Skip to content

Commit 6c6b2d1

Browse files
committed
---
yaml --- r: 132451 b: refs/heads/dist-snap c: cf27910 h: refs/heads/master i: 132449: b5f3147 132447: 7f084fa v: v3
1 parent 7df22ab commit 6c6b2d1

File tree

39 files changed

+180
-311
lines changed

39 files changed

+180
-311
lines changed

[refs]

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ refs/heads/try: 457a3c991d79b971be07fce75f9d0c12848fb37c
66
refs/tags/release-0.1: 1f5c5126e96c79d22cb7862f75304136e204f105
77
refs/heads/ndm: f3868061cd7988080c30d6d5bf352a5a5fe2460b
88
refs/heads/try2: 147ecfdd8221e4a4d4e090486829a06da1e0ca3c
9-
refs/heads/dist-snap: 4d4eb10230a58071c6c83f3009c74040b700fbb7
9+
refs/heads/dist-snap: cf279105d5369b76468935ed0b333da94437e7dc
1010
refs/tags/release-0.2: c870d2dffb391e14efb05aa27898f1f6333a9596
1111
refs/tags/release-0.3: b5f0d0f648d9a6153664837026ba1be43d3e2503
1212
refs/heads/try3: 9387340aab40a73e8424c48fd42f0c521a4875c0

branches/dist-snap/mk/docs.mk

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ doc/$(1)/:
285285
$(2) += doc/$(1)/index.html
286286
doc/$(1)/index.html: CFG_COMPILER_HOST_TRIPLE = $(CFG_TARGET)
287287
doc/$(1)/index.html: $$(LIB_DOC_DEP_$(1)) doc/$(1)/
288-
@$$(call E, rustdoc: $$@)
288+
@$$(call E, rustdoc $$@)
289289
$$(Q)$$(RUSTDOC) --cfg dox --cfg stage2 $$<
290290
endef
291291

branches/dist-snap/src/compiletest/common.rs

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ pub struct Config {
136136
// Extra parameter to run adb on arm-linux-androideabi
137137
pub adb_path: String,
138138

139-
// Extra parameter to run test suite on arm-linux-androideabi
139+
// Extra parameter to run test sute on arm-linux-androideabi
140140
pub adb_test_dir: String,
141141

142142
// status whether android device available or not

branches/dist-snap/src/compiletest/runtest.rs

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -325,7 +325,7 @@ fn run_debuginfo_gdb_test(config: &Config, props: &TestProps, testfile: &Path) {
325325
let DebuggerCommands { commands, check_lines, .. } = parse_debugger_commands(testfile, "gdb");
326326
let mut cmds = commands.connect("\n");
327327

328-
// compile test file (it should have 'compile-flags:-g' in the header)
328+
// compile test file (it shoud have 'compile-flags:-g' in the header)
329329
let compiler_run_result = compile_test(config, props, testfile);
330330
if !compiler_run_result.status.success() {
331331
fatal_proc_rec("compilation failed!", &compiler_run_result);
@@ -520,7 +520,7 @@ fn run_debuginfo_lldb_test(config: &Config, props: &TestProps, testfile: &Path)
520520

521521
let config = &mut config;
522522

523-
// compile test file (it should have 'compile-flags:-g' in the header)
523+
// compile test file (it shoud have 'compile-flags:-g' in the header)
524524
let compile_result = compile_test(config, props, testfile);
525525
if !compile_result.status.success() {
526526
fatal_proc_rec("compilation failed!", &compile_result);

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/complement-design-faq.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% The Rust Design FAQ
1+
% Rust Design FAQ
22

33
This document describes decisions were arrived at after lengthy discussion and
44
experimenting with alternatives. Please do not propose reversing them unless

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/complement-lang-faq.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 12 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% The Rust Language FAQ
1+
% Language FAQ
22

33
## Are there any big programs written in it yet? I want to read big samples.
44

@@ -162,15 +162,4 @@ debugging linking in the compiler you might set
162162
`RUST_LOG=rustc::metadata::creader,rustc::util::filesearch,rustc::back::rpath`
163163
For a full description see [the logging crate][1].
164164

