#[repr(u8)] enum Eu8 { Au8 = 23, Bu8 = 223, Cu8 = -23, //~^ ERROR cannot apply unary operator `-` to type `u8` } #[repr(u16)] enum Eu16 { Au16 = 23, Bu16 = 55555, Cu16 = -22333, //~^ ERROR cannot apply unary operator `-` to type `u16` } #[repr(u32)] enum Eu32 { Au32 = 23, Bu32 = 3_000_000_000, Cu32 = -2_000_000_000, //~^ ERROR cannot apply unary operator `-` to type `u32` } #[repr(u64)] enum Eu64 { Au32 = 23, Bu32 = 3_000_000_000, Cu32 = -2_000_000_000, //~^ ERROR cannot apply unary operator `-` to type `u64` } // u64 currently allows negative numbers, and i64 allows numbers greater than `1<<63`. This is a // little counterintuitive, but since the discriminant can store all the bits, and extracting it // with a cast requires specifying the signedness, there is no loss of information in those cases. // This also applies to isize and usize on 64-bit targets. pub fn main() { }