Count char width at most once in `Formatter::pad`
When both width and precision flags are specified, then `Formatter::pad` counts the character width twice. Instead, record the character width when truncating it to the precision, so it does not need to be recomputed. Simplify control flow so the cases are more clear.
Related:
- 6c9e708f4b (`fmt::Formatter::pad`: don't call chars().count() more than one time, 2021-09-01): Reduce counting chars from thrice to twice in worst case
- ede39aeb33 (feat: reinterpret `precision` field for strings, 2016-06-29): Change meaning of precision for strings
- b820748ff5 (Implement formatting arguments for strings and integers, 2013-08-10): Implement `Formatter::pad`
dec2flt: Clean up float parsing modules
This is the first portion of my work adding support for parsing and printing `f16`. Changes in `float.rs` replace the magic constants with expressions and add some use of generics to better support the new float types. Everything else is related to documentation or naming; there are no functional changes in this PR.
This can be reviewed by commit.
Rollup of 12 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135767 (Future incompatibility warning `unsupported_fn_ptr_calling_conventions`: Also warn in dependencies)
- #137852 (Remove layouting dead code for non-array SIMD types.)
- #137863 (Fix pretty printing of unsafe binders)
- #137882 (do not build additional stage on compiler paths)
- #137894 (Revert "store ScalarPair via memset when one side is undef and the other side can be memset")
- #137902 (Make `ast::TokenKind` more like `lexer::TokenKind`)
- #137921 (Subtree update of `rust-analyzer`)
- #137922 (A few cleanups after the removal of `cfg(not(parallel))`)
- #137939 (fix order on shl impl)
- #137946 (Fix docker run-local docs)
- #137955 (Always allow rustdoc-json tests to contain long lines)
- #137958 (triagebot.toml: Don't label `test/rustdoc-json` as A-rustdoc-search)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
A lot of the magic constants can be turned into expressions. This
reduces some code duplication.
Additionally, add traits to make these operations fully generic. This
will make it easier to support `f16` and `f128`.
The previous commit renamed `Decimal` to `DecimalSeq`. Now, rename the
type that represents a decimal floating point number to be `Decimal`.
Additionally, add some tests for internal behavior.
This module currently contains two decimal types, `Decimal` and
`Number`. These names don't provide a whole lot of insight into what
exactly they are, and `Number` is actually the one that is more like an
expected `Decimal` type.
In accordance with this, rename the existing `Decimal` to `DecimalSeq`.
This highlights that it contains a sequence of decimal digits, rather
than representing a base-10 floating point (decimal) number.
Additionally, add some tests to validate internal behavior.
Fix inaccurate `std::intrinsics::simd` documentation
This addresses two issues:
- the docs on comparison operators (`simd_gt` etc.) said they only work for floating-point vectors, but they work for integer vectors too.
- the docs on various functions that use a mask did not document that the mask must be a signed integer vector. Unsigned integer vectors would cause invalid behavior when the mask vector is widened (unsigned integers would use zero extension, producing incorrect results).
r? ``@workingjubilee``
import `simd_` intrinsics
In most cases, we can import the simd intrinsics rather than redeclare them. Apparently, most of these tests were written before `std::intrinsics::simd` existed.
There are a couple of exceptions where we can't yet import:
- the intrinsics are not declared as `const fn` in the standard library, causing issues in the `const-eval` tests
- the `simd_shuffle_generic` function is not exposed from `std::intrinsics`
- the `simd_fpow` and `simd_fpowi` functions are not exposed from `std::intrinsics` (removed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/137595)
- some tests use `no_core`, and therefore cannot use `std::intrinsics`
r? ```@RalfJung```
cc ```@workingjubilee``` do you have context on why some intrinsics are not exposed?
Update some comparison codegen tests now that they pass in LLVM20
Fixes#106107
Needed one tweak to the default `PartialOrd::le` to get the test to pass. Everything but the derived 2-field `le` test passes even without the change to the defaults in the trait.
When both width and precision flags are specified, then the character
width is counted twice. Instead, record the character width when
truncating it to the precision, so it does not need to be recomputed.
Simplify control flow so the cases are more clear.
remove `#[rustc_intrinsic_must_be_overridde]`
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135031, we gained support for just leaving away the body. Now that the bootstrap compiler got bumped, stop using the old style and remove support for it.
r? `@oli-obk`
There are a few more mentions of this attribute in RA code that I didn't touch; Cc `@rust-lang/rust-analyzer`
remove some unnecessary rustc_const_unstable
If the function is anyway unstable, it doesn't need to be `rustc_const_unstable`.
`copy_from_slice` turns out to not do anything const-unstable itself, we just haven't stably committed to it being available in const yet. See [here](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/stability.html?highlight=rustc_const_stable_indirect) for more details on the `rustc_const_stable_indirect` attribute.