r[coerce]
r[coerce.intro] Type coercions are implicit operations that change the type of a value. They happen automatically at specific locations and are highly restricted in what types actually coerce.
r[cerce.as]
Any conversions allowed by coercion can also be explicitly performed by the
type cast operator, as
.
Coercions are originally defined in RFC 401 and expanded upon in RFC 1558.
r[coerce.site]
r[coerce.site.intro] A coercion can only occur at certain coercion sites in a program; these are typically places where the desired type is explicit or can be derived by propagation from explicit types (without type inference). Possible coercion sites are:
r[coerce.site.let]
-
let
statements where an explicit type is given.For example,
&mut 42
is coerced to have type&i8
in the following:let _: &i8 = &mut 42;
r[coerce.site.value]
static
andconst
item declarations (similar tolet
statements).
r[coerce.site.argument]
-
Arguments for function calls
The value being coerced is the actual parameter, and it is coerced to the type of the formal parameter.
For example,
&mut 42
is coerced to have type&i8
in the following:fn bar(_: &i8) { } fn main() { bar(&mut 42); }
For method calls, the receiver (
self
parameter) type is coerced differently, see the documentation on method-call expressions for details.
r[coerce.site.constructor]
-
Instantiations of struct, union, or enum variant fields
For example,
&mut 42
is coerced to have type&i8
in the following:struct Foo<'a> { x: &'a i8 } fn main() { Foo { x: &mut 42 }; }
r[coerce.site.return]
-
Function results—either the final line of a block if it is not semicolon-terminated or any expression in a
return
statementFor example,
x
is coerced to have type&dyn Display
in the following:use std::fmt::Display; fn foo(x: &u32) -> &dyn Display { x }
r[coerce.site.subexpr] If the expression in one of these coercion sites is a coercion-propagating expression, then the relevant sub-expressions in that expression are also coercion sites. Propagation recurses from these new coercion sites. Propagating expressions and their relevant sub-expressions are:
r[coerce.site.array]
- Array literals, where the array has type
[U; n]
. Each sub-expression in the array literal is a coercion site for coercion to typeU
.
r[coerce.site.repeat]
- Array literals with repeating syntax, where the array has type
[U; n]
. The repeated sub-expression is a coercion site for coercion to typeU
.
r[coerce.site.tuple]
- Tuples, where a tuple is a coercion site to type
(U_0, U_1, ..., U_n)
. Each sub-expression is a coercion site to the respective type, e.g. the zeroth sub-expression is a coercion site to typeU_0
.
r[coerce.site.parenthesis]
- Parenthesized sub-expressions (
(e)
): if the expression has typeU
, then the sub-expression is a coercion site toU
.
r[coerce.site.block]
- Blocks: if a block has type
U
, then the last expression in the block (if it is not semicolon-terminated) is a coercion site toU
. This includes blocks which are part of control flow statements, such asif
/else
, if the block has a known type.
r[coerce.types]
r[coerce.types.intro] Coercion is allowed between the following types:
r[coerce.types.reflexive]
T
toU
ifT
is a subtype ofU
(reflexive case)
r[coerce.types.transitive]
-
T_1
toT_3
whereT_1
coerces toT_2
andT_2
coerces toT_3
(transitive case)Note that this is not fully supported yet.
r[coerce.types.mut-reborrow]
&mut T
to&T
r[coerce.types.mut-pointer]
*mut T
to*const T
r[coerce.types.ref-to-pointer]
&T
to*const T
r[coerce.types.mut-to-pointer]
&mut T
to*mut T
r[coerce.types.deref]
-
&T
or&mut T
to&U
ifT
implementsDeref<Target = U>
. For example:use std::ops::Deref; struct CharContainer { value: char, } impl Deref for CharContainer { type Target = char; fn deref<'a>(&'a self) -> &'a char { &self.value } } fn foo(arg: &char) {} fn main() { let x = &mut CharContainer { value: 'y' }; foo(x); //&mut CharContainer is coerced to &char. }
r[coerce.types.deref-mut]
&mut T
to&mut U
ifT
implementsDerefMut<Target = U>
.
