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[refs]

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ refs/heads/snap-stage3: 78a7676898d9f80ab540c6df5d4c9ce35bb50463
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refs/heads/try: 519addf6277dbafccbb4159db4b710c37eaa2ec5
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refs/tags/release-0.1: 1f5c5126e96c79d22cb7862f75304136e204f105
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refs/heads/ndm: f3868061cd7988080c30d6d5bf352a5a5fe2460b
8-
refs/heads/try2: 1a9641bf8e02230427a6e90e6662b879dec8caf2
8+
refs/heads/try2: 32408a6e32ba396a8e5f4d183d6b80352dfad092
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refs/heads/dist-snap: ba4081a5a8573875fed17545846f6f6902c8ba8d
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refs/tags/release-0.2: c870d2dffb391e14efb05aa27898f1f6333a9596
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refs/tags/release-0.3: b5f0d0f648d9a6153664837026ba1be43d3e2503

branches/try2/doc/complement-cheatsheet.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -62,8 +62,8 @@ let reader : File = File::open(&path).unwrap_or_else(on_error);
6262
Use the [`lines`](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/io/trait.Buffer.html#method.lines) method on a [`BufferedReader`](http://static.rust-lang.org/doc/master/std/io/buffered/struct.BufferedReader.html).
6363

6464
~~~
65-
use std::io::BufferedReader;
66-
# use std::io::MemReader;
65+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
66+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
6767
6868
# let reader = MemReader::new(~[]);
6969

branches/try2/doc/guide-conditions.md

Lines changed: 27 additions & 20 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -46,11 +46,12 @@ An example program that does this task reads like this:
4646
~~~~
4747
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
4848
# extern mod extra;
49-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
49+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
50+
use std::io::File;
5051
# mod BufferedReader {
5152
# use std::io::File;
52-
# use std::io::MemReader;
53-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
53+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
54+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
5455
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
5556
# 34 56\n\
5657
# 789 123\n\
@@ -244,12 +245,13 @@ and trapping its exit status using `task::try`:
244245
~~~~
245246
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
246247
# extern mod extra;
247-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
248+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
249+
use std::io::File;
248250
use std::task;
249251
# mod BufferedReader {
250252
# use std::io::File;
251-
# use std::io::MemReader;
252-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
253+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
254+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
253255
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
254256
# 34 56\n\
255257
# 789 123\n\
@@ -348,11 +350,12 @@ but similarly clear as the version that used `fail!` in the logic where the erro
348350
~~~~
349351
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
350352
# extern mod extra;
351-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
353+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
354+
use std::io::File;
352355
# mod BufferedReader {
353356
# use std::io::File;
354-
# use std::io::MemReader;
355-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
357+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
358+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
356359
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
357360
# 34 56\n\
358361
# 789 123\n\
@@ -417,11 +420,12 @@ and replaces bad input lines with the pair `(-1,-1)`:
417420
~~~~
418421
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
419422
# extern mod extra;
420-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
423+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
424+
use std::io::File;
421425
# mod BufferedReader {
422426
# use std::io::File;
423-
# use std::io::MemReader;
424-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
427+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
428+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
425429
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
426430
# 34 56\n\
427431
# 789 123\n\
@@ -492,11 +496,12 @@ Changing the condition's return type from `(int,int)` to `Option<(int,int)>` wil
492496
~~~~
493497
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
494498
# extern mod extra;
495-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
499+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
500+
use std::io::File;
496501
# mod BufferedReader {
497502
# use std::io::File;
498-
# use std::io::MemReader;
499-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
503+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
504+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
500505
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
501506
# 34 56\n\
502507
# 789 123\n\
@@ -577,11 +582,12 @@ This can be encoded in the handler API by introducing a helper type: `enum Malfo
577582
~~~~
578583
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
579584
# extern mod extra;
585+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
580586
use std::io::File;
581587
# mod BufferedReader {
582588
# use std::io::File;
583-
# use std::io::MemReader;
584-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
589+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
590+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
585591
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
586592
# 34 56\n\
587593
# 789 123\n\
@@ -701,11 +707,12 @@ a second condition and a helper function will suffice:
701707
~~~~
702708
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
703709
# extern mod extra;
704-
use std::io::{BufferedReader, File};
710+
use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
711+
use std::io::File;
705712
# mod BufferedReader {
706713
# use std::io::File;
707-
# use std::io::MemReader;
708-
# use std::io::BufferedReader;
714+
# use std::io::mem::MemReader;
715+
# use std::io::buffered::BufferedReader;
709716
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
710717
# 34 56\n\
711718
# 789 123\n\

