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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | library/core/src/mem/mod.rs | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs b/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs index 20b2d5e26..d2dd2941d 100644 --- a/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs +++ b/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs @@ -665,14 +665,14 @@ pub unsafe fn zeroed<T>() -> T { /// correctly: it has the same effect as [`MaybeUninit::uninit().assume_init()`][uninit]. /// As the [`assume_init` documentation][assume_init] explains, /// [the Rust compiler assumes][inv] that values are properly initialized. -/// As a consequence, calling e.g. `mem::uninitialized::<bool>()` causes immediate -/// undefined behavior for returning a `bool` that is not definitely either `true` -/// or `false`. Worse, truly uninitialized memory like what gets returned here +/// +/// Truly uninitialized memory like what gets returned here /// is special in that the compiler knows that it does not have a fixed value. /// This makes it undefined behavior to have uninitialized data in a variable even /// if that variable has an integer type. -/// (Notice that the rules around uninitialized integers are not finalized yet, but -/// until they are, it is advisable to avoid them.) +/// +/// Therefore, it is immediate undefined behavior to call this function on nearly all types, +/// including integer types and arrays of integer types, and even if the result is unused. /// /// [uninit]: MaybeUninit::uninit /// [assume_init]: MaybeUninit::assume_init |