Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
b23648fe4a improve the printing of substs and trait-refs 2016-04-05 22:56:23 +03:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
8a461d940c suggest adding a where-clause when that can help
suggest adding a where-clause when there is an unmet trait-bound that
can be satisfied if some type can implement it.
2016-04-05 20:58:58 +03:00
Jeffrey Seyfried
da41e583d6 Fix fallout in tests 2016-03-30 22:00:48 +00:00
Tamir Duberstein
1759cfa01c Consistent spacing 2015-03-16 07:35:23 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
872ce47955 Fallout: tests. As tests frequently elide things, lots of changes
here.  Some of this may have been poorly rebased, though I tried to be
careful and preserve the spirit of the test.
2015-02-18 10:25:28 -05:00
Nick Cameron
9f07d055f7 markers -> marker 2015-01-07 12:10:31 +13:00
Nick Cameron
503709708c Change std::kinds to std::markers; flatten std::kinds::marker
[breaking-change]
2015-01-07 09:45:28 +13:00
Niko Matsakis
b88f86782e Update error messages in compile-fail tests 2014-09-15 14:58:49 -04:00
Nick Cameron
3e626375d8 DST coercions and DST structs
[breaking-change]

1. The internal layout for traits has changed from (vtable, data) to (data, vtable). If you were relying on this in unsafe transmutes, you might get some very weird and apparently unrelated errors. You should not be doing this! Prefer not to do this at all, but if you must, you should use raw::TraitObject rather than hardcoding rustc's internal representation into your code.

2. The minimal type of reference-to-vec-literals (e.g., `&[1, 2, 3]`) is now a fixed size vec (e.g., `&[int, ..3]`) where it used to be an unsized vec (e.g., `&[int]`). If you want the unszied type, you must explicitly give the type (e.g., `let x: &[_] = &[1, 2, 3]`). Note in particular where multiple blocks must have the same type (e.g., if and else clauses, vec elements), the compiler will not coerce to the unsized type without a hint. E.g., `[&[1], &[1, 2]]` used to be a valid expression of type '[&[int]]'. It no longer type checks since the first element now has type `&[int, ..1]` and the second has type &[int, ..2]` which are incompatible.

3. The type of blocks (including functions) must be coercible to the expected type (used to be a subtype). Mostly this makes things more flexible and not less (in particular, in the case of coercing function bodies to the return type). However, in some rare cases, this is less flexible. TBH, I'm not exactly sure of the exact effects. I think the change causes us to resolve inferred type variables slightly earlier which might make us slightly more restrictive. Possibly it only affects blocks with unreachable code. E.g., `if ... { fail!(); "Hello" }` used to type check, it no longer does. The fix is to add a semicolon after the string.
2014-08-26 12:38:51 +12:00
Alex Crichton
89b0e6e12b Register new snapshots 2014-06-15 23:30:24 -07:00
Jeong YunWon
2ee0ca5132 Advice to use Box<T> not ~T 2014-05-18 15:30:41 +09:00
Kevin Ballard
8135032779 Remove references to @Trait from a compiler error message 2014-04-10 15:21:57 -07:00
Patrick Walton
bb830558d1 librustc: Fix merge fallout and test cases. 2013-06-28 10:44:17 -04:00
Ben Blum
f4ccb2fa85 Add tests for not-kind-checked trait bounds. 2013-06-23 14:40:18 -04:00