@@ -1475,14 +1475,16 @@ mod prim_usize {}
14751475///
14761476/// For instance, this means that unsafe code in a safe function may assume these invariants are
14771477/// ensured of arguments passed by the caller, and it may assume that these invariants are ensured
1478- /// of return values from any safe functions it calls. In most cases, the inverse is also true:
1479- /// unsafe code must not violate these invariants when passing arguments to safe functions or
1480- /// returning values from safe functions; such violations may result in undefined behavior. Where
1481- /// exceptions to this latter requirement exist, they will be called out explicitly in documentation.
1478+ /// of return values from any safe functions it calls.
1479+ ///
1480+ /// For the other direction, things are more complicated: when unsafe code passes arguments
1481+ /// to safe functions or returns values from safe functions, they generally must *at least*
1482+ /// not violate these invariants. The full requirements are stronger, as the reference generally
1483+ /// must point to data that is safe to use at type `T`.
14821484///
14831485/// It is not decided yet whether unsafe code may violate these invariants temporarily on internal
14841486/// data. As a consequence, unsafe code which violates these invariants temporarily on internal data
1485- /// may become unsound in future versions of Rust depending on how this question is decided.
1487+ /// may be unsound or become unsound in future versions of Rust depending on how this question is decided.
14861488///
14871489/// [allocated object]: ptr#allocated-object
14881490#[ stable( feature = "rust1" , since = "1.0.0" ) ]
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