Closed
Description
As the title says, the parenthesised part sometimes prints backwards. At least, I've found one case where it does - when one of the operands is a reference provided by an iterator:
Test code:
fn main() {
let i: [int, ..5] = [0, ..5];
let n = &i[0];
// Error prints correctly
1 + n;
// Error prints backwards
for v in i.iter() {
1 + v;
}
}
Result:
test.rs:8:6: 8:7 error: mismatched types: expected `<generic integer #3>`
but found `&int` (expected integral variable but found &-ptr)
test.rs:8 1 + n;
^
test.rs:12:7: 12:8 error: mismatched types: expected `<generic integer #4>`
but found `&int` (expected &-ptr but found integral variable)
test.rs:12 1 + v;