Struct rustc::infer::combine::Generalization [−][src]
🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (rustc_private)
this crate is being loaded from the sysroot, an unstable location; did you mean to load this crate from crates.io via Cargo.toml instead?
Result from a generalization operation. This includes not only the generalized type, but also a bool flag indicating whether further WF checks are needed.
Fields
ty: Ty<'tcx>
🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (rustc_private)
this crate is being loaded from the sysroot, an unstable location; did you mean to load this crate from crates.io via Cargo.toml instead?
needs_wf: bool
🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (rustc_private)
this crate is being loaded from the sysroot, an unstable location; did you mean to load this crate from crates.io via Cargo.toml instead?
If true, then the generalized type may not be well-formed, even if the source type is well-formed, so we should add an additional check to enforce that it is. This arises in particular around 'bivariant' type parameters that are only constrained by a where-clause. As an example, imagine a type:
struct Foo<A, B> where A: Iterator<Item=B> { data: A }
here, A will be covariant, but B is
unconstrained. However, whatever it is, for Foo to be WF, it
must be equal to A::Item. If we have an input Foo<?A, ?B>,
then after generalization we will wind up with a type like
Foo<?C, ?D>. When we enforce that Foo<?A, ?B> <: Foo<?C, ?D> (or >:), we will wind up with the requirement that ?A <: ?C, but no particular relationship between ?B and ?D
(after all, we do not know the variance of the normalized form
of A::Item with respect to A). If we do nothing else, this
may mean that ?D goes unconstrained (as in #41677). So, in
this scenario where we create a new type variable in a
bivariant context, we set the needs_wf flag to true. This
will force the calling code to check that WF(Foo<?C, ?D>)
holds, which in turn implies that ?C::Item == ?D. So once
?C is constrained, that should suffice to restrict ?D.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<'tcx> !Send for Generalization<'tcx>
impl<'tcx> !Send for Generalization<'tcx>impl<'tcx> !Sync for Generalization<'tcx>
impl<'tcx> !Sync for Generalization<'tcx>