generic_arguments.md: substs -> GenericArgs

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113591
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Mahdi Dibaiee 2023-07-14 21:16:48 +01:00 committed by Tshepang Mbambo
parent c514440e84
commit 6e6f620f83
1 changed files with 13 additions and 13 deletions

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@ -1,28 +1,28 @@
# Generic arguments
A `ty::subst::GenericArg<'tcx>` represents some entity in the type system: a type
A `ty::GenericArg<'tcx>` represents some entity in the type system: a type
(`Ty<'tcx>`), lifetime (`ty::Region<'tcx>`) or constant (`ty::Const<'tcx>`).
`GenericArg` is used to perform substitutions of generic parameters for concrete
`GenericArg` is used to perform instantiation of generic parameters to concrete
arguments, such as when calling a function with generic parameters explicitly
with type arguments. Substitutions are represented using the
[`Subst` type](#subst) as described below.
with type arguments. Instantiations are represented using the
[`GenericArgs` type](#genericargs) as described below.
## `Subst`
`ty::subst::Subst<'tcx>` is intuitively simply a slice of `GenericArg<'tcx>`s,
acting as an ordered list of substitutions from generic parameters to
## `GenericArgs`
`ty::GenericArgs<'tcx>` is intuitively simply a slice of `GenericArg<'tcx>`s,
acting as an ordered list of generic parameters instantiated to
concrete arguments (such as types, lifetimes and consts).
For example, given a `HashMap<K, V>` with two type parameters, `K` and `V`, an
instantiation of the parameters, for example `HashMap<i32, u32>`, would be
represented by the substitution `&'tcx [tcx.types.i32, tcx.types.u32]`.
represented by `&'tcx [tcx.types.i32, tcx.types.u32]`.
`Subst` provides various convenience methods to instantiate substitutions
`GenericArgs` provides various convenience methods to instantiate generic arguments
given item definitions, which should generally be used rather than explicitly
constructing such substitution slices.
instantiating such slices.
## `GenericArg`
The actual `GenericArg` struct is optimised for space, storing the type, lifetime or
const as an interned pointer containing a tag identifying its kind (in the
lowest 2 bits). Unless you are working with the `Subst` implementation
lowest 2 bits). Unless you are working with the `GenericArgs` implementation
specifically, you should generally not have to deal with `GenericArg` and instead
make use of the safe [`GenericArgKind`](#genericargkind) abstraction.
@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ make use of the safe [`GenericArgKind`](#genericargkind) abstraction.
As `GenericArg` itself is not type-safe, the `GenericArgKind` enum provides a more
convenient and safe interface for dealing with generic arguments. An
`GenericArgKind` can be converted to a raw `GenericArg` using `GenericArg::from()`
(or simply `.into()` when the context is clear). As mentioned earlier, substitution
(or simply `.into()` when the context is clear). As mentioned earlier, instantiation
lists store raw `GenericArg`s, so before dealing with them, it is preferable to
convert them to `GenericArgKind`s first. This is done by calling the `.unpack()`
method.
@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ fn deal_with_generic_arg<'tcx>(generic_arg: GenericArg<'tcx>) -> GenericArg<'tcx
GenericArgKind::Lifetime(lt) => { /* ... */ }
GenericArgKind::Const(ct) => { /* ... */ }
};
// Pack the `GenericArgKind` to store it in a substitution list.
// Pack the `GenericArgKind` to store it in a generic args list.
new_generic_arg.into()
}
```