branches/try2/doc/guide-tasks.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ be distributed on the available cores.
290290
fn partial_sum(start: uint) -> f64 {
291291
let mut local_sum = 0f64;
292292
for num in range(start*100000, (start+1)*100000) {
293-
local_sum += (num as f64 + 1.0).powf(&-2.0);
293+
local_sum += (num as f64 + 1.0).pow(&-2.0);
294294
}
295295
local_sum
296296
}
@@ -326,7 +326,7 @@ a single large vector of floats. Each task needs the full vector to perform its
326326
use extra::arc::Arc;
327327
328328
fn pnorm(nums: &~[f64], p: uint) -> f64 {
329-
nums.iter().fold(0.0, |a,b| a+(*b).powf(&(p as f64)) ).powf(&(1.0 / (p as f64)))
329+
nums.iter().fold(0.0, |a,b| a+(*b).pow(&(p as f64)) ).pow(&(1.0 / (p as f64)))
330330
}
331331
332332
fn main() {

branches/try2/doc/guide-testing.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -63,8 +63,8 @@ mod tests {
6363
}
6464
~~~
6565

66-
Additionally `#[test]` items behave as if they also have the
67-
`#[cfg(test)]` attribute, and will not be compiled when the --test flag
66+
Additionally #[test] items behave as if they also have the
67+
#[cfg(test)] attribute, and will not be compiled when the --test flag
6868
is not used.
6969

7070
Tests that should not be run can be annotated with the 'ignore'

branches/try2/doc/rust.md

Lines changed: 31 additions & 50 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -2211,9 +2211,12 @@ dereferences (`*expr`), [indexing expressions](#index-expressions)
22112211
(`expr[expr]`), and [field references](#field-expressions) (`expr.f`).
22122212
All other expressions are rvalues.
22132213

2214-
The left operand of an [assignment](#assignment-expressions) or
2214+
The left operand of an [assignment](#assignment-expressions),
2215+
[binary move](#binary-move-expressions) or
22152216
[compound-assignment](#compound-assignment-expressions) expression is an lvalue context,
2216-
as is the single operand of a unary [borrow](#unary-operator-expressions).
2217+
as is the single operand of a unary [borrow](#unary-operator-expressions),
2218+
or [move](#unary-move-expressions) expression,
2219+
and _both_ operands of a [swap](#swap-expressions) expression.
22172220
All other expression contexts are rvalue contexts.
22182221

22192222
When an lvalue is evaluated in an _lvalue context_, it denotes a memory location;
@@ -2226,8 +2229,9 @@ A temporary's lifetime equals the largest lifetime of any reference that points
22262229

22272230
When a [local variable](#memory-slots) is used
22282231
as an [rvalue](#lvalues-rvalues-and-temporaries)
2229-
the variable will either be moved or copied, depending on its type.
2230-
For types that contain [owning pointers](#pointer-types)
2232+
the variable will either be [moved](#move-expressions) or copied,
2233+
depending on its type.
2234+
For types that contain [owning pointers](#owning-pointers)
22312235
or values that implement the special trait `Drop`,
22322236
the variable is moved.
22332237
All other types are copied.
@@ -2886,26 +2890,16 @@ match x {
28862890

28872891
The first pattern matches lists constructed by applying `Cons` to any head value, and a
28882892
tail value of `~Nil`. The second pattern matches _any_ list constructed with `Cons`,
2889-
ignoring the values of its arguments. The difference between `_` and `*` is that the pattern
2890-
`C(_)` is only type-correct if `C` has exactly one argument, while the pattern `C(..)` is
2891-
type-correct for any enum variant `C`, regardless of how many arguments `C` has.
2892-
2893-
A `match` behaves differently depending on whether or not the head expression
2894-
is an [lvalue or an rvalue](#lvalues-rvalues-and-temporaries).
2895-
If the head expression is an rvalue, it is
2896-
first evaluated into a temporary location, and the resulting value
2897-
is sequentially compared to the patterns in the arms until a match
2893+
ignoring the values of its arguments. The difference between `_` and `*` is that the pattern `C(_)` is only type-correct if
2894+
`C` has exactly one argument, while the pattern `C(..)` is type-correct for any enum variant `C`, regardless of how many arguments `C` has.
2895+
2896+
To execute an `match` expression, first the head expression is evaluated, then
2897+
its value is sequentially compared to the patterns in the arms until a match
28982898
is found. The first arm with a matching pattern is chosen as the branch target
28992899
of the `match`, any variables bound by the pattern are assigned to local
29002900
variables in the arm's block, and control enters the block.
29012901

2902-
When the head expression is an lvalue, the match does not allocate a
2903-
temporary location (however, a by-value binding may copy or move from
2904-
the lvalue). When possible, it is preferable to match on lvalues, as the
2905-
lifetime of these matches inherits the lifetime of the lvalue, rather
2906-
than being restricted to the inside of the match.
2907-
2908-
An example of a `match` expression:
2902+
An example of an `match` expression:
29092903

29102904
~~~~
29112905
# fn process_pair(a: int, b: int) { }
@@ -2935,31 +2929,19 @@ Patterns that bind variables
29352929
default to binding to a copy or move of the matched value
29362930
(depending on the matched value's type).
29372931
This can be changed to bind to a reference by
2938-
using the `ref` keyword,
2939-
or to a mutable reference using `ref mut`.
2940-
2941-
Patterns can also dereference pointers by using the `&`,
2942-
`~` or `@` symbols, as appropriate. For example, these two matches
2943-
on `x: &int` are equivalent:
2944-
2945-
~~~~
2946-
# let x = &3;
2947-
let y = match *x { 0 => "zero", _ => "some" };
2948-
let z = match x { &0 => "zero", _ => "some" };
2949-
2950-
assert_eq!(y, z);
2951-
~~~~
2952-
2953-
A pattern that's just an identifier, like `Nil` in the previous answer,
2954-
could either refer to an enum variant that's in scope, or bind a new variable.
2955-
The compiler resolves this ambiguity by forbidding variable bindings that occur
2956-
in `match` patterns from shadowing names of variants that are in scope.
2957-
For example, wherever `List` is in scope,
2958-
a `match` pattern would not be able to bind `Nil` as a new name.
2959-
The compiler interprets a variable pattern `x` as a binding _only_ if there is
2960-
no variant named `x` in scope.
2961-
A convention you can use to avoid conflicts is simply to name variants with
2962-
upper-case letters, and local variables with lower-case letters.
2932+
using the ```ref``` keyword,
2933+
or to a mutable reference using ```ref mut```.
2934+
2935+
A pattern that's just an identifier,
2936+
like `Nil` in the previous answer,
2937+
could either refer to an enum variant that's in scope,
2938+
or bind a new variable.
2939+
The compiler resolves this ambiguity by forbidding variable bindings that occur in ```match``` patterns from shadowing names of variants that are in scope.
2940+
For example, wherever ```List``` is in scope,
2941+
a ```match``` pattern would not be able to bind ```Nil``` as a new name.
2942+
The compiler interprets a variable pattern `x` as a binding _only_ if there is no variant named `x` in scope.
2943+
A convention you can use to avoid conflicts is simply to name variants with upper-case letters,
2944+
and local variables with lower-case letters.
29632945

