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- //! [`super::usefulness`] explains most of what is happening in this file. As explained there,
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- //! values and patterns are made from constructors applied to fields. This file defines a
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- //! `Constructor` enum, a `Fields` struct, and various operations to manipulate them and convert
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- //! them from/to patterns.
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+ //! As explained in [`super::usefulness`], values and patterns are made from constructors applied to
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+ //! fields. This file defines a `Constructor` enum, a `Fields` struct, and various operations to
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+ //! manipulate them and convert them from/to patterns.
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//!
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- //! There's one idea that is not detailed in [`super::usefulness`] because the details are not
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- //! needed there: _constructor splitting_.
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+ //! There are two important bits of core logic in this file: constructor inclusion and constructor
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+ //! splitting. Constructor inclusion, i.e. whether a constructor is included in/covered by another,
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+ //! is straightforward and defined in [`Constructor::is_covered_by`].
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//!
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- //! # Constructor splitting
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+ //! Constructor splitting is mentioned in [`super::usefulness`] but not detailed. We describe it
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+ //! precisely here.
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//!
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- //! The idea is as follows: given a constructor `c` and a matrix, we want to specialize in turn
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- //! with all the value constructors that are covered by `c`, and compute usefulness for each.
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- //! Instead of listing all those constructors (which is intractable), we group those value
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- //! constructors together as much as possible. Example:
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//!
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+ //! # Constructor grouping and splitting
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+ //!
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+ //! As explained in the corresponding section in [`super::usefulness`], to make usefulness tractable
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+ //! we need to group together constructors that have the same effect when they are used to
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+ //! specialize the matrix.
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+ //!
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+ //! Example:
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//! ```compile_fail,E0004
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//! match (0, false) {
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- //! (0 ..=100, true) => {} // `p_1`
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- //! (50..=150, false) => {} // `p_2`
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- //! (0 ..=200, _) => {} // `q`
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+ //! (0 ..=100, true) => {}
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+ //! (50..=150, false) => {}
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+ //! (0 ..=200, _) => {}
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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- //! The naive approach would try all numbers in the range `0..=200`. But we can be a lot more
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- //! clever: `0` and `1` for example will match the exact same rows, and return equivalent
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- //! witnesses. In fact all of `0..50` would. We can thus restrict our exploration to 4
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- //! constructors: `0..50`, `50..=100`, `101..=150` and `151..=200`. That is enough and infinitely
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- //! more tractable.
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+ //! In this example we can restrict specialization to 5 cases: `0..50`, `50..=100`, `101..=150`,
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+ //! `151..=200` and `200..`.
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+ //!
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+ //! In [`super::usefulness`], we had said that `specialize` only takes value-only constructors. We
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+ //! now relax this restriction: we allow `specialize` to take constructors like `0..50` as long as
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+ //! we're careful to only do that with constructors that make sense. For example, `specialize(0..50,
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+ //! (0..=100, true))` is sensible, but `specialize(50..=200, (0..=100, true))` is not. The rule is
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+ //! that we must only use a constructor that is a subset of constructors in the column (as computed
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+ //! by [`Constructor::is_covered_by`]). No non-trivial intersections are allowed.
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+ //!
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+ //! Note how we only consider the first column of the match. In fact we take as input only the list
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+ //! of the constructors of that column. We must return a set of constructors that cover the whole
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+ //! type and is grouped as much as possible, without breaking the "must be included" rule above. The
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+ //! precise set of invariants is described in [`SplitConstructorSet`].
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+ //!
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+ //! We compute this in two steps: first [`ConstructorSet::for_ty`] computes a representation of the
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+ //! set of all possible constructors for the type. Then [`ConstructorSet::split`] looks at the
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+ //! column of constructors and splits the set into groups accordingly.
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+ //!
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+ //! Constructor splitting has two interesting special cases: integer range splitting (see
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+ //! [`IntRange::split`]) and slice splitting (see [`Slice::split`]).
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//!
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- //! We capture this idea in a function `split(p_1 ... p_n, c)` which returns a list of constructors
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- //! `c'` covered by `c`. Given such a `c'`, we require that all value ctors `c''` covered by `c'`
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- //! return an equivalent set of witnesses after specializing and computing usefulness.
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- //! In the example above, witnesses for specializing by `c''` covered by `0..50` will only differ
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- //! in their first element.
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//!
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- //! We usually also ask that the `c'` together cover all of the original `c`. However we allow
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- //! skipping some constructors as long as it doesn't change whether the resulting list of witnesses
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- //! is empty of not. We use this in the wildcard `_` case.
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+ //! # The `Missing` constructor
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+ //!
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+ //! We detail a special case of constructor splitting that is a bit subtle. Take the following:
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+ //!
