Commit graph

518 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
bcdde4ea5b
Rollup merge of #134601 - dtolnay:dynstar, r=compiler-errors
Support pretty-printing `dyn*` trait objects

- Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425
2024-12-22 03:49:43 +01:00
David Tolnay
1cc8289791
Support pretty-printing dyn* trait objects 2024-12-20 21:31:21 -08:00
Esteban Küber
1ce0fa98c7 Detect missing . in method chain in let bindings and statements
On parse errors where an ident is found where one wasn't expected, see if the next elements might have been meant as method call or field access.

```
error: expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator, found `map`
  --> $DIR/missing-dot-on-statement-expression.rs:7:29
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x);
   |                             ^^^ expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator
   |
help: you might have meant to write a method call
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x);
   |                             +
```
2024-12-21 02:46:33 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
db77788dc5
Rollup merge of #132939 - uellenberg:suggest-deref, r=oli-obk
Suggest using deref in patterns

Fixes #132784

This changes the following code:
```rs
use std::sync::Arc;
fn main() {
    let mut x = Arc::new(Some(1));
    match x {
        Some(_) => {}
        None => {}
    }
}
```

to output
```rs
error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> src/main.rs:5:9
   |
LL |     match x {
   |           - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
...
LL |         Some(_) => {}
   |         ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>`
   |
   = note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
                found enum `Option<_>`
help: consider dereferencing to access the inner value using the Deref trait
   |
LL |     match *x {
   |           ~~
```

instead of
```rs
error[E0308]: mismatched types
 --> src/main.rs:5:9
  |
4 |     match x {
  |           - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
5 |         Some(_) => {}
  |         ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>`
  |
  = note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
               found enum `Option<_>`
```

This makes it more obvious that a Deref is available, and gives a suggestion on how to use it in order to fix the issue at hand.
2024-12-14 23:56:28 +01:00
bors
ed14192604 Auto merge of #134294 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-anh6io8, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #134252 (Fix `Path::is_absolute` on Hermit)
 - #134254 (Fix building `std` for Hermit after `c_char` change)
 - #134255 (Update includes in `/library/core/src/error.rs`.)
 - #134261 (Document the symbol Visibility enum)
 - #134262 (Arbitrary self types v2: adjust diagnostic.)
 - #134265 (Rename `ty_def_id` so people will stop using it by accident)
 - #134271 (Arbitrary self types v2: better feature gate test)
 - #134274 (Add check-pass test for `&raw`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-12-14 06:44:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2846699366
Rollup merge of #134181 - estebank:trim-render, r=oli-obk
Tweak multispan rendering to reduce output length

Consider comments and bare delimiters the same as an "empty line" for purposes of hiding rendered code output of long multispans. This results in more aggressive shortening of rendered output without losing too much context, specially in `*.stderr` tests that have "hidden" comments. We do that check not only on the first 4 lines of the multispan, but now also on the previous to last line as well.
2024-12-14 03:54:31 +01:00
uellenberg
831f4549cd Suggest using deref in patterns
Fixes #132784
2024-12-13 14:18:41 -08:00
Adrian Taylor
174dae607c Arbitrary self types v2: adjust diagnostic.
The recently landed PR to adjust arbitrary self types was a bit
overenthusiastic, advising folks to use the new Receiver trait even
before it's been stabilized. Revert to the older wording of the lint in
such cases.
2024-12-13 15:40:37 +00:00
bors
f4f0fafd0c Auto merge of #132706 - compiler-errors:async-closures, r=oli-obk
Stabilize async closures (RFC 3668)

# Async Closures Stabilization Report

This report proposes the stabilization of `#![feature(async_closure)]` ([RFC 3668](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3668-async-closures.html)). This is a long-awaited feature that increases the expressiveness of the Rust language and fills a pressing gap in the async ecosystem.

