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A `#[repr(..)]` attribute was placed on an unsupported item.
Examples of erroneous code:
```compile_fail,E0517
#[repr(C)]
type Foo = u8;
#[repr(packed)]
enum Foo {Bar, Baz}
#[repr(u8)]
struct Foo {bar: bool, baz: bool}
#[repr(C)]
impl Foo {
// ...
}
```
* The `#[repr(C)]` attribute can only be placed on structs and enums.
* The `#[repr(packed)]` and `#[repr(simd)]` attributes only work on structs.
* The `#[repr(u8)]`, `#[repr(i16)]`, etc attributes only work on enums.
These attributes do not work on typedefs, since typedefs are just aliases.
Representations like `#[repr(u8)]`, `#[repr(i64)]` are for selecting the
discriminant size for enums with no data fields on any of the variants, e.g.
`enum Color {Red, Blue, Green}`, effectively setting the size of the enum to
the size of the provided type. Such an enum can be cast to a value of the same
type as well. In short, `#[repr(u8)]` makes the enum behave like an integer
with a constrained set of allowed values.
Only field-less enums can be cast to numerical primitives, so this attribute
will not apply to structs.
`#[repr(packed)]` reduces padding to make the struct size smaller. The
representation of enums isn't strictly defined in Rust, and this attribute
won't work on enums.
`#[repr(simd)]` will give a struct consisting of a homogeneous series of machine
types (i.e., `u8`, `i32`, etc) a representation that permits vectorization via
SIMD. This doesn't make much sense for enums since they don't consist of a
single list of data.
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