Represents the unprojected term of a projection goal.
Represents the projection of an associated, opaque, or lazy-type-alias type.
Binder is a binder for higher-ranked lifetimes or types. It is part of the
compiler’s representation for things like for<'a> Fn(&'a isize)
(which would be represented by the type PolyTraitRef == Binder<I, TraitRef>
). Note that when we instantiate,
erase, or otherwise “discharge” these bound vars, we change the
type from Binder<I, T>
to just T
(see
e.g., liberate_late_bound_regions
).
A “canonicalized” type V
is one where all free inference
variables have been rewritten to “canonical vars”. These are
numbered starting from 0 in order of first appearance.
Information about a canonical variable that is included with the
canonical value. This is sufficient information for code to create
a copy of the canonical value in some other inference context,
with fresh inference variables replacing the canonical values.
A set of values corresponding to the canonical variables from some
Canonical
. You can give these values to
canonical_value.instantiate
to instantiate them into the canonical
value at the right places.
A closure can be modeled as a struct that looks like:
Struct returned by split()
.
Encodes that we have to coerce from the a
type to the b
type.
A const
variable ID.
Similar to ClosureArgs
; see the above documentation for more.
See docs for explanation of how each argument is used.
A
De Bruijn index is a standard means of representing
regions (and perhaps later types) in a higher-ranked setting. In
particular, imagine a type like this:
Similar to
super::Binder
except that it tracks early bound generics, i.e.
struct Foo<T>(T)
needs
T
instantiated immediately. This type primarily exists to avoid forgetting to call
instantiate
.
An effect variable ID.
A ProjectionPredicate
for an ExistentialTraitRef
.
An existential reference to a trait, where Self
is erased.
For example, the trait object Trait<'a, 'b, X, Y>
is:
A floating-point (f32
or f64
) type variable ID.
An integral (u32
, i32
, usize
, etc.) type variable ID.
Used by the new solver to normalize an alias. This always expects the term
to
be an unconstrained inference variable which is used as the output.
A: 'region
This kind of predicate has no direct correspondent in the
syntax, but it roughly corresponds to the syntactic forms:
A region variable ID.
Encodes that a
must be a subtype of b
. The a_is_expected
flag indicates
whether the a
type is the type that we should label as “expected” when
presenting user diagnostics.
A complete reference to a trait. These take numerous guises in syntax,
but perhaps the most recognizable form is in a where-clause:
A type variable ID.
Flags that we track on types. These flags are propagated upwards
through the type during type construction, so that we can quickly check
whether the type has various kinds of types in it without recursing
over the type itself.
An unevaluated (potentially generic) constant used in the type-system.
“Universes” are used during type- and trait-checking in the
presence of for<..>
binders to control what sets of names are
visible. Universes are arranged into a tree: the root universe
contains names that are always visible. Each child then adds a new
set of names that are visible, in addition to those of its parent.
We say that the child universe “extends” the parent universe with
new names.
A helper type that you can wrap round your own type in order to automatically
cache the stable hash, type flags and debruijn index on creation and
not recompute it whenever the information is needed.
This is only done in incremental mode. You can also opt out of caching by using
StableHash::ZERO for the hash, in which case the hash gets computed each time.
This is useful if you have values that you intern but never (can?) use for stable
hashing.
Rust actually has more than one category of type variables;
notably, the type variables we create for literals (e.g., 22 or
22.) can only be instantiated with integral/float types (e.g.,
usize or f32). In order to faithfully reproduce a type, we need to
know what set of types a given type variable can be unified with.
Describes the “kind” of the canonical variable. This is a “kind”
in the type-theory sense of the term – i.e., a “meta” type system
that analyzes type-like values.
A clause is something that can appear in where bounds or be inferred
by implied bounds.
Represents the various closure traits in the language. This
will determine the type of the environment (self
, in the
desugaring) argument that the closure expects.
Represents a constant in Rust.
Specifies how a trait object is represented.
An inference variable for a const, for use in const generics.
A placeholder for a type that hasn’t been inferred yet.
Polarity for a trait predicate. May either be negative or positive.
Distinguished from
ImplPolarity
since we never compute goals with
“reservation” level.
Representation of regions. Note that the NLL checker uses a distinct
representation of regions. For this reason, it internally replaces all the
regions with inference variables – the index of the variable is then used
to index into internal NLL data structures. See rustc_const_eval::borrow_check
module for more information.
Defines the kinds of types used by the type system.