| //@ check-pass |
| #![allow(dead_code)] |
| // Regression test for issue #21245. Check that we are able to infer |
| // the types in these examples correctly. It used to be that |
| // insufficient type propagation caused the type of the iterator to be |
| // incorrectly unified with the `*const` type to which it is coerced. |
| |
| //@ pretty-expanded FIXME #23616 |
| |
| use std::ptr; |
| |
| trait IntoIterator { |
| type Iter: Iterator; |
| |
| fn into_iter2(self) -> Self::Iter; |
| } |
| |
| impl<I> IntoIterator for I where I: Iterator { |
| type Iter = I; |
| |
| fn into_iter2(self) -> I { |
| self |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn desugared_for_loop_bad<T>(v: Vec<T>) { |
| match IntoIterator::into_iter2(v.iter()) { |
| mut iter => { |
| loop { |
| match ::std::iter::Iterator::next(&mut iter) { |
| ::std::option::Option::Some(x) => { |
| unsafe { ptr::read(x); } |
| }, |
| ::std::option::Option::None => break |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn desugared_for_loop_good<T>(v: Vec<T>) { |
| match v.iter().into_iter() { |
| mut iter => { |
| loop { |
| match ::std::iter::Iterator::next(&mut iter) { |
| ::std::option::Option::Some(x) => { |
| unsafe { ptr::read(x); } |
| }, |
| ::std::option::Option::None => break |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn main() {} |