rust/src/test/compile-fail/borrowck-overloaded-index-autoderef.rs
Niko Matsakis 0b5bc3314f Implement new operator dispatch semantics.
Key points are:
1. `a + b` maps directly to `Add<A,B>`, where `A` and `B` are the types of `a` and `b`.
2. Indexing and slicing autoderefs consistently.
2014-11-05 11:29:15 -05:00

92 lines
2.0 KiB
Rust

// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
// Test that we still see borrowck errors of various kinds when using
// indexing and autoderef in combination.
struct Foo {
x: int,
y: int,
}
impl Index<String,int> for Foo {
fn index<'a>(&'a self, z: &String) -> &'a int {
if z.as_slice() == "x" {
&self.x
} else {
&self.y
}
}
}
impl IndexMut<String,int> for Foo {
fn index_mut<'a>(&'a mut self, z: &String) -> &'a mut int {
if z.as_slice() == "x" {
&mut self.x
} else {
&mut self.y
}
}
}
fn test1(mut f: Box<Foo>, s: String) {
let _p = &mut f[s];
let _q = &f[s]; //~ ERROR cannot borrow
}
fn test2(mut f: Box<Foo>, s: String) {
let _p = &mut f[s];
let _q = &mut f[s]; //~ ERROR cannot borrow
}
struct Bar {
foo: Foo
}
fn test3(mut f: Box<Bar>, s: String) {
let _p = &mut f.foo[s];
let _q = &mut f.foo[s]; //~ ERROR cannot borrow
}
fn test4(mut f: Box<Bar>, s: String) {
let _p = &f.foo[s];
let _q = &f.foo[s];
}
fn test5(mut f: Box<Bar>, s: String) {
let _p = &f.foo[s];
let _q = &mut f.foo[s]; //~ ERROR cannot borrow
}
fn test6(mut f: Box<Bar>, g: Foo, s: String) {
let _p = &f.foo[s];
f.foo = g; //~ ERROR cannot assign
}
fn test7(mut f: Box<Bar>, g: Bar, s: String) {
let _p = &f.foo[s];
*f = g; //~ ERROR cannot assign
}
fn test8(mut f: Box<Bar>, g: Foo, s: String) {
let _p = &mut f.foo[s];
f.foo = g; //~ ERROR cannot assign
}
fn test9(mut f: Box<Bar>, g: Bar, s: String) {
let _p = &mut f.foo[s];
*f = g; //~ ERROR cannot assign
}
fn main() {
}