165-
## How fast is Rust?
166-
167-
As always, this question is difficult to answer. There's still a lot of work to
168-
do on speed, and depending on what you're benchmarking, Rust has variable
169-
performance.
170-
171-
That said, it is an explicit goal of Rust to be as fast as C++ for most things.
172-
Language decisions are made with performance in mind, and we want Rust to be as
173-
fast as possible. Given that Rust is built on top of LLVM, any performance
174-
improvements in it also help us be faster.
175-
176165
[1]:log/index.html

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/complement-project-faq.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% The Rust Project FAQ
1+
% Project FAQ
22

33
# What is this project's goal, in one sentence?
44

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/guide-strings.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% The Guide to Rust Strings
1+
% The Strings Guide
22

33
Strings are an important concept to master in any programming language. If you
44
come from a managed language background, you may be surprised at the complexity

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/guide-unsafe.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% Writing Unsafe and Low-Level Code in Rust
1+
% Writing Safe Unsafe and Low-Level Code
22

33
# Introduction
44

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/guide.md

Lines changed: 71 additions & 48 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ Now that you've got your file open, type this in:
152152

153153
```
154154
fn main() {
155-
println!("Hello, world!");
155+
println!("Hello, world");
156156
}
157157
```
158158

@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ Save the file, and then type this into your terminal window:
161161
```{bash}
162162
$ rustc hello_world.rs
163163
$ ./hello_world # or hello_world.exe on Windows
164-
Hello, world!
164+
Hello, world
165165
```
166166

167167
Success! Let's go over what just happened in detail.
@@ -187,7 +187,7 @@ declaration, with one space in between.
187187
Next up is this line:
188188

189189
```
190-
println!("Hello, world!");
190+
println!("Hello, world");
191191
```
192192

193193
This line does all of the work in our little program. There are a number of
@@ -205,7 +205,7 @@ to mention: Rust's macros are significantly different than C macros, if you've
205205
used those. Don't be scared of using macros. We'll get to the details
206206
eventually, you'll just have to trust us for now.
207207

208-
Next, `"Hello, world!"` is a **string**. Strings are a surprisingly complicated
208+
Next, `"Hello, world"` is a **string**. Strings are a surprisingly complicated
209209
topic in a systems programming language, and this is a **statically allocated**
210210
string. We will talk more about different kinds of allocation later. We pass
211211
this string as an argument to `println!`, which prints the string to the
@@ -316,7 +316,7 @@ Put this inside:
316316
317317
name = "hello_world"
318318
version = "0.1.0"
319-
authors = [ "Your name <you@example.com>" ]
319+
authors = [ "someone@example.com" ]
320320
321321
[[bin]]
322322
@@ -354,18 +354,6 @@ file, we would need to call `rustc` twice, and pass it a bunch of options to
354354
tell it to build everything together. With Cargo, as our project grows, we can
355355
just `cargo build` and it'll work the right way.
356356

357-
You'll also notice that Cargo has created a new file: `Cargo.lock`.
358-
359-
```{ignore,notrust}
360-
[root]
361-
name = "hello_world"
362-
version = "0.0.1"
363-
```
364-
365-
This file is used by Cargo to keep track of dependencies in your application.
366-
Right now, we don't have any, so it's a bit sparse. You won't ever need
367-
to touch this file yourself, just let Cargo handle it.
368-
369357
That's it! We've successfully built `hello_world` with Cargo. Even though our
370358
program is simple, it's using much of the real tooling that you'll use for the
371359
rest of your Rust career.
@@ -461,9 +449,9 @@ let x;
461449
...we'll get an error:
462450

463451
```{ignore}
464-
src/hello_world.rs:2:9: 2:10 error: cannot determine a type for this local variable: unconstrained type
465-
src/hello_world.rs:2 let x;
466-
^
452+
src/guessing_game.rs:2:9: 2:10 error: cannot determine a type for this local variable: unconstrained type
453+
src/guessing_game.rs:2 let x;
454+
^
467455
```
468456

469457
Giving it a type will compile, though:
@@ -472,7 +460,7 @@ Giving it a type will compile, though:
472460
let x: int;
473461
```
474462

475-
Let's try it out. Change your `src/hello_world.rs` file to look like this:
463+
Let's try it out. Change your `src/guessing_game.rs` file to look like this:
476464

477465
```{rust}
478466
fn main() {
@@ -486,10 +474,10 @@ You can use `cargo build` on the command line to build it. You'll get a warning,
486474
but it will still print "Hello, world!":
487475

