use std::iter;
declare_clippy_lint! {
- /// **What it does:** Checks for usage of unconstrained numeric literals which may cause default numeric fallback in type
+ /// ### What it does
+ /// Checks for usage of unconstrained numeric literals which may cause default numeric fallback in type
/// inference.
///
/// Default numeric fallback means that if numeric types have not yet been bound to concrete
///
/// See [RFC0212](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0212-restore-int-fallback.md) for more information about the fallback.
///
- /// **Why is this bad?** For those who are very careful about types, default numeric fallback
+ /// ### Why is this bad?
+ /// For those who are very careful about types, default numeric fallback
/// can be a pitfall that cause unexpected runtime behavior.
///
- /// **Known problems:** This lint can only be allowed at the function level or above.
+ /// ### Known problems
+ /// This lint can only be allowed at the function level or above.
///
- /// **Example:**
+ /// ### Example
/// ```rust
/// let i = 10;
/// let f = 1.23;