Minor edits
- un-codeblock some words - uncomment the last paragraph (it's useful to know this)
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@ -3,25 +3,25 @@
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<!-- toc -->
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In the previous chapters, we saw how the [*Abstract Syntax Tree* (`AST`)][ast]
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is built with all `macros` expanded. We saw how doing that requires doing some
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name resolution to resolve imports and `macro` names. In this chapter, we show
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is built with all macros expanded. We saw how doing that requires doing some
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name resolution to resolve imports and macro names. In this chapter, we show
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how this is actually done and more.
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[ast]: ./ast-validation.md
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In fact, we don't do full name resolution during `macro` expansion -- we only
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resolve imports and `macros` at that time. This is required to know what to even
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expand. Later, after we have the whole `AST`, we do full name resolution to
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In fact, we don't do full name resolution during macro expansion -- we only
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resolve imports and macros at that time. This is required to know what to even
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expand. Later, after we have the whole AST, we do full name resolution to
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resolve all names in the crate. This happens in [`rustc_resolve::late`][late].
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Unlike during `macro` expansion, in this late expansion, we only need to try to
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Unlike during macro expansion, in this late expansion, we only need to try to
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resolve a name once, since no new names can be added. If we fail to resolve a
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name, then it is a compiler error.
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Name resolution can be complex. There are different namespaces (e.g.
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`macros`, values, types, lifetimes), and names may be valid at different (nested)
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Name resolution is complex. There are different namespaces (e.g.
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macros, values, types, lifetimes), and names may be valid at different (nested)
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scopes. Also, different types of names can fail resolution differently, and
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failures can happen differently at different scopes. For example, in a module
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scope, failure means no unexpanded `macros` and no unresolved glob imports in
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scope, failure means no unexpanded macros and no unresolved glob imports in
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that module. On the other hand, in a function body scope, failure requires that a
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name be absent from the block we are in, all outer scopes, and the global
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scope.
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@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ expansion and name resolution communicate with each other via the
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The input to the second phase is the syntax tree, produced by parsing input
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files and expanding `macros`. This phase produces links from all the names in the
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source to relevant places where the name was introduced. It also generates
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helpful error messages, like typo suggestions, `trait`s to import or lints about
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helpful error messages, like typo suggestions, traits to import or lints about
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unused items.
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A successful run of the second phase ([`Resolver::resolve_crate`]) creates kind
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@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ namespaces, the resolver keeps them separated and builds separate structures for
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them.
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In other words, when the code talks about namespaces, it doesn't mean the module
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hierarchy, it's types vs. values vs. `macros`.
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hierarchy, it's types vs. values vs. macros.
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## Scopes and ribs
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@ -105,12 +105,12 @@ example:
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modules.
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* Introducing a `let` binding ‒ this can shadow another binding with the same
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name.
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* Macro expansion border ‒ to cope with `macro` hygiene.
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* Macro expansion border ‒ to cope with macro hygiene.
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When searching for a name, the stack of [`ribs`] is traversed from the innermost
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outwards. This helps to find the closest meaning of the name (the one not
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shadowed by anything else). The transition to outer [`Rib`] may also affect
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what names are usable ‒ if there are nested functions (not `closure`s),
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what names are usable ‒ if there are nested functions (not closures),
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the inner one can't access parameters and local bindings of the outer one,
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even though they should be visible by ordinary scoping rules. An example:
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@ -150,14 +150,14 @@ used even before encountered ‒ therefore every block needs to be first scanned
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for items to fill in its [`Rib`].
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Other, even more problematic ones, are imports which need recursive fixed-point
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resolution and `macros`, that need to be resolved and expanded before the rest of
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resolution and macros, that need to be resolved and expanded before the rest of
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the code can be processed.
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Therefore, the resolution is performed in multiple stages.
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## Speculative crate loading
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To give useful errors, `rustc` suggests importing paths into scope if they're
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To give useful errors, rustc suggests importing paths into scope if they're
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not found. How does it do this? It looks through every module of every crate
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and looks for possible matches. This even includes crates that haven't yet
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been loaded!
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@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ To tell the difference between speculative loads and loads initiated by the
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user, [`rustc_resolve`] passes around a `record_used` parameter, which is `false` when
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the load is speculative.
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<!-- ## TODO: [#16](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/issues/16)
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## TODO: [#16](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/issues/16)
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This is a result of the first pass of learning the code. It is definitely
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incomplete and not detailed enough. It also might be inaccurate in places.
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@ -190,4 +190,4 @@ Still, it probably provides useful first guidepost to what happens in there.
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* The overall strategy description is a bit vague.
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* Where does the name `Rib` come from?
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* Does this thing have its own tests, or is it tested only as part of some e2e
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testing? -->
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testing?
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