//! lint when there is an enum with no variants use crate::utils::span_lint_and_then; use rustc_hir::{Item, ItemKind}; use rustc_lint::{LateContext, LateLintPass}; use rustc_session::{declare_lint_pass, declare_tool_lint}; declare_clippy_lint! { /// **What it does:** Checks for `enum`s with no variants. /// /// **Why is this bad?** If you want to introduce a type which /// can't be instantiated, you should use `!` (the never type), /// or a wrapper around it, because `!` has more extensive /// compiler support (type inference, etc...) and wrappers /// around it are the conventional way to define an uninhabited type. /// For further information visit [never type documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.never.html) /// /// /// **Known problems:** None. /// /// **Example:** /// /// Bad: /// ```rust /// enum Test {} /// ``` /// /// Good: /// ```rust /// #![feature(never_type)] /// /// struct Test(!); /// ``` pub EMPTY_ENUM, pedantic, "enum with no variants" } declare_lint_pass!(EmptyEnum => [EMPTY_ENUM]); impl<'a, 'tcx> LateLintPass<'a, 'tcx> for EmptyEnum { fn check_item(&mut self, cx: &LateContext<'_, '_>, item: &Item<'_>) { let did = cx.tcx.hir().local_def_id(item.hir_id); if let ItemKind::Enum(..) = item.kind { let ty = cx.tcx.type_of(did); let adt = ty.ty_adt_def().expect("already checked whether this is an enum"); if adt.variants.is_empty() { span_lint_and_then(cx, EMPTY_ENUM, item.span, "enum with no variants", |db| { db.span_help( item.span, "consider using the uninhabited type `!` (never type) or a wrapper \ around it to introduce a type which can't be instantiated", ); }); } } } }