Skip to content

Commit 5a341ec

Browse files
committed
Auto merge of #25384 - steveklabnik:rollup, r=steveklabnik
- Successful merges: #25308, #25360, #25363, #25365, #25371, #25372, #25376, #25379, #25382 - Failed merges:
2 parents 222cd73 + 87c903a commit 5a341ec

File tree

10 files changed

+252
-31
lines changed

10 files changed

+252
-31
lines changed

src/doc/reference.md

+60-7
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1346,6 +1346,8 @@ vtable when the trait is used as a [trait object](#trait-objects).
13461346
Traits are implemented for specific types through separate
13471347
[implementations](#implementations).
13481348

1349+
Consider the following trait:
1350+
13491351
```
13501352
# type Surface = i32;
13511353
# type BoundingBox = i32;
@@ -1360,6 +1362,20 @@ This defines a trait with two methods. All values that have
13601362
`draw` and `bounding_box` methods called, using `value.bounding_box()`
13611363
[syntax](#method-call-expressions).
13621364

1365+
Traits can include default implementations of methods, as in:
1366+
1367+
```
1368+
trait Foo {
1369+
fn bar(&self);
1370+
1371+
fn baz(&self) { println!("We called baz."); }
1372+
}
1373+
```
1374+
1375+
Here the `baz` method has a default implementation, so types that implement
1376+
`Foo` need only implement `bar`. It is also possible for implementing types
1377+
to override a method that has a default implementation.
1378+
13631379
Type parameters can be specified for a trait to make it generic. These appear
13641380
after the trait name, using the same syntax used in [generic
13651381
functions](#generic-functions).
@@ -1372,6 +1388,35 @@ trait Seq<T> {
13721388
}
13731389
```
13741390

1391+
It is also possible to define associated types for a trait. Consider the
1392+
following example of a `Container` trait. Notice how the type is available
1393+
for use in the method signatures:
1394+
1395+
```
1396+
trait Container {
1397+
type E;
1398+
fn empty() -> Self;
1399+
fn insert(&mut self, Self::E);
1400+
}
1401+
```
1402+
1403+
In order for a type to implement this trait, it must not only provide
1404+
implementations for every method, but it must specify the type `E`. Here's
1405+
an implementation of `Container` for the standard library type `Vec`:
1406+
1407+
```
1408+
# trait Container {
1409+
# type E;
1410+
# fn empty() -> Self;
1411+
# fn insert(&mut self, Self::E);
1412+
# }
1413+
impl<T> Container for Vec<T> {
1414+
type E = T;
1415+
fn empty() -> Vec<T> { Vec::new() }
1416+
fn insert(&mut self, x: T) { self.push(x); }
1417+
}
1418+
```
1419+
13751420
Generic functions may use traits as _bounds_ on their type parameters. This
13761421
will have two effects: only types that have the trait may instantiate the
13771422
parameter, and within the generic function, the methods of the trait can be
@@ -3470,13 +3515,21 @@ more of the closure traits:
34703515

34713516
### Trait objects
34723517

3473-
Every trait item (see [traits](#traits)) defines a type with the same name as
3474-
the trait. This type is called the _trait object_ of the trait. Trait objects
3475-
permit "late binding" of methods, dispatched using _virtual method tables_
3476-
("vtables"). Whereas most calls to trait methods are "early bound" (statically
3477-
resolved) to specific implementations at compile time, a call to a method on an
3478-
trait objects is only resolved to a vtable entry at compile time. The actual
3479-
implementation for each vtable entry can vary on an object-by-object basis.
3518+
In Rust, a type like `&SomeTrait` or `Box<SomeTrait>` is called a _trait object_.
3519+
Each instance of a trait object includes:
3520+
3521+
- a pointer to an instance of a type `T` that implements `SomeTrait`
3522+
- a _virtual method table_, often just called a _vtable_, which contains, for
3523+
each method of `SomeTrait` that `T` implements, a pointer to `T`'s
3524+
implementation (i.e. a function pointer).
3525+
3526+
The purpose of trait objects is to permit "late binding" of methods. A call to
3527+
a method on a trait object is only resolved to a vtable entry at compile time.
3528+
The actual implementation for each vtable entry can vary on an object-by-object
3529+
basis.
3530+
3531+
Note that for a trait object to be instantiated, the trait must be
3532+
_object-safe_. Object safety rules are defined in [RFC 255][rfc255].
34803533

34813534
Given a pointer-typed expression `E` of type `&T` or `Box<T>`, where `T`
34823535
implements trait `R`, casting `E` to the corresponding pointer type `&R` or

src/doc/trpl/README.md

+1-1
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ data, we call the `clone()` method. In this example, `y` is no longer a referenc
175175
to the vector stored in `x`, but a copy of its first element, `"Hello"`. Now
176176
that we don’t have a reference, our `push()` works just fine.
177177

178-
[move]: move-semantics.html
178+
[move]: ownership.html#move-semantics
179179

180180
If we truly want a reference, we need the other option: ensure that our reference
181181
goes out of scope before we try to do the mutation. That looks like this:

src/doc/trpl/dining-philosophers.md

+1-1
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -450,7 +450,7 @@ which blocks execution until the thread has completed execution. This ensures
450450
that the threads complete their work before the program exits.
451451

