Error code E0211

Note: this error code is no longer emitted by the compiler.

You used a function or type which doesn't fit the requirements for where it was used. Erroneous code examples:

#![feature(intrinsics)] #![allow(internal_features)] extern "rust-intrinsic" { fn unreachable(); // error: intrinsic has wrong type } // or: fn main() -> i32 { 0 } // error: main function expects type: `fn() {main}`: expected (), found i32 // or: let x = 1u8; match x { 0u8..=3i8 => (), // error: mismatched types in range: expected u8, found i8 _ => () } // or: use std::rc::Rc; struct Foo; impl Foo { fn x(self: Rc<Foo>) {} // error: mismatched self type: expected `Foo`: expected struct // `Foo`, found struct `alloc::rc::Rc` }

For the first code example, please check the function definition. Example:

#![allow(unused)] #![feature(intrinsics)] #![allow(internal_features)] fn main() { extern "rust-intrinsic" { fn unreachable() -> !; // ok! } }

The second case example is a bit particular: the main function must always have this definition:

fn main();

They never take parameters and never return types.

For the third example, when you match, all patterns must have the same type as the type you're matching on. Example:

#![allow(unused)] fn main() { let x = 1u8; match x { 0u8..=3u8 => (), // ok! _ => () } }

And finally, for the last example, only Box<Self>, &Self, Self, or &mut Self work as explicit self parameters. Example:

#![allow(unused)] fn main() { struct Foo; impl Foo { fn x(self: Box<Foo>) {} // ok! } }