use crate::ty::{self, Ty, TyCtxt}; use crate::ty::error::TypeError; use crate::ty::relate::{self, Relate, TypeRelation, RelateResult}; /// A type "A" *matches* "B" if the fresh types in B could be /// substituted with values so as to make it equal to A. Matching is /// intended to be used only on freshened types, and it basically /// indicates if the non-freshened versions of A and B could have been /// unified. /// /// It is only an approximation. If it yields false, unification would /// definitely fail, but a true result doesn't mean unification would /// succeed. This is because we don't track the "side-constraints" on /// type variables, nor do we track if the same freshened type appears /// more than once. To some extent these approximations could be /// fixed, given effort. /// /// Like subtyping, matching is really a binary relation, so the only /// important thing about the result is Ok/Err. Also, matching never /// affects any type variables or unification state. pub struct Match<'a, 'gcx: 'a+'tcx, 'tcx: 'a> { tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> Match<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { pub fn new(tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>) -> Match<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { Match { tcx } } } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> TypeRelation<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> for Match<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { fn tag(&self) -> &'static str { "Match" } fn tcx(&self) -> TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { self.tcx } fn a_is_expected(&self) -> bool { true } // irrelevant fn relate_with_variance>(&mut self, _: ty::Variance, a: &T, b: &T) -> RelateResult<'tcx, T> { self.relate(a, b) } fn regions(&mut self, a: ty::Region<'tcx>, b: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> RelateResult<'tcx, ty::Region<'tcx>> { debug!("{}.regions({:?}, {:?})", self.tag(), a, b); Ok(a) } fn tys(&mut self, a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'tcx>) -> RelateResult<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>> { debug!("{}.tys({:?}, {:?})", self.tag(), a, b); if a == b { return Ok(a); } match (&a.sty, &b.sty) { (_, &ty::Infer(ty::FreshTy(_))) | (_, &ty::Infer(ty::FreshIntTy(_))) | (_, &ty::Infer(ty::FreshFloatTy(_))) => { Ok(a) } (&ty::Infer(_), _) | (_, &ty::Infer(_)) => { Err(TypeError::Sorts(relate::expected_found(self, &a, &b))) } (&ty::Error, _) | (_, &ty::Error) => { Ok(self.tcx().types.err) } _ => { relate::super_relate_tys(self, a, b) } } } fn binders(&mut self, a: &ty::Binder, b: &ty::Binder) -> RelateResult<'tcx, ty::Binder> where T: Relate<'tcx> { Ok(ty::Binder::bind(self.relate(a.skip_binder(), b.skip_binder())?)) } }