4d66986e09
Currently, we use a relatively 'small' span for THIR expressions generated by an 'adjustment' (e.g. an autoderef, autoborrow, unsizing). As a result, if a borrow generated by an adustment ends up causing a borrowcheck error, for example: ```rust let mut my_var = String::new(); let my_ref = &my_var my_var.push('a'); my_ref; ``` then the span for the mutable borrow may end up referring to only the base expression (e.g. `my_var`), rather than the method call which triggered the mutable borrow (e.g. `my_var.push('a')`) Due to a quirk of the MIR borrowck implementation, this doesn't always get exposed in migration mode, but it does in many cases. This commit makes THIR building consistently use 'larger' spans for adjustment expressions The intent of this change it make it clearer to users when it's the specific way in which a variable is used (for example, in a method call) that produdes a borrowcheck error. For example, an error message claiming that a 'mutable borrow occurs here' might be confusing if it just points at a usage of a variable (e.g. `my_var`), when no `&mut` is in sight. Pointing at the entire expression should help to emphasize that the method call itself is responsible for the mutable borrow. In several cases, this makes the `#![feature(nll)]` diagnostic output match up exactly with the default (migration mode) output. As a result, several `.nll.stderr` files end up getting removed entirely.
15 lines
481 B
Plaintext
15 lines
481 B
Plaintext
error[E0499]: cannot borrow `i` as mutable more than once at a time
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--> $DIR/E0499.rs:4:17
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LL | let mut x = &mut i;
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| ------ first mutable borrow occurs here
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LL | let mut a = &mut i;
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| ^^^^^^ second mutable borrow occurs here
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LL | a.use_mut();
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LL | x.use_mut();
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| ----------- first borrow later used here
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error: aborting due to previous error
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For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0499`.
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