r[coerce.types.unsize]
-
TyCtor(
T
) to TyCtor(U
), where TyCtor(T
) is one of&T
&mut T
*const T
*mut T
Box<T>
and where
U
can be obtained fromT
by unsized coercion.
r[coerce.types.fn]
- Function item types to
fn
pointers
r[coerce.types.closure]
- Non capturing closures to
fn
pointers
r[coerce.types.never]
!
to anyT
r[coerce.unsize]
r[coerce.unsize.intro]
The following coercions are called unsized coercions
, since they
relate to converting sized types to unsized types, and are permitted in a few
cases where other coercions are not, as described above. They can still happen
anywhere else a coercion can occur.
r[coerce.unsize.trait]
Two traits, Unsize
and CoerceUnsized
, are used
to assist in this process and expose it for library use. The following
coercions are built-ins and, if T
can be coerced to U
with one of them, then
an implementation of Unsize<U>
for T
will be provided:
r[coerce.unsize.slice]
[T; n]
to[T]
.
r[coerce.unsize.trait-object]
T
todyn U
, whenT
implementsU + Sized
, andU
is dyn compatible.
r[coerce.unsized.composite]
Foo<..., T, ...>
toFoo<..., U, ...>
, when:Foo
is a struct.T
implementsUnsize<U>
.- The last field of
Foo
has a type involvingT
. - If that field has type
Bar<T>
, thenBar<T>
implementsUnsize<Bar<U>>
. - T is not part of the type of any other fields.
r[coerce.unsized.pointer]
Additionally, a type Foo<T>
can implement CoerceUnsized<Foo<U>>
when T
implements Unsize<U>
or CoerceUnsized<Foo<U>>
. This allows it to provide an
unsized coercion to Foo<U>
.
Note: While the definition of the unsized coercions and their implementation has been stabilized, the traits themselves are not yet stable and therefore can't be used directly in stable Rust.
r[coerce.least-upper-bound]
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.intro] In some contexts, the compiler must coerce together multiple types to try and find the most general type. This is called a "Least Upper Bound" coercion. LUB coercion is used and only used in the following situations:
- To find the common type for a series of if branches.
- To find the common type for a series of match arms.
- To find the common type for array elements.
- To find the type for the return type of a closure with multiple return statements.
- To check the type for the return type of a function with multiple return statements.
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.target]
In each such case, there are a set of types T0..Tn
to be mutually coerced
to some target type T_t
, which is unknown to start.
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.computation]
Computing the LUB
coercion is done iteratively. The target type T_t
begins as the type T0
.
For each new type Ti
, we consider whether
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.computation-identity]
- If
Ti
can be coerced to the current target typeT_t
, then no change is made.
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.computation-replace]
- Otherwise, check whether
T_t
can be coerced toTi
; if so, theT_t
is changed toTi
. (This check is also conditioned on whether all of the source expressions considered thus far have implicit coercions.)
r[coerce.least-upper-bound.computation-unify]
- If not, try to compute a mutual supertype of
T_t
andTi
, which will become the new target type.
# let (a, b, c) = (0, 1, 2);
// For if branches
let bar = if true {
a
} else if false {
b
} else {
c
};
// For match arms
let baw = match 42 {
0 => a,
1 => b,
_ => c,
};
// For array elements
let bax = [a, b, c];
// For closure with multiple return statements
let clo = || {
if true {
a
} else if false {
b
} else {
c
}
};
let baz = clo();
// For type checking of function with multiple return statements
fn foo() -> i32 {
let (a, b, c) = (0, 1, 2);
match 42 {
0 => a,
1 => b,
_ => c,
}
}
In these examples, types of the ba*
are found by LUB coercion. And the
compiler checks whether LUB coercion result of a
, b
, c
is i32
in the
processing of the function foo
.
This description is obviously informal. Making it more precise is expected to proceed as part of a general effort to specify the Rust type checker more precisely.