ^^^^^^^^^ help: try dereferencing it: `(*y).clone()` | = note: `-D clone-double-ref` implied by `-D warnings` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:499:13 | 499 | x.split("x"); | --------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.split('x')` | = note: `-D single-char-pattern` implied by `-D warnings` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:516:16 | 516 | x.contains("x"); | -----------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.contains('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:517:19 | 517 | x.starts_with("x"); | --------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.starts_with('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:518:17 | 518 | x.ends_with("x"); | ------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.ends_with('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:519:12 | 519 | x.find("x"); | -------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.find('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:520:13 | 520 | x.rfind("x"); | --------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rfind('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:521:14 | 521 | x.rsplit("x"); | ---------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rsplit('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:522:24 | 522 | x.split_terminator("x"); | -------------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.split_terminator('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:523:25 | 523 | x.rsplit_terminator("x"); | --------------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rsplit_terminator('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:524:17 | 524 | x.splitn(0, "x"); | ------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.splitn(0, 'x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:525:18 | 525 | x.rsplitn(0, "x"); | -------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rsplitn(0, 'x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:526:15 | 526 | x.matches("x"); | ----------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.matches('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:527:16 | 527 | x.rmatches("x"); | -----------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rmatches('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:528:21 | 528 | x.match_indices("x"); | ----------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.match_indices('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:529:22 | 529 | x.rmatch_indices("x"); | -----------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.rmatch_indices('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:530:25 | 530 | x.trim_left_matches("x"); | --------------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.trim_left_matches('x')` error: single-character string constant used as pattern --> $DIR/methods.rs:531:26 | 531 | x.trim_right_matches("x"); | ---------------------^^^- help: try using a char instead: `x.trim_right_matches('x')` error: you are getting the inner pointer of a temporary `CString` --> $DIR/methods.rs:541:5 | 541 | CString::new("foo").unwrap().as_ptr(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D temporary-cstring-as-ptr` implied by `-D warnings` = note: that pointer will be invalid outside this expression help: assign the `CString` to a variable to extend its lifetime --> $DIR/methods.rs:541:5 | 541 | CString::new("foo").unwrap().as_ptr(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ error: called `cloned().collect()` on a slice to create a `Vec`. Calling `to_vec()` is both faster and more readable --> $DIR/methods.rs:546:27 | 546 | let v2 : Vec = v.iter().cloned().collect(); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: `-D iter-cloned-collect` implied by `-D warnings` error: aborting due to 107 previous errors