Description
Code
pub trait Trait {
type Gat<'a>;
fn example(self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) -> Self::Gat<'_>;
}
impl Trait for () {
type Gat<'a> = ();
fn example(self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) {}
}
Current output
error[E0195]: lifetime parameters or bounds on method `example` do not match the trait declaration
--> <source>:8:15
|
3 | fn example(self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) -> Self::Gat<'_>;
| - lifetimes in impl do not match this method in trait
...
8 | fn example(self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) {}
| ^ lifetimes do not match method in trait
Desired output
error[E0195]: lifetime parameters or bounds on method `example` do not match the trait declaration
--> <source>:8:15
|
3 | fn example(self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) -> Self::Gat<'_>;
| -- --
| lifetimes in impl do not match this method in trait
...
8 | fn example(self, _: Gat<'_>) {}
| --
| lifetimes do not match method in trait
|
note: The lifetime in the trait does not constrain the lifetime parameter,
but the lifetime in the implementation signature is constrained
hint: Make the lifetime in the implementation unconstrained by mentioning
the lifetime in an explicit bound:
fn example<'a:'a>(self, _: Self::Gat<'a>) {}
+++++++ ~~
Rationale and extra context
Context: #109476 and #87803. Those are filed as bugs, so I'm filing this diagnostic issue separately. It's plausible this will become moot if those issues are resolved, but it's not certain that will happen (or that it will happen soon).
When I encountered this, it took me awhile to figure out that E0195 was really about late-vs-early lifetimes parameters. Only when I figured that out did the error make sense. Late-vs-early lifetime parameters are niche knowledge, so I'm not entirely sure how to phrase the error message; it needs to probably spell out a workaround, as it's not obvious.
The current phrasing of E0195 makes sense when lifetime parameters are early bound due to appearing in explicit bounds. However, lifetime parameters can also become early bound implicitly/invisibly, such as in the example. There are similar cases (see #87803) when the return type is an RPIT/RPITIT (-> impl Trait
) -- in which case the lifetime is early bound due to appearing in the implicit use<..>
bounds.
Also in those cases, exactly matching the signature from the trait is not always an option or desirable. For example, when using refinement and/or precise capturing -- i.e. intentionally removing a lifetime from the return type in order to provide more functionality than the trait requires.
So for example while -> Self::Gat<'_>
would be a usable suggestion for the code at the top of this issue, it is not a usable suggestion here:
pub trait Trait {
type Gat<'a>;
fn example(&self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) -> impl Sized;
}
impl Trait for () {
type Gat<'a> = &'a str;
#[allow(refining_impl_trait)]
fn example(&self, _: Self::Gat<'_>) -> i32 { 0 }
}
Other cases
Being explicit about lifetimes doesn't improve things; the span highlighted has an "Expected X
found X
" flavor.
3 | fn example<'a, 'b>(&'a self, _: Self::Gat<'b>) -> Self::Gat<'b>;
| -------- lifetimes in impl do not match this method in trait
...
8 | fn example<'a, 'b>(&'a self, _: Self::Gat<'b>) {}
| ^^^^^^^^ lifetimes do not match method in trait
Rust Version
Rust Playground
Build using the Stable version: 1.84.0
Anything else?
No response
Activity
QuineDot commentedon Jan 11, 2025
The "constrained"/"unconstrained" in my desired output are definitely also not accurate, but I haven't thought of a good phrasing that avoids late/early bound so far. Those are discussed in E0794, so maybe E0195 could just bite the bullet and explain that too (in the long form at least), or refer to E0794 or some other official documentation (which may not yet exist for late/early bound lifetime parameters).
(Though also note that the definition of a late-bound lifetime parameter in E0794 is currently incomplete.)
Kontinuation commentedon May 9, 2025
Just came across a similar issue using the latest stable rustc (rustc 1.86.0 (05f9846 2025-03-31)):
Playground
The error message is confusing as it is, and it took me quite a long time to find out that this is related to early-bound/late-bound lifetime parameters, which is some arcane knowledge that only covered by Error code E0794 and the Rust Compiler Developer Guide. I'd really like to have this code compile cleanly, or having the compiler emitting useful error message if it does not.