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Patch projection to not be so eager to unify type variables. This code
is still probably wrong since it fails to incorporate the ambiguity resolution measures that `select` uses. Also, made more complicated by the fact that trait object types do not impl their own traits yet.
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@ -125,21 +125,14 @@ pub fn project_type<'cx,'tcx>(
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ambiguous: false,
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};
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let () = assemble_candidates_from_param_env(selcx,
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obligation,
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&mut candidates);
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let () = assemble_candidates_from_object_type(selcx,
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obligation,
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&mut candidates);
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if candidates.vec.is_empty() {
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// FIXME(#20297) -- In `select.rs` there is similar logic that
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// gives precedence to where-clauses, but it's a bit more
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// fine-grained. I was lazy here and just always give
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// precedence to where-clauses or other such sources over
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// actually dredging through impls. This logic probably should
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// be tightened up.
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let () = assemble_candidates_from_param_env(selcx,
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obligation,
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&mut candidates);
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let () = try!(assemble_candidates_from_impls(selcx,
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obligation,
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@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
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// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
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// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
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// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
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// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// Test how resolving a projection interacts with inference. In this
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// case, we were eagerly unifying the type variable for the iterator
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// type with `I` from the where clause, ignoring the in-scope `impl`
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// for `ByRef`. The right answer was to consider the result ambiguous
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// until more type information was available.
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#![feature(associated_types, lang_items, unboxed_closures)]
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#![no_implicit_prelude]
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use std::option::Option::{None, Some, mod};
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trait Iterator {
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type Item;
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fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>;
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}
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trait IteratorExt: Iterator {
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fn by_ref(&mut self) -> ByRef<Self> {
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ByRef(self)
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}
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}
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impl<I> IteratorExt for I where I: Iterator {}
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struct ByRef<'a, I: 'a + Iterator>(&'a mut I);
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impl<'a, A, I> Iterator for ByRef<'a, I> where I: Iterator<Item=A> {
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type Item = A;
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fn next(&mut self) -> Option< <I as Iterator>::Item > {
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self.0.next()
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}
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}
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fn is_iterator_of<A, I: Iterator<Item=A>>(_: &I) {}
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fn test<A, I: Iterator<Item=A>>(mut it: I) {
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is_iterator_of::<A, _>(&it.by_ref());
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}
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fn main() { }
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