## Stabilization summary

* You can write async closures like `async || {}` which return futures that can borrow from their captures and can be higher-ranked in their argument lifetimes.
* You can express trait bounds for these async closures using the `AsyncFn` family of traits, analogous to the `Fn` family.

```rust
async fn takes_an_async_fn(f: impl AsyncFn(&str)) {
    futures::join(f("hello"), f("world")).await;
}

takes_an_async_fn(async |s| { other_fn(s).await }).await;
```

## Motivation

Without this feature, users hit two major obstacles when writing async code that uses closures and `Fn` trait bounds:

- The inability to express higher-ranked async function signatures.
- That closures cannot return futures that borrow from the closure captures.

That is, for the first, we cannot write:

```rust
// We cannot express higher-ranked async function signatures.
async fn f<Fut>(_: impl for<'a> Fn(&'a u8) -> Fut)
where
    Fut: Future<Output = ()>,
{ todo!() }

async fn main() {
    async fn g(_: &u8) { todo!() }
    f(g).await;
    //~^ ERROR mismatched types
    //~| ERROR one type is more general than the other
}
```

And for the second, we cannot write:

```rust
// Closures cannot return futures that borrow closure captures.
async fn f<Fut: Future<Output = ()>>(_: impl FnMut() -> Fut)
{ todo!() }

async fn main() {
    let mut xs = vec![];
    f(|| async {
        async fn g() -> u8 { todo!() }
        xs.push(g().await);
    });
    //~^ ERROR captured variable cannot escape `FnMut` closure body
}
```

Async closures provide a first-class solution to these problems.

For further background, please refer to the [motivation section](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3668-async-closures.html#motivation) of the RFC.

## Major design decisions since RFC

The RFC had left open the question of whether we would spell the bounds syntax for async closures...

```rust
// ...as this...
fn f() -> impl AsyncFn() -> u8 { todo!() }
// ...or as this:
fn f() -> impl async Fn() -> u8 { todo!() }
```

We've decided to spell this as `AsyncFn{,Mut,Once}`.

The `Fn` family of traits is special in many ways.  We had originally argued that, due to this specialness, that perhaps the `async Fn` syntax could be adopted without having to decide whether a general `async Trait` mechanism would ever be adopted.  However, concerns have been raised that we may not want to use `async Fn` syntax unless we would pursue more general trait modifiers.  Since there remain substantial open questions on those -- and we don't want to rush any design work there -- it makes sense to ship this needed feature using the `AsyncFn`-style bounds syntax.

Since we would, in no case, be shipping a generalized trait modifier system anytime soon, we'll be continuing to see `AsyncFoo` traits appear across the ecosystem regardless.  If we were to ever later ship some general mechanism, we could at that time manage the migration from `AsyncFn` to `async Fn`, just as we'd be enabling and managing the migration of many other traits.

Note that, as specified in RFC 3668, the details of the `AsyncFn*` traits are not exposed and they can only be named via the "parentheses sugar".  That is, we can write `T: AsyncFn() -> u8` but not `T: AsyncFn<Output = u8>`.

Unlike the `Fn` traits, we cannot project to the `Output` associated type of the `AsyncFn` traits.  That is, while we can write...

```rust
fn f<F: Fn() -> u8>(_: F::Output) {}
```

...we cannot write:

```rust
fn f<F: AsyncFn() -> u8>(_: F::Output) {}
//~^ ERROR
```

The choice of `AsyncFn{,Mut,Once}` bounds syntax obviates, for our purposes here, another question decided after that RFC, which was how to order bound modifiers such as `for<'a> async Fn()`.

Other than answering the open question in the RFC on syntax, nothing has changed about the design of this feature between RFC 3668 and this stabilization.

## What is stabilized

For those interested in the technical details, please see [the dev guide section](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/coroutine-closures.html) I authored.

#### Async closures

Other than in how they solve the problems described above, async closures act similarly to closures that return async blocks, and can have parts of their signatures specified:

```rust
// They can have arguments annotated with types:
let _ = async |_: u8| { todo!() };

// They can have their return types annotated:
let _ = async || -> u8 { todo!() };

// They can be higher-ranked:
let _ = async |_: &str| { todo!() };

// They can capture values by move:
let x = String::from("hello, world");
let _ = async move || do_something(&x).await };
```

When called, they return an anonymous future type corresponding to the (not-yet-executed) body of the closure. These can be awaited like any other future.

