# Example: Type checking through `rustc_interface` `rustc_interface` allows you to interact with Rust code at various stages of compilation. ## Getting the type of an expression To get the type of an expression, use the `global_ctxt` to get a `TyCtxt`. The following was tested with `nightly-2022-12-19` (see [here][example] for the complete example): [example]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/blob/master/examples/rustc-driver-interacting-with-the-ast.rs ```rust let config = rustc_interface::Config { input: config::Input::Str { name: source_map::FileName::Custom("main.rs".to_string()), input: "fn main() { let message = \"Hello, world!\"; println!(\"{}\", message); }" .to_string(), }, /* other config */ }; rustc_interface::run_compiler(config, |compiler| { compiler.enter(|queries| { // Analyze the crate and inspect the types under the cursor. queries.global_ctxt().unwrap().take().enter(|tcx| { // Every compilation contains a single crate. let hir_krate = tcx.hir(); // Iterate over the top-level items in the crate, looking for the main function. for id in hir_krate.items() { let item = hir_krate.item(id); // Use pattern-matching to find a specific node inside the main function. if let rustc_hir::ItemKind::Fn(_, _, body_id) = item.kind { let expr = &tcx.hir().body(body_id).value; if let rustc_hir::ExprKind::Block(block, _) = expr.kind { if let rustc_hir::StmtKind::Local(local) = block.stmts[0].kind { if let Some(expr) = local.init { let hir_id = expr.hir_id; // hir_id identifies the string "Hello, world!" let def_id = tcx.hir().local_def_id(item.hir_id()); // def_id identifies the main function let ty = tcx.typeck(def_id).node_type(hir_id); println!("{:?}: {:?}", expr, ty); } } } } } }) }); }); ```