// This is a reduction of a concrete test illustrating a case that was // annoying to Rust developer niconii (see comment thread on #21114). // // With resolving issue #54556, pnkfelix hopes that the new diagnostic // output produced by NLL helps to *explain* the semantic significance // of temp drop order, and thus why inserting a semi-colon after the // `if let` expression in `main` works. struct Mutex; struct MutexGuard<'a>(&'a Mutex); impl Drop for Mutex { fn drop(&mut self) { println!("Mutex::drop"); } } impl<'a> Drop for MutexGuard<'a> { fn drop(&mut self) { println!("MutexGuard::drop"); } } impl Mutex { fn lock(&self) -> Result { Ok(MutexGuard(self)) } } fn main() { let counter = Mutex; if let Ok(_) = counter.lock() { } //~ ERROR does not live long enough // With this code as written, the dynamic semantics here implies // that `Mutex::drop` for `counter` runs *before* // `MutexGuard::drop`, which would be unsound since `MutexGuard` // still has a reference to `counter`. // // The goal of #54556 is to explain that within a compiler // diagnostic. }