+/-inf were not being handled, and so invalid typescript was being
generated when a float/double had an infinite default value. NaN was
being handled correctly.
Co-authored-by: Derek Bailey <derekbailey@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Casper <casperneo@uchicago.edu>
* Set an explicit 2018 edition for Rust tests
* Replace all `std` usage with `core` and `alloc` in Rust code generator
* Update the generated files
* Make Rust tests actually use no_std when the corresponding feature is enabled
* Fix 64-bit default numeric enum values in typescript
If you had a default value that wasn't a valid enum value (e.g., a zero
if you used a bit_flag setting, like you get with AdvancedFeatures
in reflection.fbs), we weren't using BigInt.
* Run generate_code.py
* [DART] Handle deprecated fields & invalid enum defaults
* Update .NET test
* fix for rust build
* Rust: Implement Serialize on generated types
For debugging convenience it is really handy to be able to dump out
types as another format (ie: json). For example, if we are logging a
type to a structured logging system, or even printing it out in a
structured way to the console.
Right now we handle this by shelling out to `flatc` which is not ideal;
by implementing Serialize on the generated types we can use any of the
Serializer-implementing packages for our structured debug output.
* clang-format
* Make the flatbuffers Rust crate only have an optional dependency on the `serde` packages.
* fix warning
* fix rust test build
* Oh yeah this needs to be initialized
* fix toml syntax
* code review feedback
* rebuild test data