Closed
Description
Proposal
ast::ptr::P
was added in rust-lang/rust#13316, in the year 2014 CE. It was created as an alternative to the now-defunct @T
. It is a thin wrapper around Box
and is used in many parts of the AST. It has a moderate-sized API, but a lot of the operations are unused, and the rest are barely used and easily replaced with Box
operations.
At this point P
just a useless layer of indirection and obfuscation. Many direct uses of Box
have crept into the AST alongside the uses of P
. Box
is superior in every way except brevity. (Especially box patterns!)
Proposed transition:
- Remove the few uses of
P::map
. - Remove the one use of
P<[T]>
. - Remove all the
P<[T]>
operations. - Remove unused
P<T>
operations (most of them). - Reduce
P<T>
to a typedef ofBox<T>
, plus theP
constructor fn. - Eliminate
P<T>
, by mass-convertingP<T>
toBox<T>
andP(x)
calls toBox::new(x)
.
rust-lang/rust#141603 does the first five steps.
Mentors or Reviewers
N/A
Process
The main points of the Major Change Process are as follows:
- File an issue describing the proposal.
- A compiler team member or contributor who is knowledgeable in the area can second by writing
@rustbot second
.- Finding a "second" suffices for internal changes. If however, you are proposing a new public-facing feature, such as a
-C flag
, then full team check-off is required. - Compiler team members can initiate a check-off via
@rfcbot fcp merge
on either the MCP or the PR.
- Finding a "second" suffices for internal changes. If however, you are proposing a new public-facing feature, such as a
- Once an MCP is seconded, the Final Comment Period begins. If no objections are raised after 10 days, the MCP is considered approved.
You can read more about Major Change Proposals on forge.