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Convert index operator to be by value #23601

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merged 4 commits into from
Mar 24, 2015

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nikomatsakis
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This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the [] operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change map[key] to map[&key] (consistent with the get routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written map["abc"].

r? @japaric
cc @aturon @gankro

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(Hmm, something seems to have broken in the rebase. It WAS passing make check. I'll fix it up tomorrow.)

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OK, fixed the problem I was seeing locally -- rerunning make check now.

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oh and cc @sfackler

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Gankra commented Mar 22, 2015

I'm not sure where we landed in discussion before. Longterm what's the strategy for recovering the old behaviour?

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ok, make check passes.

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@gankro if we want to recover the map[key], vs map[&key], there are two options:

  1. Optional autoref, probably applied uniformly to all by-value operators (that is, also to + and friends). (*)
  2. Extending coherence in such a way that we can provide two impls.

I would prefer option 1 since I think we want to have optional auto-ref for +, and I think that the more we can make the operators act uniformly the better. (I probably want to find ways to extend coherence too, but that's a complicated story...)

(All that said, my experience has been that I find the autoref on map[key] rather confusing. I can never remember whether I need an & or not, basically -- I expect map.get(&key) and map[&key] to act the same, but for the Option return type.)

(*) This may seem inconsistent with our conversation on IRC, since I think maybe (in retrospect) you were asking me about the prospects for "autoref" and I was saying "that's hard". There are indeed sometimes challenges about this sort of thing from inference; we'd have to see how well it works. But I think it'll work out ok in most cases, I guess.

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japaric commented Mar 22, 2015

@bors: r+ bae844d

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bors commented Mar 22, 2015

☔ The latest upstream changes (presumably #23361) made this pull request unmergeable. Please resolve the merge conflicts.

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@bors r=japaric b760c56

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@bors p=1

important language change

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bors commented Mar 23, 2015

⌛ Testing commit b760c56 with merge 2aa6858...

bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Mar 23, 2015
This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the `[]` operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change `map[key]` to `map[&key]` (consistent with the `get` routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written `map["abc"]`.

r? @japaric
cc @aturon @gankro
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bors commented Mar 23, 2015

💔 Test failed - auto-mac-64-nopt-t

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@bors: retry

this test failure makes no sense!

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bors commented Mar 23, 2015

☔ The latest upstream changes (presumably #23593) made this pull request unmergeable. Please resolve the merge conflicts.

references. For collections whose keys are integers, we take both
references and by-value.
`[]` on maps to `get` in rustc, since stage0 and stage1+ disagree about
how to use `[]`.
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@bors r=japaric 57cf2de p=1

alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this pull request Mar 23, 2015
This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the `[]` operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change `map[key]` to `map[&key]` (consistent with the `get` routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written `map["abc"]`.

r? @japaric
cc @aturon @gankro
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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

⌛ Testing commit 57cf2de with merge beb33d4...

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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

⛄ The build was interrupted to prioritize another pull request.

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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

⌛ Testing commit 57cf2de with merge ffd5f00...

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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

⛄ The build was interrupted to prioritize another pull request.

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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

⌛ Testing commit 57cf2de with merge de8a23b...

bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Mar 24, 2015
This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the `[]` operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change `map[key]` to `map[&key]` (consistent with the `get` routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written `map["abc"]`.

r? @japaric
cc @aturon @gankro
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bors commented Mar 24, 2015

💔 Test failed - auto-linux-64-opt

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@bors: retry

@bors bors merged commit 57cf2de into rust-lang:master Mar 24, 2015
@nikomatsakis nikomatsakis deleted the by-value-index branch March 30, 2016 16:12
bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Mar 29, 2019
remove ?Sized bounds from Index

I've noticed that we have an `Idx: ?Sized` bound on the **index** in the `Index`, which seems strange given that we accept index by value. My guess is that it was meant to be removed in #23601, but was overlooked.

If I remove this bound, `./x.py src/libstd/ src/libcore/` passes, which means at least that this is not covered by test.

I think there's three things we can do here:

* run crater with the bound removed to check if there are any regressions, and merge this, to be consistent with other operator traits
* run crater, get regressions, write a test for this with a note that "hey, we tried to fix it, its unfixable"
* decide, in the light of by-value DSTs, that this is a feature rather than a bug, and add a test

cc @rust-lang/libs

EDIT: the forth alternative is that there exist a genuine reason why this is the case, but I failed to see it :D
bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Apr 17, 2019
Add test checking that Index<T: ?Sized> works

I've noticed that we have an `Idx: ?Sized` bound on the **index** in the `Index`, which seems strange given that we accept index by value. My guess is that it was meant to be removed in #23601, but was overlooked.

If I remove this bound, `./x.py src/libstd/ src/libcore/` passes, which means at least that this is not covered by test.

I think there's three things we can do here:

* run crater with the bound removed to check if there are any regressions, and merge this, to be consistent with other operator traits
* run crater, get regressions, write a test for this with a note that "hey, we tried to fix it, its unfixable"
* decide, in the light of by-value DSTs, that this is a feature rather than a bug, and add a test

cc @rust-lang/libs

EDIT: the forth alternative is that there exist a genuine reason why this is the case, but I failed to see it :D
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4 participants