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#rust-clippy Build Status

A collection of lints that give helpful tips to newbies and catch oversights.

Jump to usage instructions

##Lints There are 56 lints included in this crate:

name default meaning
approx_constant warn the approximate of a known float constant (in std::f64::consts or std::f32::consts) is found; suggests to use the constant
bad_bit_mask warn expressions of the form _ & mask == select that will only ever return true or false (because in the example select containing bits that mask doesn't have)
box_vec warn usage of Box<Vec<T>>, vector elements are already on the heap
cast_possible_truncation allow casts that may cause truncation of the value, e.g x as u8 where x: u32, or x as i32 where x: f32
cast_possible_wrap allow casts that may cause wrapping around the value, e.g x as i32 where x: u32 and x > i32::MAX
cast_precision_loss allow casts that cause loss of precision, e.g x as f32 where x: u64
cast_sign_loss allow casts from signed types to unsigned types, e.g x as u32 where x: i32
cmp_nan deny comparisons to NAN (which will always return false, which is probably not intended)
cmp_owned warn creating owned instances for comparing with others, e.g. x == "foo".to_string()
collapsible_if warn two nested if-expressions can be collapsed into one, e.g. if x { if y { foo() } } can be written as if x && y { foo() }
eq_op warn equal operands on both sides of a comparison or bitwise combination (e.g. x == x)
explicit_iter_loop warn for-looping over _.iter() or _.iter_mut() when &_ or &mut _ would do
float_cmp warn using == or != on float values (as floating-point operations usually involve rounding errors, it is always better to check for approximate equality within small bounds)
identity_op warn using identity operations, e.g. x + 0 or y / 1
ineffective_bit_mask warn expressions where a bit mask will be rendered useless by a comparison, e.g. `(x
inline_always warn #[inline(always)] is a bad idea in most cases
iter_next_loop warn for-looping over _.next() which is probably not intended
len_without_is_empty warn traits and impls that have .len() but not .is_empty()
len_zero warn checking .len() == 0 or .len() > 0 (or similar) when .is_empty() could be used instead
let_and_return warn creating a let-binding and then immediately returning it like let x = expr; x at the end of a function
let_unit_value warn creating a let binding to a value of unit type, which usually can't be used afterwards
linkedlist warn usage of LinkedList, usually a vector is faster, or a more specialized data structure like a RingBuf
match_ref_pats warn a match has all arms prefixed with &; the match expression can be dereferenced instead
min_max warn min(_, max(_, _)) (or vice versa) with bounds clamping the result to a constant
modulo_one warn taking a number modulo 1, which always returns 0
mut_mut allow usage of double-mut refs, e.g. &mut &mut ... (either copy'n'paste error, or shows a fundamental misunderstanding of references)
needless_bool warn if-statements with plain booleans in the then- and else-clause, e.g. if p { true } else { false }
needless_lifetimes warn using explicit lifetimes for references in function arguments when elision rules would allow omitting them
needless_range_loop warn for-looping over a range of indices where an iterator over items would do
needless_return warn using a return statement like return expr; where an expression would suffice
non_ascii_literal allow using any literal non-ASCII chars in a string literal; suggests using the \u escape instead
option_unwrap_used allow using Option.unwrap(), which should at least get a better message using expect()
precedence warn catches operations where precedence may be unclear. See the wiki for a list of cases caught
ptr_arg allow fn arguments of the type &Vec<...> or &String, suggesting to use &[...] or &str instead, respectively
range_step_by_zero warn using Range::step_by(0), which produces an infinite iterator
redundant_closure warn using redundant closures, i.e. `
redundant_pattern warn using name @ _ in a pattern
result_unwrap_used allow using Result.unwrap(), which might be better handled
shadow_reuse allow rebinding a name to an expression that re-uses the original value, e.g. let x = x + 1
shadow_same allow rebinding a name to itself, e.g. let mut x = &mut x
shadow_unrelated allow The name is re-bound without even using the original value
should_implement_trait warn defining a method that should be implementing a std trait
single_match warn a match statement with a single nontrivial arm (i.e, where the other arm is _ => {}) is used; recommends if let instead
str_to_string warn using to_string() on a str, which should be to_owned()
string_add allow using x + .. where x is a String; suggests using push_str() instead
string_add_assign allow using x = x + .. where x is a String; suggests using push_str() instead
string_to_string warn calling String.to_string() which is a no-op
toplevel_ref_arg warn a function argument is declared ref (i.e. fn foo(ref x: u8), but not fn foo((ref x, ref y): (u8, u8)))
type_complexity warn usage of very complex types; recommends factoring out parts into type definitions
unicode_not_nfc allow using a unicode literal not in NFC normal form (see http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/ for further information)
unit_cmp warn comparing unit values (which is always true or false, respectively)
unused_collect warn collect()ing an iterator without using the result; this is usually better written as a for loop
while_let_loop warn loop { if let { ... } else break } can be written as a while let loop
wrong_pub_self_convention allow defining a public method named with an established prefix (like "into_") that takes self with the wrong convention
wrong_self_convention warn defining a method named with an established prefix (like "into_") that takes self with the wrong convention
zero_width_space deny using a zero-width space in a string literal, which is confusing

More to come, please file an issue if you have ideas!

##Usage

Compiler plugins are highly unstable and will only work with a nightly Rust for now. Since stable Rust is backwards compatible, you should be able to compile your stable programs with nightly Rust with clippy plugged in to circumvent this.

Add in your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
clippy = "*"

You may also use cargo clippy, a custom cargo subcommand that runs clippy on a given project.

Sample main.rs:

#![feature(plugin)]

#![plugin(clippy)]


fn main(){
    let x = Some(1u8);
    match x {
        Some(y) => println!("{:?}", y),
        _ => ()
    }
}

Produces this warning:

src/main.rs:8:5: 11:6 warning: you seem to be trying to use match for destructuring a single type. Consider using `if let`, #[warn(single_match)] on by default
src/main.rs:8     match x {
src/main.rs:9         Some(y) => println!("{:?}", y),
src/main.rs:10         _ => ()
src/main.rs:11     }
src/main.rs:8:5: 11:6 help: Try
if let Some(y) = x { println!("{:?}", y) }

You can add options to allow/warn/deny:

  • the whole set using the clippy lint group (#![deny(clippy)], etc)
  • only some lints (#![deny(single_match, box_vec)], etc)
  • allow/warn/deny can be limited to a single function or module using #[allow(...)], etc

Note: deny produces errors instead of warnings

To have cargo compile your crate with clippy without needing #![plugin(clippy)] in your code, you can use:

cargo rustc -- -L /path/to/clippy_so -Z extra-plugins=clippy

Be sure that clippy was compiled with the same version of rustc that cargo invokes here!

##License Licensed under MPL. If you're having issues with the license, let me know and I'll try to change it to something more permissive.