There has been no RFC, afaict. However, t-lang have expressed enthusiasm about seeing this added.
The feature gate for the issue is #![feature(const_block_items)].
Currently, this feature allows you to write const blocks as items in modules. So, it makes the following code possible:
#![feature(const_block_items)]
const {
let a = 2 + 2;
assert!(a != 5)
}
fn main() { }
Which is equivalent to the current stable's:
const _: () = {
let a = 2 + 2;
assert!(a != 5)
};
fn main() { }
About tracking issues
Tracking issues are used to record the overall progress of implementation.
They are also used as hubs connecting to other relevant issues, e.g., bugs or open design questions.
A tracking issue is however not meant for large scale discussion, questions, or bug reports about a feature.
Instead, open a dedicated issue for the specific matter and add the relevant feature gate label.
Discussion comments will get marked as off-topic or deleted.
Repeated discussions on the tracking issue may lead to the tracking issue getting locked.
See also
Steps
Unresolved Questions
Implementation history
There has been no RFC, afaict. However, t-lang have expressed enthusiasm about seeing this added.
The feature gate for the issue is
#![feature(const_block_items)].Currently, this feature allows you to write
constblocks as items in modules. So, it makes the following code possible:Which is equivalent to the current
stable's:About tracking issues
Tracking issues are used to record the overall progress of implementation.
They are also used as hubs connecting to other relevant issues, e.g., bugs or open design questions.
A tracking issue is however not meant for large scale discussion, questions, or bug reports about a feature.
Instead, open a dedicated issue for the specific matter and add the relevant feature gate label.
Discussion comments will get marked as off-topic or deleted.
Repeated discussions on the tracking issue may lead to the tracking issue getting locked.
See also
const {}blocks, andconst { assert!(...) }lang-team#251Steps
rustfmtUnresolved Questions
const { ... }item is equivalent toconst _: () =, but what about statement-items (i.e. inside function body) or assoc items?const { ... }sometimes an item and sometimes an expression complicates our story about that.Other possibilities would be things likenobody was too enthusiastic about this approach: see Ability to omitconst _ = ...;to clarify that it's an item, but shorten the syntax (like one can omit-> ()on functions): ()on const item declarations #149738()const"_identifiers that are inserted during AST->HIR lowering ofconst { ... }toconst _: () = const { ... };const _declarations #147136)static { ... }instead ofconst { ... }?Implementation history
constblocks:constblocks as amoditem #149174: ()forconstitems: Ability to omit: ()on const item declarations #149738