29642946
Multiple match patterns may be joined with the `|` operator.
29652947
A range of values may be specified with `..`.
@@ -3140,20 +3122,19 @@ A `struct` *type* is a heterogeneous product of other types, called the *fields*
31403122
the *record* types of the ML family,
31413123
or the *structure* types of the Lisp family.]
31423124

3143-
New instances of a `struct` can be constructed with a [struct expression](#structure-expressions).
3125+
New instances of a `struct` can be constructed with a [struct expression](#struct-expressions).
31443126

31453127
The memory order of fields in a `struct` is given by the item defining it.
31463128
Fields may be given in any order in a corresponding struct *expression*;
31473129
the resulting `struct` value will always be laid out in memory in the order specified by the corresponding *item*.
31483130

3149-
The fields of a `struct` may be qualified by [visibility modifiers](#re-exporting-and-visibility),
3131+
The fields of a `struct` may be qualified by [visibility modifiers](#visibility-modifiers),
31503132
to restrict access to implementation-private data in a structure.
31513133

31523134
A _tuple struct_ type is just like a structure type, except that the fields are anonymous.
31533135

31543136
A _unit-like struct_ type is like a structure type, except that it has no fields.
3155-
The one value constructed by the associated [structure expression](#structure-expressions)
3156-
is the only value that inhabits such a type.
3137+
The one value constructed by the associated [structure expression](#structure-expression) is the only value that inhabits such a type.
31573138

31583139
### Enumerated types
31593140

@@ -3824,7 +3805,7 @@ over the output format of a Rust crate.
38243805
### Logging system
38253806

38263807
The runtime contains a system for directing [logging
3827-
expressions](#logging-expressions) to a logging console and/or internal logging
3808+
expressions](#log-expressions) to a logging console and/or internal logging
38283809
buffers. Logging can be enabled per module.
38293810

38303811
Logging output is enabled by setting the `RUST_LOG` environment

branches/try2/doc/tutorial.md

Lines changed: 4 additions & 9 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1020,15 +1020,10 @@ being destroyed along with the owner. Since the `list` variable above is
10201020
immutable, the whole list is immutable. The memory allocation itself is the
10211021
box, while the owner holds onto a pointer to it:
10221022

