`@!has` (and `@!matches`) with two arguments used to treat the second
argument as a literal string of HTML code. Now, that feature has been
renamed into `@!hasraw` (and `@!matchesraw`), and the arity-2 `@!has`
version is an error.
These uses thought the second argument was being treated as an XPath, as
with the arity-3 version, but in fact was being treated as literal HTML.
Because these were checking for the *absence* of the string, the tests
silently did nothing -- an XPath string won't ever be showing up in the
test's generated HTML!
Also:
* Always use `/* */` block comments
* Use the same message everywhere, rather than sometimes prefixing
with "some"
When I first read rustdoc docs, I was confused why the fields were being
omitted. It was only later that I realized it was because they were
private. It's also always bothered me that rustdoc sometimes uses `//`
and sometimes uses `/*` comments for these messages, so this change
makes them all use `/*`.
Technically, I think fields can be omitted if they are public but
`doc(hidden)` too, but `doc(hidden)` is analogous to privacy. It's
really just used to emulate "doc privacy" when -- because of technical
limitations -- an item has to be public. So I think it's fine to include
this under the category of "private fields".
* The toggle adds visual clutter
* It's easy to miss that there are fields
* Tuple variant fields are always shown, so it is inconsistent to hide
struct variant fields
* It's annoying to have to click the toggle every time
Per discussion in #84326. For trait implementations, this was
misleading: the items actually do have documentation (but it comes from
the trait definition).
For both trait implementations and trait implementors, this was
redundant: in both of those cases, the items are default-hidden by
different toggle at the level above.
Update tests: Remove XPath selectors that over-specified on details tag,
in cases that weren't testing toggles. Add an explicit test for toggles
on methods. Rename item-hide-threshold to toggle-item-contents for
consistency.