What distinguishes async closures is that, unlike closures that return async blocks, the futures returned from the async closure can capture state from the async closure. For example:

```rust
let vec: Vec<String> = vec![];

let closure = async || {
    vec.push(ready(String::from("")).await);
};
```

The async closure captures `vec` with some `&'closure mut Vec<String>` which lives until the closure is dropped. Every call to `closure()` returns a future which reborrows that mutable reference `&'call mut Vec<String>` which lives until the future is dropped (e.g. it is `await`ed).

As another example:

```rust
let string: String = "Hello, world".into();

let closure = async move || {
    ready(&string).await;
};
```

The closure is marked with `move`, which means it takes ownership of the string by *value*. The future that is returned by calling `closure()` returns a future which borrows a reference `&'call String` which lives until the future is dropped (e.g. it is `await`ed).

#### Async fn trait family

To support the lending capability of async closures, and to provide a first-class way to express higher-ranked async closures, we introduce the `AsyncFn*` family of traits. See the [corresponding section](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3668-async-closures.html#asyncfn) of the RFC.

We stabilize naming `AsyncFn*` via the "parenthesized sugar" syntax that normal `Fn*` traits can be named. The `AsyncFn*` trait can be used anywhere a `Fn*` trait bound is allowed, such as:

```rust
/// In return-position impl trait:
fn closure() -> impl AsyncFn() { async || {} }

/// In trait bounds:
trait Foo<F>: Sized
where
    F: AsyncFn()
{
    fn new(f: F) -> Self;
}

/// in GATs:
trait Gat {
    type AsyncHasher<T>: AsyncFn(T) -> i32;
}
```

Other than using them in trait bounds, the definitions of these traits are not directly observable, but certain aspects of their behavior can be indirectly observed such as the fact that:

* `AsyncFn::async_call` and `AsyncFnMut::async_call_mut` return a future which is *lending*, and therefore borrows the `&self` lifetime of the callee.

```rust
fn by_ref_call(c: impl AsyncFn()) {
    let fut = c();
    drop(c);
    //   ^ Cannot drop `c` since it is borrowed by `fut`.
}
```

* `AsyncFnOnce::async_call_once` returns a future that takes ownership of the callee.

```rust
fn by_ref_call(c: impl AsyncFnOnce()) {
    let fut = c();
    let _ = c();
    //      ^ Cannot call `c` since calling it takes ownership the callee.
}
```

* All currently-stable callable types (i.e., closures, function items, function pointers, and `dyn Fn*` trait objects) automatically implement `AsyncFn*() -> T` if they implement `Fn*() -> Fut` for some output type `Fut`, and `Fut` implements `Future<Output = T>`.
    * This is to make sure that `AsyncFn*()` trait bounds have maximum compatibility with existing callable types which return futures, such as async function items and closures which return boxed futures.
    * For now, this only works currently for *concrete* callable types -- for example, a argument-position impl trait like `impl Fn() -> impl Future<Output = ()>` does not implement `AsyncFn()`, due to the fact that a `AsyncFn`-if-`Fn` blanket impl does not exist in reality. This may be relaxed in the future. Users can work around this by wrapping their type in an async closure and calling it. I expect this to not matter much in practice, as users are encouraged to write `AsyncFn` bounds directly.

```rust
fn is_async_fn(_: impl AsyncFn(&str)) {}

async fn async_fn_item(s: &str) { todo!() }
is_async_fn(s);
// ^^^ This works.

fn generic(f: impl Fn() -> impl Future<Output = ()>) {
    is_async_fn(f);
    // ^^^ This does not work (yet).
}
```

#### The by-move future

When async closures are called with `AsyncFn`/`AsyncFnMut`, they return a coroutine that borrows from the closure. However, when they are called via `AsyncFnOnce`, we consume that closure, and cannot return a coroutine that borrows from data that is now dropped.

To work around around this limitation, we synthesize a separate future type for calling the async closure via `AsyncFnOnce`.

