Struct devise::syn::Error [−][src]
pub struct Error { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
Error returned when a Syn parser cannot parse the input tokens.
Refer to the module documentation for details about parsing in Syn.
This type is available if Syn is built with the "parsing"
feature.
Implementations
Usually the ParseStream::error
method will be used instead, which
automatically uses the correct span from the current position of the
parse stream.
Use Error::new
when the error needs to be triggered on some span other
than where the parse stream is currently positioned.
Example
use syn::{Error, Ident, LitStr, Result, Token};
use syn::parse::ParseStream;
// Parses input that looks like `name = "string"` where the key must be
// the identifier `name` and the value may be any string literal.
// Returns the string literal.
fn parse_name(input: ParseStream) -> Result<LitStr> {
let name_token: Ident = input.parse()?;
if name_token != "name" {
// Trigger an error not on the current position of the stream,
// but on the position of the unexpected identifier.
return Err(Error::new(name_token.span(), "expected `name`"));
}
input.parse::<Token![=]>()?;
let s: LitStr = input.parse()?;
Ok(s)
}
Creates an error with the specified message spanning the given syntax tree node.
Unlike the Error::new
constructor, this constructor takes an argument
tokens
which is a syntax tree node. This allows the resulting Error
to attempt to span all tokens inside of tokens
. While you would
typically be able to use the Spanned
trait with the above Error::new
constructor, implementation limitations today mean that
Error::new_spanned
may provide a higher-quality error message on
stable Rust.
When in doubt it’s recommended to stick to Error::new
(or
ParseStream::error
)!
The source location of the error.
Spans are not thread-safe so this function returns Span::call_site()
if called from a different thread than the one on which the Error
was
originally created.
Render the error as an invocation of compile_error!
.
The [parse_macro_input!
] macro provides a convenient way to invoke
this method correctly in a procedural macro.
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl !RefUnwindSafe for Error
impl UnwindSafe for Error
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more