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+ //! ```
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+ //! enum Direction { North, South, East, West }
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+ //! # let wind = (Direction::North, 0u8);
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+ //! match wind {
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+ //! (Direction::North, 50..) => {}
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+ //! (_, _) => {}
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+ //! }
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+ //! ```
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+ //!
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+ //! Here we expect constructor splitting to output two cases: `North`, and "everything else". This
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+ //! "everything else" is represented by [`Constructor::Missing`]. Unlike other constructors, it's a
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+ //! bit contextual: to know the exact list of constructors it represents we have to look at the
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+ //! column. In practice however we don't need to, because by construction it only matches rows that
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+ //! have wildcards. This is how this constructor is special: the only constructor that covers it is
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+ //! `Wildcard`.
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+ //!
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+ //! The only place where we care about which constructors `Missing` represents is in diagnostics
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+ //! (see `super::usefulness::WitnessMatrix::apply_constructor`).
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+ //!
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+ //! Extra special implementation detail: in fact, in the case where all the constructors are
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+ //! missing, we replace `Missing` with `Wildcard` to signal this. It only makes a difference for
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+ //! diagnostics: for `Missing` we list the missing constructors; for `Wildcard` we only output `_`.
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+ //!
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+ //! FIXME(Nadrieril): maybe `Missing { all_missing: bool }` would be less confusing.
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+ //!
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+ //! We choose whether to specialize with `Missing`/`Wildcard` in
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+ //! `super::usefulness::compute_exhaustiveness_and_reachability`.
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+ //!
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//!
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- //! Splitting is implemented in the [`Constructor::split`] function. We don't do splitting for
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- //! or-patterns; instead we just try the alternatives one-by-one. For details on splitting
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- //! wildcards, see [`Constructor::split`]; for integer ranges, see
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- //! [`IntRange::split`]; for slices, see [`Slice::split`].
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//!
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//! ## Opaque patterns
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//!
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- //! Some patterns, such as TODO, cannot be inspected, which we handle with `Constructor::Opaque`.
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- //! Since we know nothing of these patterns, we assume they never cover each other. In order to
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- //! respect the invariants of [`SplitConstructorSet`], we give each `Opaque` constructor a unique id
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- //! so we can recognize it.
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+ //! Some patterns, such as constants that are not allowed to be matched structurally, cannot be
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+ //! inspected, which we handle with `Constructor::Opaque`. Since we know nothing of these patterns,
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+ //! we assume they never cover each other. In order to respect the invariants of
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+ //! [`SplitConstructorSet`], we give each `Opaque` constructor a unique id so we can recognize it.
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use std:: cell:: Cell ;
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use std:: cmp:: { self , max, min, Ordering } ;
@@ -645,8 +685,8 @@ impl OpaqueId {
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/// `Fields`.
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#[ derive( Clone , Debug , PartialEq ) ]
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pub ( super ) enum Constructor < ' tcx > {
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- /// The constructor for patterns that have a single constructor, like tuples, struct patterns
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- /// and fixed -length arrays.
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+ /// The constructor for patterns that have a single constructor, like tuples, struct patterns,
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+ /// and references. Fixed -length arrays are treated separately with `Slice` .
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Single ,
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/// Enum variants.
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Variant ( VariantIdx ) ,
@@ -678,8 +718,8 @@ pub(super) enum Constructor<'tcx> {
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/// We use this for variants behind an unstable gate as well as
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/// `#[doc(hidden)]` ones.
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Hidden ,
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- /// Fake extra constructor for constructors that are not seen in the matrix, as explained in the
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- /// code for [`Constructor::split`] .
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+ /// Fake extra constructor for constructors that are not seen in the matrix, as explained at the
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+ /// top of the file .
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Missing ,
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}
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@@ -761,104 +801,12 @@ impl<'tcx> Constructor<'tcx> {
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}
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}
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- /// Some constructors (namely `Wildcard`, `IntRange` and `Slice`) actually stand for a set of
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- /// actual constructors (like variants, integers or fixed-sized slices). When specializing for
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- /// these constructors, we want to be specialising for the actual underlying constructors.
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- /// Naively, we would simply return the list of constructors they correspond to. We instead are
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- /// more clever: if there are constructors that we know will behave the same w.r.t. the current
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- /// matrix, we keep them grouped. For example, all slices of a sufficiently large length will
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- /// either be all useful or all non-useful with a given matrix.
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- ///
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- /// See the branches for details on how the splitting is done.
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- ///
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- /// This function may discard some irrelevant constructors if this preserves behavior. Eg. for
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- /// the `_` case, we ignore the constructors already present in the column, unless all of them
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- /// are.