This future executes identically to the by-ref future returned from calling the async closure, except for the fact that it has a different set of captures, since we must *move* the captures from the parent async into the child future.

#### Interactions between async closures and the `Fn*` family of traits

Async closures always implement `FnOnce`, since they always can be called once. They may also implement `Fn` or `FnMut` if their body is compatible with the calling mode (i.e. if they do not mutate their captures, or they do not capture their captures, respectively) and if the future returned by the async closure is not *lending*.

```rust
let id = String::new();

let mapped: Vec</* impl Future */> =
    [/* elements */]
    .into_iter()
    // `Iterator::map` takes an `impl FnMut`
    .map(async |element| {
        do_something(&id, element).await;
    })
    .collect();
```

See [the dev guide](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/coroutine-closures.html#follow-up-when-do-async-closures-implement-the-regular-fn-traits) for a detailed explanation for the situations where this may not be possible due to the lending nature of async closures.

#### Other notable features of async closures shared with synchronous closures

* Async closures are `Copy` and/or `Clone` if their captures are `Copy`/`Clone`.
* Async closures do closure signature inference: If an async closure is passed to a function with a `AsyncFn` or `Fn` trait bound, we can eagerly infer the argument types of the closure. More details are provided in [the dev guide](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/coroutine-closures.html#closure-signature-inference).

#### Lints

This PR also stabilizes the `CLOSURE_RETURNING_ASYNC_BLOCK` lint as an `allow` lint. This lints on "old-style" async closures:

```rust
#![warn(closure_returning_async_block)]
let c = |x: &str| async {};
```

We should encourage users to use `async || {}` where possible. This lint remains `allow` and may be refined in the future because it has a few false positives (namely, see: "Where do we expect rewriting `|| async {}` into `async || {}` to fail?")

An alternative that could be made at the time of stabilization is to put this lint behind another gate, so we can decide to stabilize it later.

## What isn't stabilized (aka, potential future work)

#### `async Fn*()` bound syntax

We decided to stabilize async closures without the `async Fn*()` bound modifier syntax. The general direction of this syntax and how it fits is still being considered by T-lang (e.g. in [RFC 3710](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3710)).

#### Naming the futures returned by async closures

This stabilization PR does not provide a way of naming the futures returned by calling `AsyncFn*`.

Exposing a stable way to refer to these futures is important for building async-closure-aware combinators, and will be an important future step.

#### Return type notation-style bounds for async closures

The RFC described an RTN-like syntax for putting bounds on the future returned by an async closure:

```rust
async fn foo(x: F) -> Result<()>
where
    F: AsyncFn(&str) -> Result<()>,
    // The future from calling `F` is `Send` and `'static`.
    F(..): Send + 'static,
{}
```

This stabilization PR does not stabilize that syntax yet, which remains unimplemented (though will be soon).

#### `dyn AsyncFn*()`

`AsyncFn*` are not dyn-compatible yet. This will likely be implemented in the future along with the dyn-compatibility of async fn in trait, since the same issue (dealing with the future returned by a call) applies there.

## Tests

Tests exist for this feature in [`tests/ui/async-await/async-closures`](5b54286640/tests/ui/async-await/async-closures).

<details>
    <summary>A selected set of tests:</summary>

* Lending behavior of async closures
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/mutate.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/captures.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/precise-captures.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/no-borrow-from-env.rs`
* Async closures may be higher-ranked
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/higher-ranked.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/higher-ranked-return.rs`
* Async closures may implement `Fn*` traits
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/is-fn.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/implements-fnmut.rs`
* Async closures may be cloned
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/clone-closure.rs`
* Ownership of the upvars when `AsyncFnOnce` is called
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/drop.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/move-is-async-fn.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/force-move-due-to-inferred-kind.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/force-move-due-to-actually-fnonce.rs`
* Closure signature inference
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/signature-deduction.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/sig-from-bare-fn.rs`
    * `tests/ui/async-await/async-closures/signature-inference-from-two-part-bound.rs`

</details>

## Remaining bugs and open issues

* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120694 tracks moving onto more general `LendingFn*` traits. No action needed, since it's not observable.
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124020 - Polymorphization ICE. Polymorphization needs to be heavily reworked. No action needed.
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127227 - Tracking reworking the way that rustdoc re-sugars bounds.
    * The part relevant to to `AsyncFn` is fixed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132697.

