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Downgrade match_bool to pedantic #5408
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Build failure appears unrelated. |
I think the reasoning
is a little too weak for this lint. In your first code example I'd prefer the For your second example, you could still put the comment on top of the The enum-from-bool example is a special case, where you could allow this lint once in the code base. After that you probably only use the enum and don't match on the bool anymore. I can see the "it's shorter" argument. Overall, this lint is opinionated (which is fair for |
FWIW, I'm also not a fan of this lint, for similar reasons as @dtolnay. |
I'm for one to downgrade this lint. |
@dtolnay This needs a rebase. After that, we can merge this. |
Rebased. |
@bors r+ |
📌 Commit ef28361 has been approved by |
🌲 The tree is currently closed for pull requests below priority 1, this pull request will be tested once the tree is reopened |
Downgrade match_bool to pedantic I don't quite buy the justification in https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/. The justification is: > It makes the code less readable. In the Rust codebases I've worked in, I have found people were comfortable using `match bool` (selectively) to make code more readable. For example, initializing struct fields is a place where the indentation of `match` can work better than the indentation of `if`: ```rust let _ = Struct { v: { ... }, w: match doing_w { true => ..., false => ..., }, x: Nested { c: ..., b: ..., a: ..., }, y: if doing_y { ... } else { // :( ... }, z: ..., }; ``` Or sometimes people prefer something a bit less pithy than `if` when the meaning of the bool doesn't read off clearly from the condition: ```rust if set.insert(...) { ... // ??? } else { ... } match set.insert(...) { // set.insert returns false if already present false => ..., true => ..., } ``` Or `match` can be a better fit when the bool is playing the role more of a value than a branch condition: ```rust impl ErrorCodes { pub fn from(b: bool) -> Self { match b { true => ErrorCodes::Yes, false => ErrorCodes::No, } } } ``` And then there's plain old it's-1-line-shorter, which means we get 25% more content on a screen when stacking a sequence of conditions: ```rust let old_noun = match old_binding.is_import() { true => "import", false => "definition", }; let new_participle = match new_binding.is_import() { true => "imported", false => "defined", }; ``` Bottom line is I think this lint fits the bill better as a pedantic lint; I don't think linting on this by default is justified. changelog: Remove match_bool from default set of enabled lints
Rollup of 5 pull requests Successful merges: - #5408 (Downgrade match_bool to pedantic) - #5505 (Avoid running cargo+internal lints when not enabled) - #5516 (Add a note to the beta sections of release.md) - #5517 (Deploy time travel) - #5523 (Add lifetime test case for `new_ret_no_self`) Failed merges: r? @ghost changelog: rollup
I don't quite buy the justification in https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/. The justification is:
In the Rust codebases I've worked in, I have found people were comfortable using
match bool
(selectively) to make code more readable. For example, initializing struct fields is a place where the indentation ofmatch
can work better than the indentation ofif
:Or sometimes people prefer something a bit less pithy than
if
when the meaning of the bool doesn't read off clearly from the condition:Or
match
can be a better fit when the bool is playing the role more of a value than a branch condition:And then there's plain old it's-1-line-shorter, which means we get 25% more content on a screen when stacking a sequence of conditions:
Bottom line is I think this lint fits the bill better as a pedantic lint; I don't think linting on this by default is justified.
changelog: Remove match_bool from default set of enabled lints