clippy_lints 0.0.84

A bunch of helpful lints to avoid common pitfalls in Rust
use consts::{Constant, constant_simple, FloatWidth};
use rustc::lint::*;
use rustc::hir::*;
use utils::span_help_and_lint;

/// **What it does:** Checks for `0.0 / 0.0`.
///
/// **Why is this bad?** It's less readable than `std::f32::NAN` or `std::f64::NAN`.
///
/// **Known problems:** None.
///
/// **Example:**
/// ```rust
/// 0.0f32 / 0.0
/// ```
declare_lint! {
    pub ZERO_DIVIDED_BY_ZERO,
    Warn,
    "usage of `0.0 / 0.0` to obtain NaN instead of std::f32::NaN or std::f64::NaN"
}

pub struct Pass;

impl LintPass for Pass {
    fn get_lints(&self) -> LintArray {
        lint_array!(ZERO_DIVIDED_BY_ZERO)
    }
}

impl LateLintPass for Pass {
    fn check_expr(&mut self, cx: &LateContext, expr: &Expr) {
        // check for instances of 0.0/0.0
        if_let_chain! {[
            let ExprBinary(ref op, ref left, ref right) = expr.node,
            let BinOp_::BiDiv = op.node,
            // TODO - constant_simple does not fold many operations involving floats.
            // That's probably fine for this lint - it's pretty unlikely that someone would
            // do something like 0.0/(2.0 - 2.0), but it would be nice to warn on that case too.
            let Some(Constant::Float(ref lhs_value, lhs_width)) = constant_simple(left),
            let Some(Constant::Float(ref rhs_value, rhs_width)) = constant_simple(right),
            let Some(0.0) = lhs_value.parse().ok(),
            let Some(0.0) = rhs_value.parse().ok()
        ], {
            // since we're about to suggest a use of std::f32::NaN or std::f64::NaN,
            // match the precision of the literals that are given.
            let float_type = match (lhs_width, rhs_width) {
                (FloatWidth::F64, _)
                | (_, FloatWidth::F64) => "f64",
                _ => "f32"
            };
            span_help_and_lint(cx, ZERO_DIVIDED_BY_ZERO, expr.span,
                "constant division of 0.0 with 0.0 will always result in NaN",
                &format!("Consider using `std::{}::NAN` if you would like a constant representing NaN", float_type));
        }}
    }
}