488476
```{ignore,notrust}
489-
Compiling hello_world v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/hello_world)
490-
src/hello_world.rs:2:9: 2:10 warning: unused variable: `x`, #[warn(unused_variable)] on by default
491-
src/hello_world.rs:2 let x: int;
492-
^
477+
Compiling guessing_game v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/guessing_game)
478+
src/guessing_game.rs:2:9: 2:10 warning: unused variable: `x`, #[warn(unused_variable)] on by default
479+
src/guessing_game.rs:2 let x: int;
480+
^
493481
```
494482

495483
Rust warns us that we never use the variable binding, but since we never use it,
@@ -508,16 +496,16 @@ And try to build it. You'll get an error:
508496

509497
```{bash}
510498
$ cargo build
511-
Compiling hello_world v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/hello_world)
512-
src/hello_world.rs:4:39: 4:40 error: use of possibly uninitialized variable: `x`
513-
src/hello_world.rs:4 println!("The value of x is: {}", x);
514-
^
499+
Compiling guessing_game v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/guessing_game)
500+
src/guessing_game.rs:4:39: 4:40 error: use of possibly uninitialized variable: `x`
501+
src/guessing_game.rs:4 println!("The value of x is: {}", x);
502+
^
515503
note: in expansion of format_args!
516504
<std macros>:2:23: 2:77 note: expansion site
517505
<std macros>:1:1: 3:2 note: in expansion of println!
518-
src/hello_world.rs:4:5: 4:42 note: expansion site
506+
src/guessing_game.rs:4:5: 4:42 note: expansion site
519507
error: aborting due to previous error
520-
Could not execute process `rustc src/hello_world.rs --crate-type bin --out-dir /home/you/projects/hello_world/target -L /home/you/projects/hello_world/target -L /home/you/projects/hello_world/target/deps` (status=101)
508+
Could not execute process `rustc src/guessing_game.rs --crate-type bin --out-dir /home/you/projects/guessing_game/target -L /home/you/projects/guessing_game/target -L /home/you/projects/guessing_game/target/deps` (status=101)
521509
```
522510

523511
Rust will not let us use a value that has not been initialized. So why let us
@@ -1606,45 +1594,41 @@ taken to the screen. Sound good?
16061594

16071595
## Set up
16081596

1609-
Let's set up a new project. Go to your projects directory. Remember how we
1610-
had to create our directory structure and a `Cargo.toml` for `hello_world`? Cargo
1611-
has a command that does that for us. Let's give it a shot:
1597+
Let's set up a new project. Go to your projects directory, and make a new
1598+
directory for the project, as well as a `src` directory for our code:
16121599

16131600
```{bash}
16141601
$ cd ~/projects
1615-
$ cargo new guessing_game --bin
1602+
$ mkdir guessing_game
16161603
$ cd guessing_game
1604+
$ mkdir src
16171605
```
16181606

1619-
We pass the name of our project to `cargo new`, and then the `--bin` flag,
1620-
since we're making a binary, rather than a library.
1621-
1622-
Check out the generated `Cargo.toml`:
1607+
Great. Next, let's make a `Cargo.toml` file so Cargo knows how to build our
1608+
project:
16231609

16241610
```{ignore}
16251611
[package]
16261612
16271613
name = "guessing_game"
16281614
version = "0.1.0"
1629-
authors = ["Your Name <you@example.com>"]
1615+
authors = [ "someone@example.com" ]
16301616
16311617
[[bin]]
16321618
16331619
name = "guessing_game"
16341620
```
16351621

1636-
Cargo gets this information from your environment. If it's not correct, go ahead
1637-
and fix that.
1638-
1639-
Finally, Cargo generated a hello, world for us. Check out `src/main.rs`:
1622+
Finally, we need our source file. Let's just make it hello world for now, so we
1623+
can check that our setup works. In `src/guessing_game.rs`:
16401624

16411625
```{rust}
16421626
fn main() {
16431627
println!("Hello world!");
16441628
}
16451629
```
16461630

1647-
Let's try compiling what Cargo gave us:
1631+
Let's make sure that worked:
16481632

16491633
```{bash}
16501634
$ cargo build
@@ -1899,6 +1883,7 @@ fn cmp(a: int, b: int) -> Ordering {
18991883
If we try to compile, we'll get some errors:
19001884

19011885
```{notrust,ignore}
1886+
$ cargo build
19021887
$ cargo build
19031888
Compiling guessing_game v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/guessing_game)
19041889
src/guessing_game.rs:20:15: 20:20 error: mismatched types: expected `int` but found `collections::string::String` (expected int but found struct collections::string::String)
@@ -2501,7 +2486,27 @@ Enough talk, let's build something! Let's make a new project called `modules`.
25012486