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- pub ( super ) fn split < ' a > (
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- & self ,
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- pcx : & PatCtxt < ' _ , ' _ , ' tcx > ,
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- ctors : impl Iterator < Item = & ' a Constructor < ' tcx > > + Clone ,
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- ) -> SmallVec < [ Self ; 1 ] >
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- where
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- ' tcx : ' a ,
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- {
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- match self {
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- Wildcard => {
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- let split_set = ConstructorSet :: for_ty ( pcx. cx , pcx. ty ) . split ( pcx, ctors) ;
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- if !split_set. missing . is_empty ( ) {
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- // We are splitting a wildcard in order to compute its usefulness. Some constructors are
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- // not present in the column. The first thing we note is that specializing with any of
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- // the missing constructors would select exactly the rows with wildcards. Moreover, they
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- // would all return equivalent results. We can therefore group them all into a
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- // fictitious `Missing` constructor.
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- //
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- // As an important optimization, this function will skip all the present constructors.
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- // This is correct because specializing with any of the present constructors would
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- // select a strict superset of the wildcard rows, and thus would only find witnesses
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- // already found with the `Missing` constructor.
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- // This does mean that diagnostics are incomplete: in
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- // ```
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- // match x {
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- // Some(true) => {}
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- // }
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- // ```
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- // we report `None` as missing but not `Some(false)`.
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- //
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- // When all the constructors are missing we can equivalently return the `Wildcard`
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- // constructor on its own. The difference between `Wildcard` and `Missing` will then
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- // only be in diagnostics.
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-
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- // If some constructors are missing, we typically want to report those constructors,
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- // e.g.:
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- // ```
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- // enum Direction { N, S, E, W }
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- // let Direction::N = ...;
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- // ```
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- // we can report 3 witnesses: `S`, `E`, and `W`.
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- //
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- // However, if the user didn't actually specify a constructor
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- // in this arm, e.g., in
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- // ```
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- // let x: (Direction, Direction, bool) = ...;
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- // let (_, _, false) = x;
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- // ```
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- // we don't want to show all 16 possible witnesses `(<direction-1>, <direction-2>,
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- // true)` - we are satisfied with `(_, _, true)`. So if all constructors are missing we
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- // prefer to report just a wildcard `_`.
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- //
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- // The exception is: if we are at the top-level, for example in an empty match, we
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- // usually prefer to report the full list of constructors.
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- let all_missing = split_set. present . is_empty ( ) ;
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- let report_when_all_missing =
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- pcx. is_top_level && !IntRange :: is_integral ( pcx. ty ) ;
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- let ctor =
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- if all_missing && !report_when_all_missing { Wildcard } else { Missing } ;
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- smallvec ! [ ctor]
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- } else {
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- split_set. present
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- }
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- }
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- // Fast-track if the range is trivial.
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- IntRange ( this_range) if !this_range. is_singleton ( ) => {
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- let column_ranges = ctors. filter_map ( |ctor| ctor. as_int_range ( ) ) . cloned ( ) ;
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- this_range. split ( column_ranges) . map ( |( _, range) | IntRange ( range) ) . collect ( )
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- }
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- Slice ( this_slice @ Slice { kind : VarLen ( ..) , .. } ) => {
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- let column_slices = ctors. filter_map ( |c| c. as_slice ( ) ) ;
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- this_slice. split ( column_slices) . map ( |( _, slice) | Slice ( slice) ) . collect ( )
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- }
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- // Any other constructor can be used unchanged.
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- _ => smallvec ! [ self . clone( ) ] ,
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- }
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- }
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-
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/// Returns whether `self` is covered by `other`, i.e. whether `self` is a subset of `other`.
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/// For the simple cases, this is simply checking for equality. For the "grouped" constructors,
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/// this checks for inclusion.
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// We inline because this has a single call site in `Matrix::specialize_constructor`.
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#[ inline]
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pub ( super ) fn is_covered_by < ' p > ( & self , pcx : & PatCtxt < ' _ , ' p , ' tcx > , other : & Self ) -> bool {
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- // This must be kept in sync with `is_covered_by_any`.
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match ( self , other) {
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// Wildcards cover anything
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( _, Wildcard ) => true ,
@@ -943,23 +891,24 @@ pub(super) enum ConstructorSet {
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/// `present` is morally the set of constructors present in the column, and `missing` is the set of
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/// constructors that exist in the type but are not present in the column.
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///
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- /// More formally, they respect the following constraints:
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- /// - the union of `present` and `missing` covers the whole type
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- /// - `present` and `missing` are disjoint
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- /// - neither contains wildcards
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- /// - each constructor in `present` is covered by some non-wildcard constructor in the column
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- /// - together, the constructors in `present` cover all the non-wildcard constructor in the column
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- /// - non-wildcards in the column do no cover anything in `missing`
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- /// - constructors in `present` and `missing` are split for the column; in other words, they are
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- /// either fully included in or disjoint from each constructor in the column. This avoids
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- /// non-trivial intersections like between `0..10` and `5..15`.