## Where do we expect rewriting `|| async {}` into `async || {}` to fail?

* Fn pointer coercions
    * Currently, it is not possible to coerce an async closure to an fn pointer like regular closures can be. This functionality may be implemented in the future.
```rust
let x: fn() -> _ = async || {};
```
* Argument capture
    * Like async functions, async closures always capture their input arguments. This is in contrast to something like `|t: T| async {}`, which doesn't capture `t` unless it is used in the async block. This may affect the `Send`-ness of the future or affect its outlives.
```rust
fn needs_send_future(_: impl Fn(NotSendArg) -> Fut)
where
    Fut: Future<Output = ()>,
{}

needs_send_future(async |_| {});
```

## History

#### Important feature history

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/51580
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/62292
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120361
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120712
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121857
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123660
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125259
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128506
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127482

## Acknowledgements

Thanks to `@oli-obk` for reviewing the bulk of the work for this feature. Thanks to `@nikomatsakis` for his design blog posts which generated interest for this feature, `@traviscross` for feedback and additions to this stabilization report. All errors are my own.

r? `@ghost`
2024-12-13 00:37:51 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c605c84be8 Stabilize async closures 2024-12-13 00:04:56 +00:00
Esteban Küber
49a22a4245 Filter empty lines, comments and delimiters from previous to last multiline span rendering 2024-12-12 23:36:27 +00:00
Esteban Küber
65a54a7f27 Tweak multispan rendering
Consider comments and bare delimiters the same as an "empty line" for purposes of hiding rendered code output of long multispans. This results in more aggressive shortening of rendered output without losing too much context, specially in `*.stderr` tests that have "hidden" comments.
2024-12-12 23:36:27 +00:00
bors
915e7eb9b9 Auto merge of #132961 - adetaylor:arbitrary-self-types-the-big-bit, r=compiler-errors,wesleywiser
Arbitrary self types v2: main compiler changes

This is the main PR in a series of PRs related to Arbitrary Self Types v2, tracked in #44874. Specifically this is step 7 of the plan [described here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44874#issuecomment-2122179688), for [RFC 3519](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3519).

Overall this PR:
* Switches from the `Deref` trait to the new `Receiver` trait when the unstable `arbitrary_self_types` feature is enabled (the simple bit)
* Introduces new algorithms to spot "shadowing"; that is, the case where a newly-added method in an outer smart pointer might end up overriding a pre-existing method in the pointee (the complex bit). Most of this bit was explored in [this earlier perf-testing PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127812#issuecomment-2236911900).
* Lots of tests

This should not break compatibility for:
* Stable users, where it should have no effect
* Users of the existing `arbitrary_self_types` feature (because we implement `Receiver` for `T: Deref`) _unless_ those folks have added methods which may shadow methods in inner types, which we no longer want to allow

Subsequent PRs will add better diagnostics.

It's probably easiest to review this commit-by-commit.

r? `@wesleywiser`
2024-12-12 21:40:39 +00:00
Orion Gonzalez
014363e89e Don't emit "field expressions may not have generic arguments" if it's a method call without () 2024-12-11 16:23:04 +01:00
Adrian Taylor
e75660dad3 Arbitrary self types v2: use Receiver trait
In this new version of Arbitrary Self Types, we no longer use the Deref trait
exclusively when working out which self types are valid. Instead, we follow a
chain of Receiver traits. This enables methods to be called on smart pointer
types which fundamentally cannot support Deref (for instance because they are
wrappers for pointers that don't follow Rust's aliasing rules).

This includes:
* Changes to tests appropriately
* New tests for:
  * The basics of the feature
  * Ensuring lifetime elision works properly
  * Generic Receivers
  * A copy of the method subst test enhanced with Receiver

This is really the heart of the 'arbitrary self types v2' feature, and
is the most critical commit in the current PR.

