When I compile code that contains an error, the compiler doesn't point me to the actual line that I made error in. This happens when I use macros, e.g. try!
.
This is an example error:
<std macros>:5:8: 6:45 error: mismatched types [E0308]
<std macros>:5 return $ crate :: result :: Result :: Err (
^
<std macros>:5:8: 6:45 note: in this expansion of try! (defined in <std macros>)
<std macros>:5:8: 6:45 help: run `rustc --explain E0308` to see a detailed explanation
<std macros>:5:8: 6:45 note: expected type `std::path::PathBuf`
<std macros>:5:8: 6:45 note: found type `std::result::Result<_, _>`
I would expect rustc
to point me to line in file that I actually edited that causes the error but instead I only see lines from std::macros
.
Is there a way to find out where the problem originates or should I just comment and uncomment all lines that are possible candidates?
Edit
The general problem looks more or less like this
use std::result::Result;
use std::path::PathBuf;
fn get_destination_path() -> PathBuf {
PathBuf::from(try!(get_res()))
}
fn get_res() -> Result<String, String> {
Ok("a".to_string())
}
I declared get_destination_path
as returning PathBuf
instead of Result<PathBuf, String>
and that causes the error.
I found that this happens only when I use nigtly version of rustc
(I executed multirust override nightly
in my cargo project directory)
When I use regular rust I get much nicer error
error: main function not found
<std macros>:5:8: 6:42 error: mismatched types:
expected `std::path::PathBuf`,
found `core::result::Result<_, _>`
(expected struct `std::path::PathBuf`,
found enum `core::result::Result`) [E0308]
<std macros>:5 return $ crate:: result:: Result:: Err (
<std macros>:6 $ crate:: convert:: From:: from ( err ) ) } } )
src/main.rs:6:18: 6:33 note: in this expansion of try! (defined in <std macros>)
So this happens on rustc 1.10.0-nightly (d91f8ab0f 2016-05-07)
and is likely to be just a bug.
<anon>:4:5: 4:25 note: in this expansion of try!
(the<anon>:4:5
bit; "anon" because I used the Playground). Maybe also edit your question to include the version of Rust, in case it's relevant.