25022487
```{bash,ignore}
25032488
$ cd ~/projects
2504-
$ cargo new modules --bin
2489+
$ mkdir modules
2490+
$ cd modules
2491+
$ mkdir src
2492+
```
2493+
2494+
We need to make our two 'hello world' files. In `src/main.rs`:
2495+
2496+
```{rust}
2497+
fn main() {
2498+
println!("Hello, world!");
2499+
}
2500+
```
2501+
2502+
And in `Cargo.toml`:
2503+
2504+
```{notrust,ignore}
2505+
[package]
2506+
2507+
name = "modules"
2508+
version = "0.1.0"
2509+
authors = [ "[email protected]" ]
25052510
```
25062511

25072512
Let's double check our work by compiling:
@@ -2919,16 +2924,34 @@ now: make a new project:
29192924

29202925
```{bash,ignore}
29212926
$ cd ~/projects
2922-
$ cargo new testing --bin
2927+
$ mkdir testing
29232928
$ cd testing
2929+
$ mkdir test
2930+
```
2931+
2932+
In `src/main.rs`:
2933+
2934+
```{rust}
2935+
fn main() {
2936+
println!("Hello, world!");
2937+
}
2938+
```
2939+
2940+
And in `Cargo.toml`:
2941+
2942+
```{notrust,ignore}
2943+
[package]
2944+
2945+
name = "testing"
2946+
version = "0.1.0"
2947+
authors = [ "[email protected]" ]
29242948
```
29252949

29262950
And try it out:
29272951

29282952
```{notrust,ignore}
29292953
$ cargo run
29302954
Compiling testing v0.1.0 (file:/home/you/projects/testing)
2931-
Running `target/testing`
29322955
Hello, world!
29332956
$
29342957
```

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/index.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1-
% Rust Documentation
1+
% Rust documentation
22

33
<!-- Completely hide the TOC and the section numbers -->
44
<style type="text/css">
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ li {list-style-type: none; }
1919
* [Containers and Iterators](guide-container.html)
2020
* [Tasks and Communication](guide-tasks.html)
2121
* [Foreign Function Interface](guide-ffi.html)
22-
* [Writing Unsafe and Low-Level Code](guide-unsafe.html)
22+
* [Writing Safe Unsafe and Low-Level Code](guide-unsafe.html)
2323
* [Macros](guide-macros.html)
2424
* [Testing](guide-testing.html)
2525
* [Rust's Runtime](guide-runtime.html)

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/rust.css

Lines changed: 1 addition & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -324,14 +324,13 @@ table th {
324324

325325
.rusttest { display: none; }
326326
pre.rust { position: relative; }
327+
pre.rust a { transform: scaleX(-1); }
327328
.test-arrow {
328329
display: inline-block;
329330
position: absolute;
330331
top: 0;
331332
right: 10px;
332333
font-size: 150%;
333-
-webkit-transform: scaleX(-1);
334-
transform: scaleX(-1);
335334
}
336335

337336
@media (min-width: 1170px) {

branches/dist-snap/src/doc/rust.md

Lines changed: 5 additions & 5 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1823,11 +1823,11 @@ meta_item : ident [ '=' literal
18231823
meta_seq : meta_item [ ',' meta_seq ] ? ;
18241824
~~~~
18251825

1826-
Static entities in Rust &mdash; crates, modules and items &mdash; may have _attributes_
1827-
applied to them. Attributes in Rust are modeled on Attributes in ECMA-335,
1828-
with the syntax coming from ECMA-334 (C#). An attribute is a general,
1829-
free-form metadatum that is interpreted according to name, convention, and
1830-
language and compiler version. Attributes may appear as any of:
1826+
Any item declaration may have an _attribute_ applied to it. Attributes in Rust
1827+
are modeled on Attributes in ECMA-335, with the syntax coming from ECMA-334
1828+
(C#). An attribute is a general, free-form metadatum that is interpreted
1829+
according to name, convention, and language and compiler version. Attributes
1830+
may appear as any of:
18311831

18321832
* A single identifier, the attribute name
18331833
* An identifier followed by the equals sign '=' and a literal, providing a

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)