Emit proper errors on missing closure braces

This commit focuses on emitting clean errors for the following syntax
error:

```
Some(42).map(|a|
    dbg!(a);
    a
);
```

Previous implementation tried to recover after parsing the closure body
(the `dbg` expression) by replacing the next `;` with a `,`, which made
the next expression belong to the next function argument. As such, the
following errors were emitted (among others):
  - the semicolon token was not expected,
  - a is not in scope,
  - Option::map is supposed to take one argument, not two.

This commit allows us to gracefully handle this situation by adding
giving the parser the ability to remember when it has just parsed a
closure body inside a function call. When this happens, we can treat the
unexpected `;` specifically and try to parse as much statements as
possible in order to eat the whole block. When we can't parse statements
anymore, we generate a clean error indicating that the braces are
missing, and return an ExprKind::Err.
This commit is contained in:
Sasha Pourcelot 2021-08-16 15:22:36 +02:00
parent 497ee321af
commit b21425de3c
7 changed files with 234 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -1,9 +1,12 @@
use super::pat::{RecoverColon, RecoverComma, PARAM_EXPECTED};
use super::ty::{AllowPlus, RecoverQPath, RecoverReturnSign};
use super::{AttrWrapper, BlockMode, ForceCollect, Parser, PathStyle, Restrictions, TokenType};
use super::{
AttrWrapper, BlockMode, ClosureSpans, ForceCollect, Parser, PathStyle, Restrictions, TokenType,
};
use super::{SemiColonMode, SeqSep, TokenExpectType, TrailingToken};
use crate::maybe_recover_from_interpolated_ty_qpath;
use ast::token::DelimToken;
use rustc_ast::ptr::P;
use rustc_ast::token::{self, Token, TokenKind};
use rustc_ast::tokenstream::Spacing;
@ -91,6 +94,8 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
/// Parses an expression.
#[inline]
pub fn parse_expr(&mut self) -> PResult<'a, P<Expr>> {
self.current_closure.take();
self.parse_expr_res(Restrictions::empty(), None)
}
@ -1736,7 +1741,7 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
let capture_clause = self.parse_capture_clause()?;
let decl = self.parse_fn_block_decl()?;
let decl_hi = self.prev_token.span;
let body = match decl.output {
let mut body = match decl.output {
FnRetTy::Default(_) => {
let restrictions = self.restrictions - Restrictions::STMT_EXPR;
self.parse_expr_res(restrictions, None)?
@ -1753,11 +1758,28 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
self.sess.gated_spans.gate(sym::async_closure, span);
}
Ok(self.mk_expr(
if self.token.kind == TokenKind::Semi && self.token_cursor.frame.delim == DelimToken::Paren
{
// It is likely that the closure body is a block but where the
// braces have been removed. We will recover and eat the next
// statements later in the parsing process.
body = self.mk_expr_err(body.span);
}
let body_span = body.span;
let closure = self.mk_expr(
lo.to(body.span),
ExprKind::Closure(capture_clause, asyncness, movability, decl, body, lo.to(decl_hi)),
attrs,
))
);
// Disable recovery for closure body
let spans =
ClosureSpans { whole_closure: closure.span, closing_pipe: decl_hi, body: body_span };
self.current_closure = Some(spans);
Ok(closure)
}
/// Parses an optional `move` prefix to a closure-like construct.