Subsequent commits are focused on:
* Detecting "shadowing" problems, where a smart pointer type can hide
  methods in the pointee.
* Diagnostics and cleanup.

Naming: in this commit, the "Autoderef" type is modified so that it no
longer solely focuses on the "Deref" trait, but can now consider the
"Receiver" trait instead. Should it be renamed, to something like
"TraitFollower"? This was considered, but rejected, because
* even in the Receiver case, it still considers built-in derefs
* the name Autoderef is short and snappy.
2024-12-11 11:59:12 +00:00
Esteban Küber
25ad0478cb Tweak wording 2024-12-07 22:18:51 +00:00
Esteban Küber
b466405890 Do not talk about "trait <Foo = Bar>"
Pass in an appropriate `Option<DefId>` in more cases from hir ty lowering.
2024-12-07 21:37:15 +00:00
Esteban Küber
cb4db0a6c6 Account for impl Trait in "add bound" suggestion message 2024-12-07 21:37:15 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d860e5b088 Mention type parameter in more cases and don't suggest ~const bound already there 2024-12-07 21:37:13 +00:00
Esteban Küber
3f2a63a68b Use trait name instead of full constraint in suggestion message
```
help: consider restricting type parameter `T` with traits `Copy` and `Trait`
   |
LL | fn duplicate_custom<T: Copy + Trait>(t: S<T>) -> (S<T>, S<T>) {
   |                      ++++++++++++++
```

```
help: consider restricting type parameter `V` with trait `Copy`
   |
LL | fn index<'a, K, V: std::marker::Copy>(map: &'a HashMap<K, V>, k: K) -> &'a V {
   |                  +++++++++++++++++++
```
2024-12-07 21:29:58 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d13c34828e reword trait bound suggestion message to include the bounds 2024-12-07 21:26:20 +00:00
Esteban Küber
1b449e123d Do not emit empty suggestion
The `println!();` statement's span doesn't include the `;`, and the modified suggestions where trying to get the `;` by getting the differenece between the statement's and the expression's spans, which was an empty suggestion.

Fix #133833, fix #133834.
2024-12-04 17:40:39 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fa7449d130 Do not create trait object type if missing associated types 2024-11-30 17:05:47 +00:00
Eric Huss
f94142b366 Update tests to use new proc-macro header 2024-11-27 07:18:25 -08:00
Michael Goulet
b0ed5ac730
Rollup merge of #133394 - compiler-errors:dyn-more-errors, r=lcnr
Bail on more errors in dyn ty lowering

If we have more than one principal trait, or if we have a principal trait with errors in it, then bail with `TyKind::Error` rather than attempting lowering. Lowering a dyn trait with more than one principal just arbitrarily chooses the first one and drops the subsequent ones, and lowering a dyn trait path with errors in it is just kinda useless.

This suppresses unnecessary errors which I think is net-good, but also is important to make sure that we don't end up leaking `{type error}` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133388 error messaging :)

r? types
2024-11-26 12:03:44 -05:00
Michael Goulet
cfa8fcbf58 Dont create trait object if it has errors in it 2024-11-23 23:31:30 +00:00
Chris Krycho
d4275e08e7
Update tests for new TRPL chapter order 2024-11-23 08:57:25 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
c064f6e1fc
Rollup merge of #132489 - compiler-errors:fn-sugg-tweaks, r=BoxyUwU
Fix closure arg extraction in `extract_callable_info`, generalize it to async closures

* Fix argument extraction in `extract_callable_info`
* FIx `extract_callable_info` to work for async closures
* Remove redundant `is_fn_ty` which is just a less general `extract_callable_info`
* More precisely name what is being called (i.e. call it a "closure" not a "function")

