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Stabilize min_exhaustive_patterns
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… r=fee1-dead Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of.
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…=<try> Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of.
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…=fee1-dead Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of.
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…=<try> Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of. try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
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…=fee1-dead Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of. try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
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The feature is now merged rust-lang/rust#122792 |
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Thanks!
Will merge after the next nightly is published tonight.
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Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang/rust#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang/rust#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of. try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
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Aug 13, 2024
Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` ## Stabilisation report I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang/rust#119612) language feature. With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows: ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // also match foo() { Ok(x) => ..., } } ``` This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](rust-lang/rust#51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky. The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g. ```rust enum Void {} fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>; fn main() { let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)` } ``` The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible. ### Comparison with today's rust This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions. To be precise, a visibly empty type is: - an enum with no variants; - the never type `!`; - a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation); - a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty; - en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation); - a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty; - all other types are nonempty. (An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one) For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature. #### Today's rust Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo { _ => ..., // required } } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required } } ``` #### After this PR After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if): - the match scrutinee expression has type `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before); - *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior). In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type. ```rust let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => ..., Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } let foo: &! = ...; match foo { _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference } fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) { match foo {} // allowed } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // allowed let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...; match *ptr { (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference } } ``` ### Documentation The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened rust-lang/nomicon#445 to reflect the changes. ### Tests The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`. ### Unresolved Questions None that I know of. try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
matthiaskrgr
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Aug 14, 2024
Update books ## rust-lang/book 7 commits in 67fa536768013d9d5a13f3a06790521d511ef711..04bc1396bb857f35b5dda1d773c9571e1f253304 2024-07-31 13:19:44 UTC to 2024-07-16 18:18:38 UTC - mdbook-trpl-listing: Add missing elided lifetimes (rust-lang/book#3995) - infra: include ghp-import and git push in generate-preview script (rust-lang/book#3998) - infra: add robots.txt for GH Pages previews (rust-lang/book#3997) - Clarify function definitions vs. expressions (rust-lang/book#3870) - infra: fix some shellcheck issues in CI config (rust-lang/book#3988) - infra: support test renderer in mdbook preprocessors (rust-lang/book#3982) - Improve handling of `<Listing>`s (rust-lang/book#3975) ## rust-lang/edition-guide 4 commits in 5454de3d12b9ccc6375b629cf7ccda8264640aac..aeeb287d41a0332c210da122bea8e0e91844ab3e 2024-08-06 21:16:24 UTC to 2024-07-29 21:41:36 UTC - Stabilize unsafe extern blocks (rust-lang/edition-guide#313) - Add chapter for Lifetime Capture Rules 2024 (rust-lang/edition-guide#316) - 2024: Add page for missing_fragment_specifier (rust-lang/edition-guide#315) - Add documentation for 2024 prelude migration. (rust-lang/edition-guide#314) ## rust-lang/nomicon 3 commits in 0ebdacadbda8ce2cd8fbf93985e15af61a7ab895..6ecf95c5f2bfa0e6314dfe282bf775fd1405f7e9 2024-08-11 16:55:29 UTC to 2024-08-09 23:25:22 UTC - Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` (rust-lang/nomicon#445) - repr(int) enums: both size and sign matter (rust-lang/nomicon#458) - Update what-unsafe-does.md (rust-lang/nomicon#457) ## rust-lang/reference 6 commits in 2e191814f163ee1e77e2d6094eee4dd78a289c5b..62cd0df95061ba0ac886333f5cd7f3012f149da1 2024-08-11 21:06:12 UTC to 2024-07-30 06:34:03 UTC - Reformat (and only reformat) the inline assembly chapter (rust-lang/reference#1550) - Changes for unsafe extern blocks (RFC 3484) (rust-lang/reference#1536) - Stabilize Wasm relaxed SIMD (rust-lang/reference#1421) - Remove custom blockquote styling (rust-lang/reference#1547) - Fix std-links for generics with commas. (rust-lang/reference#1549) - Add details on how names are