1023-
List box List box List box List box
1024-
+--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+
1025-
list -> | Cons | 1 | ~ | -> | Cons | 2 | ~ | -> | Cons | 3 | ~ | -> | Nil |
1026-
+--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+
1027-
1028-
> Note: the above diagram shows the logical contents of the enum. The actual
1029-
> memory layout of the enum may vary. For example, for the `List` enum shown
1030-
> above, Rust guarantees that there will be no enum tag field in the actual
1031-
> structure. See the language reference for more details.
1023+
Cons cell Cons cell Cons cell
1024+
+-----------+ +-----+-----+ +-----+-----+
1025+
| 1 | ~ | -> | 2 | ~ | -> | 3 | ~ | -> Nil
1026+
+-----------+ +-----+-----+ +-----+-----+
10321027

10331028
An owned box is a common example of a type with a destructor. The allocated
10341029
memory is cleaned up when the box is destroyed.

branches/try2/mk/docs.mk

Lines changed: 7 additions & 8 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -17,16 +17,16 @@ CDOCS :=
1717
DOCS_L10N :=
1818
HTML_DEPS :=
1919

20-
BASE_DOC_OPTS := --standalone --toc --number-sections
21-
HTML_OPTS = $(BASE_DOC_OPTS) --to=html5 --section-divs --css=rust.css \
22-
--include-before-body=doc/version_info.html --include-in-header=doc/favicon.inc
23-
TEX_OPTS = $(BASE_DOC_OPTS) --include-before-body=doc/version.md --to=latex
20+
BASE_DOC_OPTS := --include-before-body=doc/version_info.html --standalone \
21+
--toc --number-sections
22+
HTML_OPTS = $(BASE_DOC_OPTS) --to=html5 --section-divs --css=rust.css \
23+
--include-in-header=doc/favicon.inc
24+
TEX_OPTS = $(BASE_DOC_OPTS) --to=latex
2425
EPUB_OPTS = $(BASE_DOC_OPTS) --to=epub
2526

2627
######################################################################
2728
# Rust version
2829
######################################################################
29-
3030
doc/version.md: $(MKFILE_DEPS) $(wildcard $(S)doc/*.*)
3131
@$(call E, version-stamp: $@)
3232
$(Q)echo "$(CFG_VERSION)" >$@
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ doc/rust.tex: rust.md doc/version.md
8484
$(CFG_PANDOC) $(TEX_OPTS) --output=$@
8585

8686
DOCS += doc/rust.epub
87-
doc/rust.epub: rust.md
87+
doc/rust.epub: rust.md doc/version_info.html doc/rust.css
8888
@$(call E, pandoc: $@)
8989
$(Q)$(CFG_NODE) $(S)doc/prep.js --highlight $< | \
9090
$(CFG_PANDOC) $(EPUB_OPTS) --output=$@
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ doc/tutorial.tex: tutorial.md doc/version.md
114114
$(CFG_PANDOC) $(TEX_OPTS) --output=$@
115115

116116
DOCS += doc/tutorial.epub
117-
doc/tutorial.epub: tutorial.md
117+
doc/tutorial.epub: tutorial.md doc/version_info.html doc/rust.css
118118
@$(call E, pandoc: $@)
119119
$(Q)$(CFG_NODE) $(S)doc/prep.js --highlight $< | \
120120
$(CFG_PANDOC) $(EPUB_OPTS) --output=$@
@@ -265,7 +265,6 @@ endif # No pandoc / node
265265
######################################################################
266266
# LLnextgen (grammar analysis from refman)
267267
######################################################################
268-
269268
ifeq ($(CFG_LLNEXTGEN),)
270269
$(info cfg: no llnextgen found, omitting grammar-verification)
271270
else

branches/try2/mk/tests.mk

Lines changed: 1 addition & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -626,10 +626,9 @@ CTEST_COMMON_ARGS$(1)-T-$(2)-H-$(3) := \
626626
--aux-base $$(S)src/test/auxiliary/ \
627627
--stage-id stage$(1)-$(2) \
628628
--target $(2) \
629-
--host $(3) \
630629
--adb-path=$(CFG_ADB) \
631630
--adb-test-dir=$(CFG_ADB_TEST_DIR) \
632-
--rustcflags "$(RUSTC_FLAGS_$(2)) $$(CTEST_RUSTC_FLAGS)" \
631+
--rustcflags "$(RUSTC_FLAGS_$(2)) $$(CTEST_RUSTC_FLAGS) --target=$(2)" \
633632
$$(CTEST_TESTARGS)
634633

635634
CTEST_DEPS_rpass_$(1)-T-$(2)-H-$(3) = $$(RPASS_TESTS)

branches/try2/src/compiletest/common.rs

Lines changed: 0 additions & 3 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -86,9 +86,6 @@ pub struct config {
8686
// Target system to be tested
8787
target: ~str,
8888

89-
// Host triple for the compiler being invoked
90-
host: ~str,
91-
9289
// Extra parameter to run adb on arm-linux-androideabi
9390
adb_path: ~str,
9491

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