Rust is going to change its Markdown rendering engine from hoedown to
pulldown-cmark. In pulldown, a table row starting with just whitespaces
will cause that whole cell disappeared. This causes rendering difference
between the two engines.
To fix this, we add leading and trailing `|` to the rows so that empty
cells are correctly rendered.
Current clippy is probably correct, but its a breaking change that
isn't appropriate now. Add allow's to get the build working again.
Also these Date(Time)::signed_duration_since cases appear to match
there `Naive` counterparts, where clippy isn't complaining. If its
fixed in the future, should probably be changed across the board, not
just here.
Now (assuming clippy is right) all (~100) uses of ` as ` in the code are
actually doing casts that could potentially silently lose data. Woooo?
At least this means that new `as`s can be extra-scrutinized, and we should
probably be adding debug_assert!s for the casts in real code.
The implementation is identical to how #[derive] would do it, and we use the
implementation to add some documentation warning people not to use items with
nanosecond-level precision in hash maps unless they're sure that's what they
want.
Starting from this version the `CHANGELOG.md` file is the canonical
source for the list of significant changes. See the file for details.
Fixes#146.
Fixes#159.
Due to the obvious lack of time zone information in `SystemTime`,
`SystemTime` can only be converted to `DateTime<Utc>` (in UTC) or
`DateTime<Local>` (in the local time zone), while any `DateTime<Tz>`
can be converted to `SystemTime`.
This removes `Datelike::isoweekdate` in favor of `Datelike::iso_week`.
The original `isoweekdate` was not named in accordance with the style
guide and also used to return the day of the week which is already
provided by `Datelike::weekday`. The new design should be more
reasonable.
Note that we initially do not implement any public constructor for
`IsoWeek`. That is, the only legitimate way to get a new `IsoWeek` is
from `Datelike::iso_week`. This sidesteps the issue of boundary values
(for example the year number in the maximal date will overflow in
the week date) while giving the same power as the original API.
Partially accounts for #139. We may add additional week types
as necessary---this is the beginning.
Linkchecker recognizes the distinction between internal and external
links (which are not checked by default), and considers URLs which
does not have the starting URL base as a prefix internal...
This commit has been verified against a proper set of options to
Linkchecker, but there are several false positives (for our purposes)
which would make the automated checking not as effective. </rant>
There used to be multiple modules like `chrono::datetime` which only
provide a single type `DateTime`. In retrospect, this module structure
never reflected how people use those types; with the release of 0.3.0
`chrono::prelude` is a preferred way to glob-import types, and due to
reexports `chrono::DateTime` and likes are also common enough.
Therefore this commit removes those implementation modules and
flattens the module structure. Specifically:
Before After
---------------------------------- ----------------------------
chrono:📅:Date chrono::Date
chrono:📅:MIN chrono::MIN_DATE
chrono:📅:MAX chrono::MAX_DATE
chrono::datetime::DateTime chrono::DateTime
chrono::datetime::TsSeconds chrono::TsSeconds
chrono::datetime::serde::* chrono::serde::*
chrono::naive::time::NaiveTime chrono::naive::NaiveTime
chrono::naive:📅:NaiveDate chrono::naive::NaiveDate
chrono::naive:📅:MIN chrono::naive::MIN_DATE
chrono::naive:📅:MAX chrono::naive::MAX_DATE
chrono::naive::datetime::NaiveDateTime
chrono::naive::NaiveDateTime
chrono::naive::datetime::TsSeconds chrono::naive::TsSeconds
chrono::naive::datetime::serde::* chrono::naive::serde::*
chrono::offset::utc::UTC chrono::offset::UTC
chrono::offset::fixed::FixedOffset chrono::offset::FixedOffset
chrono::offset::local::Local chrono::offset::Local
chrono::format::parsed::Parsed chrono::format::Parsed
All internal documentation links have been updated (phew!) and
verified with LinkChecker [1]. Probably we can automate this check
in the future.
[1] https://wummel.github.io/linkchecker/Closes#161. Compared to the original proposal, `chrono::naive` is
retained as we had `TsSeconds` types duplicated for `NaiveDateTime`
and `DateTime` (legitimately).
I think it's a terrible API, but AFAIK rustc-serialize doesn't support anything
like serde's `with` attribute.
I think it would be better to just not include this API at all and require that
people who want to use this move to serde, which is the recommended rust
encoding/decoding library.
This introduces a newtype around DateTime and NaiveDateTime that deserlization
is implemented for.
There are two advantages to this over the previous implementation:
* It is expandable to other timestamp representations (e.g. millisecond and
microsecond timestamps)
* It works with RustcSerialize::Decodable. AFAICT Decodable will error if you
try to call more than one of the `read_*` functions in the same `decode`
invocation. This is slightly annoying compared to serde which just calls the
correct `visit_*` function for whatever type the deserializer encounters.
On the whole I think that I prefer this to the previous implementation of
deserializing timestamps (even though I don't care about RustcSerialize in the
post-1.15 world) because it is much more explicit.
On the other hand, this feels like it's introducing a lot of types, and
possibly making downstream crates introduce a variety of different structs for
ser/de and translating into different struct types.
Timestamps are defined in terms of UTC, so what this does is, if we encounter
an integer instead of a str, create a FixedOffset timestamp with an offset of
zero and create the timestamp from that.