Merge pull request #129 from vorner/minor-stuff

Minor improvements
pull/133/head
Alexis Beingessner 6 years ago committed by GitHub
commit f7a148c7e3
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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ println!("{} {} {} {}", a, b, c, c2);
However borrowck doesn't understand arrays or slices in any way, so this doesn't
work:
```rust,ignore
```rust,compile_fail
let mut x = [1, 2, 3];
let a = &mut x[0];
let b = &mut x[1];
@ -60,7 +60,12 @@ the left of the index, and one for everything to the right. Intuitively we know
this is safe because the slices don't overlap, and therefore alias. However
the implementation requires some unsafety:
```rust,ignore
```rust
# use std::slice::from_raw_parts_mut;
# struct FakeSlice<T>(T);
# impl<T> FakeSlice<T> {
# fn len(&self) -> usize { unimplemented!() }
# fn as_mut_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut T { unimplemented!() }
fn split_at_mut(&mut self, mid: usize) -> (&mut [T], &mut [T]) {
let len = self.len();
let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr();
@ -70,6 +75,7 @@ fn split_at_mut(&mut self, mid: usize) -> (&mut [T], &mut [T]) {
from_raw_parts_mut(ptr.offset(mid as isize), len - mid))
}
}
# }
```
This is actually a bit subtle. So as to avoid ever making two `&mut`'s to the

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Like C, all stack variables in Rust are uninitialized until a value is
explicitly assigned to them. Unlike C, Rust statically prevents you from ever
reading them until you do:
```rust,ignore
```rust,compile_fail
fn main() {
let x: i32;
println!("{}", x);
@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ fn main() {
but this doesn't:
```rust,ignore
```rust,compile_fail
fn main() {
let x: i32;
if true {

@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ types or lifetimes are logically associated with a struct, but not actually
part of a field. This most commonly occurs with lifetimes. For instance, the
`Iter` for `&'a [T]` is (approximately) defined as follows:
```rust,ignore
```rust,compile_fail
struct Iter<'a, T: 'a> {
ptr: *const T,
end: *const T,

@ -6,9 +6,10 @@ really can't emphasize that you should deeply think about finding Another Way
than the operations covered in this section. This is really, truly, the most
horribly unsafe thing you can do in Rust. The railguards here are dental floss.
`mem::transmute<T, U>` takes a value of type `T` and reinterprets it to have
type `U`. The only restriction is that the `T` and `U` are verified to have the
same size. The ways to cause Undefined Behavior with this are mind boggling.
[`mem::transmute<T, U>`][transmute] takes a value of type `T` and reinterprets
it to have type `U`. The only restriction is that the `T` and `U` are verified
to have the same size. The ways to cause Undefined Behavior with this are mind
boggling.
* First and foremost, creating an instance of *any* type with an invalid state
is going to cause arbitrary chaos that can't really be predicted.
@ -23,13 +24,16 @@ same size. The ways to cause Undefined Behavior with this are mind boggling.
* Transmuting to a reference without an explicitly provided lifetime
produces an [unbounded lifetime]
`mem::transmute_copy<T, U>` somehow manages to be *even more* wildly unsafe than
this. It copies `size_of<U>` bytes out of an `&T` and interprets them as a `U`.
The size check that `mem::transmute` has is gone (as it may be valid to copy
out a prefix), though it is Undefined Behavior for `U` to be larger than `T`.
[`mem::transmute_copy<T, U>`][transmute_copy] somehow manages to be *even more*
wildly unsafe than this. It copies `size_of<U>` bytes out of an `&T` and
interprets them as a `U`. The size check that `mem::transmute` has is gone (as
it may be valid to copy out a prefix), though it is Undefined Behavior for `U`
to be larger than `T`.
Also of course you can get most of the functionality of these functions using
pointer casts.
[unbounded lifetime]: unbounded-lifetimes.html
[transmute]: ../std/mem/fn.transmute.html
[transmute_copy]: ../std/mem/fn.transmute.html

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