Review this without whitespace -- I ended up reformatting `extract_callable_info` because some pesky `//` comments were keeping the let-chains from being formatted.
2024-11-21 11:58:39 +01:00
Esteban Küber
f1772d5739 Make suggestion verbose 2024-11-17 23:40:00 +00:00
Esteban Küber
ff2f7a7a83 Point at const definition when used instead of a binding in a let statement
After:

```
error[E0005]: refutable pattern in local binding
  --> $DIR/bad-pattern.rs:19:13
   |
LL |     const PAT: u32 = 0;
   |     -------------- missing patterns are not covered because `PAT` is interpreted as a constant pattern, not a new variable
...
LL |         let PAT = v1;
   |             ^^^
   |             |
   |             pattern `1_u32..=u32::MAX` not covered
   |             help: introduce a variable instead: `PAT_var`
   |
   = note: `let` bindings require an "irrefutable pattern", like a `struct` or an `enum` with only one variant
   = note: for more information, visit https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch18-02-refutability.html
   = note: the matched value is of type `u32`
```

Before:

```
error[E0005]: refutable pattern in local binding
  --> $DIR/bad-pattern.rs:19:13
   |
LL |         let PAT = v1;
   |             ^^^
   |             |
   |             pattern `1_u32..=u32::MAX` not covered
   |             missing patterns are not covered because `PAT` is interpreted as a constant pattern, not a new variable
   |             help: introduce a variable instead: `PAT_var`
   |
   = note: `let` bindings require an "irrefutable pattern", like a `struct` or an `enum` with only one variant
   = note: for more information, visit https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch18-02-refutability.html
   = note: the matched value is of type `u32`
```
2024-11-17 23:39:59 +00:00
dianne
02add7d0fb Provide placeholder generic arguments for traits in "no method found for type parameter" suggestions 2024-11-11 12:33:15 -08:00
Michael Goulet
0e481b44f5 use verbose for path separator suggestion 2024-11-08 16:58:19 +00:00
bors
4d215e2426 Auto merge of #132404 - makai410:suggest-swap-lhs-rhs, r=fee1-dead
Suggest swapping LHS and RHS when RHS impls `PartialEq<lhs_ty>`

Closes: #130495
r? `@fee1-dead`
2024-11-06 11:49:52 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b23655893e
Rollup merge of #132498 - uellenberg:typo-and-let-suggestions, r=estebank
Suggest fixing typos and let bindings at the same time

Fixes #132483

Currently, a suggestion for adding a let binding won't be shown if we suggest fixing a typo. This changes that behavior to always show both, if possible. Essentially, this turns the suggestion from
```rust
error[E0425]: cannot find value `x2` in this scope
 --> src/main.rs:4:5
  |
4 |     x2 = 2;
  |     ^^ help: a local variable with a similar name exists: `x1`

For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
```

to
```rust
error[E0425]: cannot find value `x2` in this scope
 --> src/main.rs:4:5
  |
4 |     x2 = 2;
  |     ^^
  |
help: a local variable with a similar name exists
  |
4 |     x1 = 2;
  |     ~~
help: you might have meant to introduce a new binding
  |
4 |     let x2 = 2;
  |     +++

For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
```

for the following code:
```rust
fn main() {
    let x1 = 1;
    x2 = 2;
}
```

The original behavior only shows the suggestion for a let binding if a typo suggestion wasn't already displayed. However, this falls apart in the cases like the one above where we have multiple similar variables. I don't think it makes sense to hide this suggestion if there's a similar variable, since that defeats the purpose of this suggestion in that case (it's meant to help those coming from languages like Python).
2024-11-05 20:10:50 +01:00
makai410
5791a66a88 suggest swapping the equality 2024-11-05 10:09:34 +08:00
uellenberg
67a85925b1 Suggest fixing typos and let bindings at the same time
Fixes #132483
2024-11-02 14:40:37 -07:00
Michael Goulet
cbacb6d931 Use extract_callable_info, generalize it to async closure 2024-11-02 03:53:59 +00:00
Esteban Küber
1a0c502183 On long E0277 primary span label, move it to a help
Long span labels don't read well.
2024-11-02 03:08:04 +00:00
Esteban Küber
7b9105dd88 Trim output of E0277 in some cases
Remove default note for "trait is not implemented" in favor of the
more colorful diff output from the previous commit. Removes
duplicated output.
2024-11-02 03:08:04 +00:00
Esteban Küber
b7fc1a7431 Add trait diff highlighting logic and use it in E0277
When a trait is not implemented for a type, but there *is* an `impl`
for another type or different trait params, we format the output to
use highlighting in the same way that E0308 does for types.