452452
If you run this program, you’ll see that the philosophers eat out of order!
453-
We have mult-threading!
453+
We have multi-threading!
454454

455455
```text
456456
Gilles Deleuze is eating.

src/doc/trpl/error-handling.md

+2
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -181,6 +181,8 @@ match version {
181181
This function makes use of an enum, `ParseError`, to enumerate the various
182182
errors that can occur.
183183

184+
The [`Debug`](../std/fmt/trait.Debug.html) trait is what lets us print the enum value using the `{:?}` format operation.
185+
184186
# Non-recoverable errors with `panic!`
185187

186188
In the case of an error that is unexpected and not recoverable, the `panic!`

src/doc/trpl/the-stack-and-the-heap.md

+1-1
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -266,7 +266,7 @@ Rust programs use [jemalloc][jemalloc] for this purpose.
266266
Anyway, back to our example. Since this memory is on the heap, it can stay
267267
alive longer than the function which allocates the box. In this case, however,
268268
it doesn’t.[^moving] When the function is over, we need to free the stack frame
269-
for `main()`. `Box<T>`, though, has a trick up its sleve: [Drop][drop]. The
269+
for `main()`. `Box<T>`, though, has a trick up its sleeve: [Drop][drop]. The
270270
implementation of `Drop` for `Box` deallocates the memory that was allocated
271271
when it was created. Great! So when `x` goes away, it first frees the memory
272272
allocated on the heap:

src/libcollections/vec.rs

+12-10
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -18,39 +18,41 @@
1818
//! You can explicitly create a `Vec<T>` with `new()`:
1919
//!
2020
//! ```
21-
//! let xs: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
21+
//! let v: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
2222
//! ```
2323
//!
2424
//! ...or by using the `vec!` macro:
2525
//!
2626
//! ```
27-
//! let ys: Vec<i32> = vec![];
27+
//! let v: Vec<i32> = vec![];
2828
//!
29-
//! let zs = vec![1i32, 2, 3, 4, 5];
29+
//! let v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
30+
//!
31+
//! let v = vec![0; 10]; // ten zeroes
3032
//! ```
3133
//!
3234
//! You can `push` values onto the end of a vector (which will grow the vector as needed):
3335
//!
3436
//! ```
35-
//! let mut xs = vec![1i32, 2];
37+
//! let mut v = vec![1, 2];
3638
//!
37-
//! xs.push(3);
39+
//! v.push(3);
3840
//! ```
3941
//!
4042
//! Popping values works in much the same way:
4143
//!
4244
//! ```
43-
//! let mut xs = vec![1i32, 2];
45+
//! let mut v = vec![1, 2];
4446
//!
45-
//! let two = xs.pop();
47+
//! let two = v.pop();
4648
//! ```
4749
//!
4850
//! Vectors also support indexing (through the `Index` and `IndexMut` traits):
4951
//!
5052
//! ```
51-
//! let mut xs = vec![1i32, 2, 3];
52-
//! let three = xs[2];
53-
//! xs[1] = xs[1] + 5;
53+
//! let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3];
54+
//! let three = v[2];
55+
//! v[1] = v[1] + 5;
5456
//! ```
5557
5658
#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]

src/libcore/macros.rs

+1-1
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ macro_rules! try {
167167
})
168168
}
169169

170-
/// Use the `format!` syntax to write data into a buffer of type `&mut Writer`.
170+
/// Use the `format!` syntax to write data into a buffer of type `&mut Write`.
171171
/// See `std::fmt` for more information.
172172
///
173173
/// # Examples

src/librustc/diagnostics.rs

+2-2
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -427,8 +427,8 @@ be taken.
427427

428428
E0271: r##"
429429
This is because of a type mismatch between the associated type of some
430-
trait (e.g. T::Bar, where T implements trait Quux { type Bar; })
431-
and another type U that is required to be equal to T::Bar, but is not.
430+
trait (e.g. `T::Bar`, where `T` implements `trait Quux { type Bar; }`)
431+
and another type `U` that is required to be equal to `T::Bar`, but is not.
432432
Examples follow.
433433
434434
Here is a basic example:

src/librustc_resolve/diagnostics.rs

+5
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ Imports (`use` statements) are not allowed after non-item statements, such as
2020
variable declarations and expression statements.
2121
2222
Here is an example that demonstrates the error:
23+
2324
```
2425
fn f() {
2526
// Variable declaration before import
@@ -33,6 +34,7 @@ The solution is to declare the imports at the top of the block, function, or
3334
file.
3435
3536
Here is the previous example again, with the correct order:
37+
3638
```
3739
fn f() {
3840
use std::io::Read;
@@ -52,6 +54,7 @@ The name chosen for an external crate conflicts with another external crate that
5254
has been imported into the current module.
5355
5456
Wrong example:
57+
5558
```
5659
extern crate a;
5760
extern crate crate_a as a;
@@ -61,6 +64,7 @@ The solution is to choose a different name that doesn't conflict with any
6164
external crate imported into the current module.
6265
6366
Correct example:
67+
6468
```
6569
extern crate a;
6670
extern crate crate_a as other_name;
@@ -71,6 +75,7 @@ E0260: r##"
7175
The name for an item declaration conflicts with an external crate's name.
7276
7377
For instance,
78+
7479
```
7580
extern crate abc;
7681

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)