Use the correct span for out-of-range int literals.

This corrects the error message to point at the literal, not the next
token.

Closes #17123.
This commit is contained in:
Huon Wilson 2014-11-10 22:07:36 +11:00
parent 26282ac337
commit 661598cef0
2 changed files with 19 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -1646,7 +1646,8 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
token::LitByte(i) => LitByte(parse::byte_lit(i.as_str()).val0()),
token::LitChar(i) => LitChar(parse::char_lit(i.as_str()).val0()),
token::LitInteger(s) => parse::integer_lit(s.as_str(),
&self.sess.span_diagnostic, self.span),
&self.sess.span_diagnostic,
self.last_span),
token::LitFloat(s) => parse::float_lit(s.as_str()),
token::LitStr(s) => {
LitStr(token::intern_and_get_ident(parse::str_lit(s.as_str()).as_slice()),

View File

@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
// issue #17123
fn main() {
100000000000000000000000000000000 //~ ERROR int literal is too large
; // the span shouldn't point to this.
}