The logic accounts for 3 cases:
- When both the type and trait in the expected predicate and the candidate are different
- When only the types are different
- When only the trait generic params are different

For each case, we use slightly different formatting and wording.
2024-11-02 03:08:04 +00:00
Esteban Küber
5b54286640 Remove detail from label/note that is already available in other note
Remove the "which is required by `{root_obligation}`" post-script in
"the trait `X` is not implemented for `Y`" explanation in E0277. This
information is already conveyed in the notes explaining requirements,
making it redundant while making the text (particularly in labels)
harder to read.

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `NotCopy: Copy` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/wf-static-type.rs:10:13
   |
LL | static FOO: IsCopy<Option<NotCopy>> = IsCopy { t: None };
   |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `Copy` is not implemented for `NotCopy`
   |
   = note: required for `Option<NotCopy>` to implement `Copy`
note: required by a bound in `IsCopy`
  --> $DIR/wf-static-type.rs:7:17
   |
LL | struct IsCopy<T:Copy> { t: T }
   |                 ^^^^ required by this bound in `IsCopy`
```
vs the prior

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `NotCopy: Copy` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/wf-static-type.rs:10:13
   |
LL | static FOO: IsCopy<Option<NotCopy>> = IsCopy { t: None };
   |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `Copy` is not implemented for `NotCopy`, which is required by `Option<NotCopy>: Copy`
   |
   = note: required for `Option<NotCopy>` to implement `Copy`
note: required by a bound in `IsCopy`
  --> $DIR/wf-static-type.rs:7:17
   |
LL | struct IsCopy<T:Copy> { t: T }
   |                 ^^^^ required by this bound in `IsCopy`
```
2024-10-29 16:26:57 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
efd940d24a
Rollup merge of #131925 - clubby789:redundant-revision-cfg, r=jieyouxu
Warn on redundant `--cfg` directive when revisions are used

r? ``@jieyouxu``

Fixes #131390
Not sure of the best way to test this
2024-10-19 22:00:59 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
559f8ce726
Rollup merge of #131795 - compiler-errors:expectation, r=Nadrieril
Stop inverting expectation in normalization errors

We have some funky special case logic to invert the expectation and actual type for normalization errors depending on their cause code. IMO most of the error messages get better, except for `try {}` blocks' type expectations. I think that these need to be special cased in some other way, rather than via this hack.

Fixes #131763
2024-10-19 22:00:57 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
268fa31596
Rollup merge of #127675 - chenyukang:yukang-fix-127562-addr, r=petrochenkov
Remove invalid help diagnostics for const pointer

Partially addresses #127562
2024-10-19 22:00:55 +02:00
clubby789
d82a21f9ad Warn on redundant --cfg directive when revisions are used 2024-10-19 12:40:12 +00:00
Michael Goulet
99d5f3b280 Stop inverting expectation in normalization errors 2024-10-16 13:44:56 -04:00
VulnBandit
9a2772e1c2 Don't assume traits used as type are trait objs 2024-10-11 17:36:04 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
20cebae312
UI tests: Rename "object safe" to "dyn compatible" 2024-10-10 01:13:29 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
2e7a52b22f
Rename feature object_safe_for_dispatch to dyn_compatible_for_dispatch 2024-10-10 00:57:59 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a935064fae
Rollup merge of #130826 - fmease:compiler-mv-obj-safe-dyn-compat, r=compiler-errors
Compiler: Rename "object safe" to "dyn compatible"

Completed T-lang FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/286#issuecomment-2338905118.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130852

Excludes `compiler/rustc_codegen_cranelift` (to be filed separately).
Includes Stable MIR.

Regarding https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/relnotes, I guess I will manually open a https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/relnotes-tracking-issue since this change affects everything (compiler, library, tools, docs, books, everyday language).

r? ghost
2024-09-27 21:35:08 +02:00