Improve documentation for constructors of pinned Boxes

This commit is contained in:
Frank Steffahn 2022-06-02 12:36:11 +02:00
parent 9598b4b594
commit 6e2ac5df31

View file

@ -266,8 +266,13 @@ impl<T> Box<T> {
Self::new_zeroed_in(Global)
}
/// Constructs a new `Pin<Box<T>>`. If `T` does not implement `Unpin`, then
/// Constructs a new `Pin<Box<T>>`. If `T` does not implement [`Unpin`], then
/// `x` will be pinned in memory and unable to be moved.
///
/// Constructing and pinning of the `Box` can also be done in two steps: `Box::pin(x)`
/// does the same as <code>[Box::into_pin]\([Box::new]\(x))</code>. Consider using
/// [`into_pin`](Box::into_pin) if you already have a `Box<T>`, or if you want to
/// construct a (pinned) `Box` in a different way than with [`Box::new`].
#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))]
#[stable(feature = "pin", since = "1.33.0")]
#[must_use]
@ -553,8 +558,13 @@ impl<T, A: Allocator> Box<T, A> {
unsafe { Ok(Box::from_raw_in(ptr.as_ptr(), alloc)) }
}
/// Constructs a new `Pin<Box<T, A>>`. If `T` does not implement `Unpin`, then
/// Constructs a new `Pin<Box<T, A>>`. If `T` does not implement [`Unpin`], then
/// `x` will be pinned in memory and unable to be moved.
///
/// Constructing and pinning of the `Box` can also be done in two steps: `Box::pin_in(x, alloc)`
/// does the same as <code>[Box::into_pin]\([Box::new_in]\(x, alloc))</code>. Consider using
/// [`into_pin`](Box::into_pin) if you already have a `Box<T, A>`, or if you want to
/// construct a (pinned) `Box` in a different way than with [`Box::new_in`].
#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))]
#[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")]
#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_box", issue = "92521")]
@ -1170,12 +1180,18 @@ impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> Box<T, A> {
unsafe { &mut *mem::ManuallyDrop::new(b).0.as_ptr() }
}
/// Converts a `Box<T>` into a `Pin<Box<T>>`
/// Converts a `Box<T>` into a `Pin<Box<T>>`. If `T` does not implement [`Unpin`], then
/// `*boxed` will be pinned in memory and unable to be moved.
///
/// This conversion does not allocate on the heap and happens in place.
///
/// This is also available via [`From`].
///
/// Constructing and pinning a `Box` with <code>Box::into_pin([Box::new]\(x))</code>
/// can also be written more concisely using <code>[Box::pin]\(x)</code>.
/// This `into_pin` method is useful if you already have a `Box<T>`, or you are
/// constructing a (pinned) `Box` in a different way than with [`Box::new`].
///
/// # Notes
///
/// It's not recommended that crates add an impl like `From<Box<T>> for Pin<T>`,
@ -1437,9 +1453,17 @@ impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const From<Box<T, A>> for Pin<Box<T, A>>
where
A: 'static,
{
/// Converts a `Box<T>` into a `Pin<Box<T>>`
/// Converts a `Box<T>` into a `Pin<Box<T>>`. If `T` does not implement [`Unpin`], then
/// `*boxed` will be pinned in memory and unable to be moved.
///
/// This conversion does not allocate on the heap and happens in place.
///
/// This is also available via [`Box::into_pin`].
///
/// Constructing and pinning a `Box` with <code><Pin<Box\<T>>>::from([Box::new]\(x))</code>
/// can also be written more concisely using <code>[Box::pin]\(x)</code>.
/// This `From` implementation is useful if you already have a `Box<T>`, or you are
/// constructing a (pinned) `Box` in a different way than with [`Box::new`].
fn from(boxed: Box<T, A>) -> Self {
Box::into_pin(boxed)
}