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+ /// More formally, if we discard wildcards from the column, this respects the following constraints:
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+ /// 1. the union of `present` and `missing` covers the whole type
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+ /// 2. each constructor in `present` is covered by something in the column
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+ /// 3. no constructor in `missing` is covered by anything in the column
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+ /// 4. each constructor in the column is equal to the union of one or more constructors in `present`
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+ /// 5. `missing` does not contain empty constructors (see discussion about emptiness at the top of
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+ /// the file);
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+ /// 6. constructors in `present` and `missing` are split for the column; in other words, they are
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+ /// either fully included in or fully disjoint from each constructor in the column. In other
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+ /// words, there are no non-trivial intersections like between `0..10` and `5..15`.
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#[ derive( Debug ) ]
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pub ( super ) struct SplitConstructorSet < ' tcx > {
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pub ( super ) present : SmallVec < [ Constructor < ' tcx > ; 1 ] > ,
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pub ( super ) missing : Vec < Constructor < ' tcx > > ,
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}
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impl ConstructorSet {
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+ /// Creates a set that represents all the constructors of `ty`.
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#[ instrument( level = "debug" , skip( cx) , ret) ]
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pub ( super ) fn for_ty < ' p , ' tcx > ( cx : & MatchCheckCtxt < ' p , ' tcx > , ty : Ty < ' tcx > ) -> Self {
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let make_range = |start, end| {
@@ -1095,9 +1044,10 @@ impl ConstructorSet {
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}
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}
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- /// This is the core logical operation of exhaustiveness checking. This analyzes a column a
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- /// constructors to 1/ determine which constructors of the type (if any) are missing; 2/ split
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- /// constructors to handle non-trivial intersections e.g. on ranges or slices.
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+ /// This analyzes a column of constructors to 1/ determine which constructors of the type (if
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+ /// any) are missing; 2/ split constructors to handle non-trivial intersections e.g. on ranges
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+ /// or slices. This can get subtle; see [`SplitConstructorSet`] for details of this operation
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+ /// and its invariants.
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#[ instrument( level = "debug" , skip( self , pcx, ctors) , ret) ]
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pub ( super ) fn split < ' a , ' tcx > (
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& self ,
@@ -1244,19 +1194,6 @@ impl ConstructorSet {
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SplitConstructorSet { present, missing }
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}
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-
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- /// Compute the set of constructors missing from this column.
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- /// This is only used for reporting to the user.
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- pub ( super ) fn compute_missing < ' a , ' tcx > (
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- & self ,
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- pcx : & PatCtxt < ' _ , ' _ , ' tcx > ,
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- ctors : impl Iterator < Item = & ' a Constructor < ' tcx > > + Clone ,
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- ) -> Vec < Constructor < ' tcx > >
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- where
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- ' tcx : ' a ,
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- {
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- self . split ( pcx, ctors) . missing
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- }
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}
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/// A value can be decomposed into a constructor applied to some fields. This struct represents
@@ -1422,6 +1359,8 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx> {
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DeconstructedPat { ctor, fields, ty, span, reachable : Cell :: new ( false ) }
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}
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+ /// Note: the input patterns must have been lowered through
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+ /// `super::check_match::MatchVisitor::lower_pattern`.
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pub ( crate ) fn from_pat ( cx : & MatchCheckCtxt < ' p , ' tcx > , pat : & Pat < ' tcx > ) -> Self {
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let mkpat = |pat| DeconstructedPat :: from_pat ( cx, pat) ;
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let ctor;
@@ -1697,7 +1636,17 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx> {
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self . reachable . set ( true )
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}
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pub ( super ) fn is_reachable ( & self ) -> bool {
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- self . reachable . get ( )
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+ if self . reachable . get ( ) {
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+ true
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+ } else if self . is_or_pat ( ) && self . iter_fields ( ) . any ( |f| f. is_reachable ( ) ) {
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+ // We always expand or patterns in the matrix, so we will never see the actual
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+ // or-pattern (the one with constructor `Or`) in the column. As such, it will not be
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+ // marked as reachable itself, only its children will. We recover this information here.
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+ self . set_reachable ( ) ;
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+ true
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+ } else {
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+ false
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+ }
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}
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/// Report the spans of subpatterns that were not reachable, if any.
@@ -1706,7 +1655,6 @@ impl<'p, 'tcx> DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx> {
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self . collect_unreachable_spans ( & mut spans) ;
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spans
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}
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-
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fn collect_unreachable_spans ( & self , spans : & mut Vec < Span > ) {
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// We don't look at subpatterns if we already reported the whole pattern as unreachable.
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if !self . is_reachable ( ) {
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