View File

@ -142,6 +142,17 @@ pub struct Parser<'a> {
/// If present, this `Parser` is not parsing Rust code but rather a macro call.
subparser_name: Option<&'static str>,
capture_state: CaptureState,
/// This allows us to recover when the user forget to add braces around
/// multiple statements in the closure body.
pub current_closure: Option<ClosureSpans>,
}
/// Stores span informations about a closure.
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct ClosureSpans {
pub whole_closure: Span,
pub closing_pipe: Span,
pub body: Span,
}
/// Indicates a range of tokens that should be replaced by
@ -440,6 +451,7 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
replace_ranges: Vec::new(),
inner_attr_ranges: Default::default(),
},
current_closure: None,
};
// Make parser point to the first token.
@ -761,8 +773,11 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
first = false;
} else {
match self.expect(t) {
Ok(false) => {}
Ok(false) => {
self.current_closure.take();
}
Ok(true) => {
self.current_closure.take();
recovered = true;
break;
}
@ -770,10 +785,29 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
let sp = self.prev_token.span.shrink_to_hi();
let token_str = pprust::token_kind_to_string(t);
// Attempt to keep parsing if it was a similar separator.
if let Some(ref tokens) = t.similar_tokens() {
if tokens.contains(&self.token.kind) && !unclosed_delims {
self.bump();
match self.current_closure.take() {
Some(closure_spans) if self.token.kind == TokenKind::Semi => {
// Finding a semicolon instead of a comma
// after a closure body indicates that the
// closure body may be a block but the user
// forgot to put braces around its
// statements.
self.recover_missing_braces_around_closure_body(
closure_spans,
expect_err,
)?;
continue;
}
_ => {
// Attempt to keep parsing if it was a similar separator.
if let Some(ref tokens) = t.similar_tokens() {
if tokens.contains(&self.token.kind) && !unclosed_delims {
self.bump();
}
}
}
}
@ -839,6 +873,65 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
Ok((v, trailing, recovered))
}
fn recover_missing_braces_around_closure_body(
&mut self,
closure_spans: ClosureSpans,
mut expect_err: DiagnosticBuilder<'_>,
) -> PResult<'a, ()> {
let initial_semicolon = self.token.span;
while self.eat(&TokenKind::Semi) {
let _ = self.parse_stmt(ForceCollect::Yes)?;
}
expect_err.set_primary_message(
"closure bodies that contain statements must be surrounded by braces",
);
let preceding_pipe_span = closure_spans.closing_pipe;
let following_token_span = self.token.span;
let mut first_note = MultiSpan::from(vec![initial_semicolon]);
first_note.push_span_label(
initial_semicolon,
"this `;` turns the preceding closure into a statement".to_string(),
);
first_note.push_span_label(
closure_spans.body,
"this expression is a statement because of the trailing semicolon".to_string(),
);
expect_err.span_note(first_note, "statement found outside of a block");
let mut second_note = MultiSpan::from(vec![closure_spans.whole_closure]);
second_note.push_span_label(
closure_spans.whole_closure,
"this is the parsed closure...".to_string(),
);
second_note.push_span_label(
following_token_span,
"...but likely you meant the closure to end here".to_string(),
);
expect_err.span_note(second_note, "the closure body may be incorrectly delimited");
expect_err.set_span(vec![preceding_pipe_span, following_token_span]);
let opening_suggestion_str = " {".to_string();
let closing_suggestion_str = "}".to_string();
expect_err.multipart_suggestion(
"try adding braces",
vec![
(preceding_pipe_span.shrink_to_hi(), opening_suggestion_str),
(following_token_span.shrink_to_lo(), closing_suggestion_str),
],
Applicability::MaybeIncorrect,
);
expect_err.emit();
Ok(())
}
/// Parses a sequence, not including the closing delimiter. The function
/// `f` must consume tokens until reaching the next separator or
/// closing bracket.

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@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
// This snippet ensures that no attempt to recover on a semicolon instead of
// comma is made next to a closure body.
//
// If this recovery happens, then plenty of errors are emitted. Here, we expect
// only one error.
//
// This is part of issue #88065:
// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88065
// run-rustfix
fn main() {
let num = 5;
(1..num).reduce(|a, b| {
//~^ ERROR: closure bodies that contain statements must be surrounded by braces
println!("{}", a);
a * b
}).unwrap();
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
// This snippet ensures that no attempt to recover on a semicolon instead of
// comma is made next to a closure body.
//
// If this recovery happens, then plenty of errors are emitted. Here, we expect
// only one error.
//
// This is part of issue #88065:
// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88065
// run-rustfix
fn main() {
let num = 5;
(1..num).reduce(|a, b|
//~^ ERROR: closure bodies that contain statements must be surrounded by braces
println!("{}", a);
a * b
).unwrap();
}

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@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
error: closure bodies that contain statements must be surrounded by braces
--> $DIR/missing_braces_around_block.rs:14:26
|
LL | (1..num).reduce(|a, b|
| ^
...
LL | ).unwrap();
| ^
|
note: statement found outside of a block
--> $DIR/missing_braces_around_block.rs:16:26
|
LL | println!("{}", a);
| -----------------^ this `;` turns the preceding closure into a statement
| |
| this expression is a statement because of the trailing semicolon
note: the closure body may be incorrectly delimited
--> $DIR/missing_braces_around_block.rs:14:21
|
LL | (1..num).reduce(|a, b|
| _____________________^
LL | |
LL | | println!("{}", a);
| |_________________________^ this is the parsed closure...
LL | a * b
LL | ).unwrap();
| - ...but likely you meant the closure to end here
help: try adding braces
|
LL ~ (1..num).reduce(|a, b| {
LL |
LL | println!("{}", a);
LL | a * b
LL ~ }).unwrap();
|
error: aborting due to previous error

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
// Part of issue #27300.
// The problem here is that ruby-style closures are parsed as blocks whose
// first statement is a closure. See the issue for more details:
// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27300
// Note: this test represents what the compiler currently emits. The error
// message will be improved later.
fn main() {
let p = Some(45).and_then({
//~^ expected a `FnOnce<({integer},)>` closure, found `Option<_>`
|x| println!("doubling {}", x);
Some(x * 2)
//~^ ERROR: cannot find value `x` in this scope
});
}

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@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
error[E0425]: cannot find value `x` in this scope
--> $DIR/ruby_style_closure.rs:13:14
|
LL | Some(x * 2)
| ^ not found in this scope
error[E0277]: expected a `FnOnce<({integer},)>` closure, found `Option<_>`
--> $DIR/ruby_style_closure.rs:10:22
|
LL | let p = Some(45).and_then({
| ^^^^^^^^ expected an `FnOnce<({integer},)>` closure, found `Option<_>`
|
= help: the trait `FnOnce<({integer},)>` is not implemented for `Option<_>`
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
Some errors have detailed explanations: E0277, E0425.
For more information about an error, try `rustc --explain E0277`.