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rewrite error handling for unresolved inference vars #89862
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error[E0282]: type annotations needed | ||
--> $DIR/fn-needing-specified-return-type-param.rs:3:13 | ||
| | ||
LL | let _ = f; | ||
| - ^ cannot infer type for type parameter `A` declared on the function `f` | ||
| | | ||
| consider giving this pattern the explicit type `fn() -> A`, where the type parameter `A` is specified | ||
| ^ cannot infer type of the type parameter `A` declared on the function `f` | ||
| | ||
help: consider specifying the generic argument | ||
| | ||
LL | let _ = f::<A>; | ||
| +++++ |
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I'm happy with most of the results, but we do lose the special casing of assignments, where the stylistic solution is to give the binding a type, instead of leveraging the turbofish.
That shouldn't be a big problem, and we could remove a bunch of suggestion code by only relying on the new logic, but idealy it'd be nice if we could keep that.
I'll take a closer look at the logic later.
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yeah, prioritizing assignments seems like the right choice, I am a bit torn however, because for
let x = returns_complex_type()
i would prefer to suggest let x = returns_complex_type::<T>()
instead of let x: SomeComplex<Type<T>, T>> = returns_complex_type()
. Maybe adding weights to each option, and prioritizing locals and closure parameters over generic arguments which are prioritized over closure return types or sth 🤔
help: consider specifying the generic arguments | ||
| | ||
LL | let x = |a: (), b: ()| -> Result<(), _> { | ||
| ++++++++++++++++ | ||
LL | Ok::<T, E>(b) | ||
| ++++++++ |
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This is another case of what I was mentioning: The current suggestion is closer to what I'd want to recommend users do, and T
is already figured out (thanks to b
), the E
is the one that needs clarification.
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I quite dislike explicitly mentioning closure return types, so I would use Ok::<(); u32>
here.
I considered (at least partially) using the inferred generic args for the suggestion, but i don't think we always want to do this because sometimes the inferred types can be quite large. There's definitely quite a few possible improvements here however ^^ took me a while to understand how this code works and think that there are some pretty big wins here.
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With the changes I'm making in #89427, we might be able to be explicit about the potentially usable types because we'll know all the impls that apply. And we already know that E
is the problematic one, so we can suggest Ok::<_, SomeE>
. Having said that, that doesn't need to be addressed yet, I think.
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ping from triage: |
it's blocked on me taking a full day to work on this, should happen at some point during february 😆 |
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⌛ Testing commit b343a46 with merge c5fda9cb3b4a0952fd3db63a3552dde0a1cba9b8... |
💔 Test failed - checks-actions |
@bors retry |
☀️ Test successful - checks-actions |
Finished benchmarking commit (e40d5e8): comparison url. Instruction count
Max RSS (memory usage)Results
CyclesThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. If you disagree with this performance assessment, please file an issue in rust-lang/rustc-perf. Next Steps: If you can justify the regressions found in this perf run, please indicate this with @rustbot label: +perf-regression Footnotes |
@lcnr @estebank looks like this caused a perf regression. It's minor enough in primary benchmarks, but still worth looking into. I ran cache grind diff and saw that |
Node::PathSegment(seg) => { | ||
let ident_span = seg.ident.span; | ||
ident_span | ||
.with_hi(seg.args.map_or_else(|| ident_span.hi(), |args| args.span_ext.hi())) | ||
} |
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I would guess that the only thing which may impact the amount of process_obligations
would be this.
We now use a different span
from seg.ident
which may mean that we don't dedup obligations as readily as they now have different spans? Can try to take a deeper look at this in the near future
Pretty much completely rewrites
fn emit_inference_failure_err
.This new setup should hopefully be easier to extend and is already a lot better when looking for generic arguments.
Because this is a rewrite there are still some parts which are lacking, these are tracked in #94483 and will be fixed in later PRs.
r? @estebank @petrochenkov