| // implements the unary operator "op &T" |
| // based on "op T" where T is expected to be `Copy`able |
| macro_rules! forward_ref_unop { |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty) => { |
| forward_ref_unop!(impl $imp, $method for $t, |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]); |
| }; |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty, #[$attr:meta]) => { |
| #[$attr] |
| impl $imp for &$t { |
| type Output = <$t as $imp>::Output; |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn $method(self) -> <$t as $imp>::Output { |
| $imp::$method(*self) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // implements binary operators "&T op U", "T op &U", "&T op &U" |
| // based on "T op U" where T and U are expected to be `Copy`able |
| macro_rules! forward_ref_binop { |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty, $u:ty) => { |
| forward_ref_binop!(impl $imp, $method for $t, $u, |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]); |
| }; |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty, $u:ty, #[$attr:meta]) => { |
| #[$attr] |
| impl<'a> $imp<$u> for &'a $t { |
| type Output = <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output; |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn $method(self, other: $u) -> <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output { |
| $imp::$method(*self, other) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[$attr] |
| impl $imp<&$u> for $t { |
| type Output = <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output; |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn $method(self, other: &$u) -> <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output { |
| $imp::$method(self, *other) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[$attr] |
| impl $imp<&$u> for &$t { |
| type Output = <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output; |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn $method(self, other: &$u) -> <$t as $imp<$u>>::Output { |
| $imp::$method(*self, *other) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // implements "T op= &U", based on "T op= U" |
| // where U is expected to be `Copy`able |
| macro_rules! forward_ref_op_assign { |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty, $u:ty) => { |
| forward_ref_op_assign!(impl $imp, $method for $t, $u, |
| #[stable(feature = "op_assign_builtins_by_ref", since = "1.22.0")]); |
| }; |
| (impl $imp:ident, $method:ident for $t:ty, $u:ty, #[$attr:meta]) => { |
| #[$attr] |
| impl $imp<&$u> for $t { |
| #[inline] |
| fn $method(&mut self, other: &$u) { |
| $imp::$method(self, *other); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Create a zero-size type similar to a closure type, but named. |
| macro_rules! impl_fn_for_zst { |
| ($( |
| $( #[$attr: meta] )* |
| struct $Name: ident impl$( <$( $lifetime : lifetime ),+> )? Fn = |
| |$( $arg: ident: $ArgTy: ty ),*| -> $ReturnTy: ty |
| $body: block; |
| )+) => { |
| $( |
| $( #[$attr] )* |
| struct $Name; |
| |
| impl $( <$( $lifetime ),+> )? Fn<($( $ArgTy, )*)> for $Name { |
| #[inline] |
| extern "rust-call" fn call(&self, ($( $arg, )*): ($( $ArgTy, )*)) -> $ReturnTy { |
| $body |
| } |
| } |
| |
| impl $( <$( $lifetime ),+> )? FnMut<($( $ArgTy, )*)> for $Name { |
| #[inline] |
| extern "rust-call" fn call_mut( |
| &mut self, |
| ($( $arg, )*): ($( $ArgTy, )*) |
| ) -> $ReturnTy { |
| Fn::call(&*self, ($( $arg, )*)) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| impl $( <$( $lifetime ),+> )? FnOnce<($( $ArgTy, )*)> for $Name { |
| type Output = $ReturnTy; |
| |
| #[inline] |
| extern "rust-call" fn call_once(self, ($( $arg, )*): ($( $ArgTy, )*)) -> $ReturnTy { |
| Fn::call(&self, ($( $arg, )*)) |
| } |
| } |
| )+ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// A macro for defining `#[cfg]` if-else statements. |
| /// |
| /// `cfg_if` is similar to the `if/elif` C preprocessor macro by allowing definition of a cascade |
| /// of `#[cfg]` cases, emitting the implementation which matches first. |
| /// |
| /// This allows you to conveniently provide a long list `#[cfg]`'d blocks of code without having to |
| /// rewrite each clause multiple times. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// ```ignore(cannot-test-this-because-non-exported-macro) |
| /// cfg_if! { |
| /// if #[cfg(unix)] { |
| /// fn foo() { /* unix specific functionality */ } |
| /// } else if #[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")] { |
| /// fn foo() { /* non-unix, 32-bit functionality */ } |
| /// } else { |
| /// fn foo() { /* fallback implementation */ } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// # fn main() {} |
| /// ``` |
| // This is a copy of `cfg_if!` from the `cfg_if` crate. |
| // The recursive invocations should use $crate if this is ever exported. |
| macro_rules! cfg_if { |
| // match if/else chains with a final `else` |
| ( |
| $( |
| if #[cfg( $i_meta:meta )] { $( $i_tokens:tt )* } |
| ) else+ |
| else { $( $e_tokens:tt )* } |
| ) => { |
| cfg_if! { |
| @__items () ; |
| $( |
| (( $i_meta ) ( $( $i_tokens )* )) , |
| )+ |
| (() ( $( $e_tokens )* )) , |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // Internal and recursive macro to emit all the items |
| // |
| // Collects all the previous cfgs in a list at the beginning, so they can be |
| // negated. After the semicolon is all the remaining items. |
| (@__items ( $( $_:meta , )* ) ; ) => {}; |
| ( |
| @__items ( $( $no:meta , )* ) ; |
| (( $( $yes:meta )? ) ( $( $tokens:tt )* )) , |
| $( $rest:tt , )* |
| ) => { |
| // Emit all items within one block, applying an appropriate #[cfg]. The |
| // #[cfg] will require all `$yes` matchers specified and must also negate |
| // all previous matchers. |
| #[cfg(all( |
| $( $yes , )? |
| not(any( $( $no ),* )) |
| ))] |
| cfg_if! { @__identity $( $tokens )* } |
| |
| // Recurse to emit all other items in `$rest`, and when we do so add all |
| // our `$yes` matchers to the list of `$no` matchers as future emissions |
| // will have to negate everything we just matched as well. |
| cfg_if! { |
| @__items ( $( $no , )* $( $yes , )? ) ; |
| $( $rest , )* |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // Internal macro to make __apply work out right for different match types, |
| // because of how macros match/expand stuff. |
| (@__identity $( $tokens:tt )* ) => { |
| $( $tokens )* |
| }; |
| } |