introduced. (rust-lang/reference#1052) ## rust-lang/rust-by-example 3 commits in 89aecb6951b77bc746da73df8c9f2b2ceaad494a..8f94061936e492159f4f6c09c0f917a7521893ff 2024-08-06 17:25:35 UTC to 2024-07-16 20:58:25 UTC - Update lifetime_bounds.md (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1869) - Remove the link to Japanese translation (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1868) - Add an example of implementing the FromStr trait for Circles. (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1865) ## rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide 12 commits in 0c4d55c..43d8378 2024-08-08 17:54:27 UTC to 2024-07-19 07:15:12 UTC - Added 'the' in chapter "Running test" subtitle "Run unit tests on the compiler/library" (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2040) - Correct rust code block in *Dataflow Analysis* (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2037) - linkcheck: fix filtering of the source files (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2019) - chore: fix some comments (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2028) - linkcheck: fix reported broken links (part 2) (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2024) - typo (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2029) - Fix broken links in `llvm-coverage-instrumentation.md` (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2027) - Fix invalid link to toolstate documentation (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2021) - linkcheck: fix reported broken links (part 1) (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2022) - fix link (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2020) - MIR docs: fix borked links and update style (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2017) - Update adding.md (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2016)
rust-timer
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Aug 15, 2024
Rollup merge of rust-lang#129015 - rustbot:docs-update, r=ehuss Update books ## rust-lang/book 7 commits in 67fa536768013d9d5a13f3a06790521d511ef711..04bc1396bb857f35b5dda1d773c9571e1f253304 2024-07-31 13:19:44 UTC to 2024-07-16 18:18:38 UTC - mdbook-trpl-listing: Add missing elided lifetimes (rust-lang/book#3995) - infra: include ghp-import and git push in generate-preview script (rust-lang/book#3998) - infra: add robots.txt for GH Pages previews (rust-lang/book#3997) - Clarify function definitions vs. expressions (rust-lang/book#3870) - infra: fix some shellcheck issues in CI config (rust-lang/book#3988) - infra: support test renderer in mdbook preprocessors (rust-lang/book#3982) - Improve handling of `<Listing>`s (rust-lang/book#3975) ## rust-lang/edition-guide 4 commits in 5454de3d12b9ccc6375b629cf7ccda8264640aac..aeeb287d41a0332c210da122bea8e0e91844ab3e 2024-08-06 21:16:24 UTC to 2024-07-29 21:41:36 UTC - Stabilize unsafe extern blocks (rust-lang/edition-guide#313) - Add chapter for Lifetime Capture Rules 2024 (rust-lang/edition-guide#316) - 2024: Add page for missing_fragment_specifier (rust-lang/edition-guide#315) - Add documentation for 2024 prelude migration. (rust-lang/edition-guide#314) ## rust-lang/nomicon 3 commits in 0ebdacadbda8ce2cd8fbf93985e15af61a7ab895..6ecf95c5f2bfa0e6314dfe282bf775fd1405f7e9 2024-08-11 16:55:29 UTC to 2024-08-09 23:25:22 UTC - Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns` (rust-lang/nomicon#445) - repr(int) enums: both size and sign matter (rust-lang/nomicon#458) - Update what-unsafe-does.md (rust-lang/nomicon#457) ## rust-lang/reference 6 commits in 2e191814f163ee1e77e2d6094eee4dd78a289c5b..62cd0df95061ba0ac886333f5cd7f3012f149da1 2024-08-11 21:06:12 UTC to 2024-07-30 06:34:03 UTC - Reformat (and only reformat) the inline assembly chapter (rust-lang/reference#1550) - Changes for unsafe extern blocks (RFC 3484) (rust-lang/reference#1536) - Stabilize Wasm relaxed SIMD (rust-lang/reference#1421) - Remove custom blockquote styling (rust-lang/reference#1547) - Fix std-links for generics with commas. (rust-lang/reference#1549) - Add details on how names are introduced. (rust-lang/reference#1052) ## rust-lang/rust-by-example 3 commits in 89aecb6951b77bc746da73df8c9f2b2ceaad494a..8f94061936e492159f4f6c09c0f917a7521893ff 2024-08-06 17:25:35 UTC to 2024-07-16 20:58:25 UTC - Update lifetime_bounds.md (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1869) - Remove the link to Japanese translation (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1868) - Add an example of implementing the FromStr trait for Circles. (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1865) ## rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide 12 commits in 0c4d55c..43d8378 2024-08-08 17:54:27 UTC to 2024-07-19 07:15:12 UTC - Added 'the' in chapter "Running test" subtitle "Run unit tests on the compiler/library" (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2040) - Correct rust code block in *Dataflow Analysis* (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2037) - linkcheck: fix filtering of the source files (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2019) - chore: fix some comments (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2028) - linkcheck: fix reported broken links (part 2) (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2024) - typo (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2029) - Fix broken links in `llvm-coverage-instrumentation.md` (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2027) - Fix invalid link to toolstate documentation (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2021) - linkcheck: fix reported broken links (part 1) (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2022) - fix link (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2020) - MIR docs: fix borked links and update style (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2017) - Update adding.md (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2016)
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This is a documentation change to accompany this stabilization report. It should only be merged if the stabilization gets accepted.