@@ -291,7 +291,7 @@ mod prim_never {}
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/// Surrogate code points, used by UTF-16, are in the range 0xD800 to 0xDFFF.
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///
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/// No `char` may be constructed, whether as a literal or at runtime, that is not a
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- /// Unicode scalar value:
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+ /// Unicode scalar value. Violating this rule causes undefined behavior.
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///
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/// ```compile_fail
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/// // Each of these is a compiler error
@@ -308,9 +308,10 @@ mod prim_never {}
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/// let _ = unsafe { char::from_u32_unchecked(0x110000) };
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/// ```
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///
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- /// USVs are also the exact set of values that may be encoded in UTF-8. Because
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- /// `char` values are USVs and `str` values are valid UTF-8, it is safe to store
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- /// any `char` in a `str` or read any character from a `str` as a `char`.
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+ /// Unicode scalar values are also the exact set of values that may be encoded in UTF-8. Because
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+ /// `char` values are Unicode scalar values and functions may assume [incoming `str` values are
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+ /// valid UTF-8](primitive.str.html#invariant), it is safe to store any `char` in a `str` or read
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+ /// any character from a `str` as a `char`.
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///
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/// The gap in valid `char` values is understood by the compiler, so in the
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/// below example the two ranges are understood to cover the whole range of
@@ -324,11 +325,10 @@ mod prim_never {}
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/// };
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/// ```
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///
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- /// All USVs are valid `char` values, but not all of them represent a real
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- /// character. Many USVs are not currently assigned to a character, but may be
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- /// in the future ("reserved"); some will never be a character
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- /// ("noncharacters"); and some may be given different meanings by different
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- /// users ("private use").
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+ /// All Unicode scalar values are valid `char` values, but not all of them represent a real
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+ /// character. Many Unicode scalar values are not currently assigned to a character, but may be in
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+ /// the future ("reserved"); some will never be a character ("noncharacters"); and some may be given
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+ /// different meanings by different users ("private use").
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///
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/// `char` is guaranteed to have the same size and alignment as `u32` on all
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/// platforms.
@@ -894,8 +894,6 @@ mod prim_slice {}
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/// type. It is usually seen in its borrowed form, `&str`. It is also the type
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/// of string literals, `&'static str`.
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///
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- /// String slices are always valid UTF-8.
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- ///
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/// # Basic Usage
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///
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/// String literals are string slices:
@@ -949,6 +947,14 @@ mod prim_slice {}
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/// Note: This example shows the internals of `&str`. `unsafe` should not be
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/// used to get a string slice under normal circumstances. Use `as_str`
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/// instead.
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+ ///
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+ /// # Invariant
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+ ///
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+ /// Rust libraries may assume that string slices are always valid UTF-8.
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+ ///
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+ /// Constructing a non-UTF-8 string slice is not immediate undefined behavior, but any function
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+ /// called on a string slice may assume that it is valid UTF-8, which means that a non-UTF-8 string
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+ /// slice can lead to undefined behavior down the road.
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#[ stable( feature = "rust1" , since = "1.0.0" ) ]
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mod prim_str { }
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