1 // This test is to make sure we don't just ICE if the trait
2 // method for an operator is not implemented properly.
3 // (In this case the mul method should take &f64 and not f64)
4 // See: #11450
5 
6 use std::ops::Mul;
7 
8 struct Vec1 {
9     x: f64
10 }
11 
12 // Expecting value in input signature
13 impl Mul<f64> for Vec1 {
14     type Output = Vec1;
15 
mul(self, s: &f64) -> Vec116     fn mul(self, s: &f64) -> Vec1 {
17     //~^ ERROR method `mul` has an incompatible type for trait
18         Vec1 {
19             x: self.x * *s
20         }
21     }
22 }
23 
24 struct Vec2 {
25     x: f64,
26     y: f64
27 }
28 
29 // Wrong type parameter ordering
30 impl Mul<Vec2> for Vec2 {
31     type Output = f64;
32 
mul(self, s: f64) -> Vec233     fn mul(self, s: f64) -> Vec2 {
34     //~^ ERROR method `mul` has an incompatible type for trait
35         Vec2 {
36             x: self.x * s,
37             y: self.y * s
38         }
39     }
40 }
41 
42 struct Vec3 {
43     x: f64,
44     y: f64,
45     z: f64
46 }
47 
48 // Unexpected return type
49 impl Mul<f64> for Vec3 {
50     type Output = i32;
51 
mul(self, s: f64) -> f6452     fn mul(self, s: f64) -> f64 {
53     //~^ ERROR method `mul` has an incompatible type for trait
54         s
55     }
56 }
57 
main()58 pub fn main() {
59     // Check that the usage goes from the trait declaration:
60 
61     let x: Vec1 = Vec1 { x: 1.0 } * 2.0; // this is OK
62 
63     let x: Vec2 = Vec2 { x: 1.0, y: 2.0 } * 2.0; // trait had reversed order
64     //~^ ERROR mismatched types
65     //~| ERROR mismatched types
66 
67     let x: i32 = Vec3 { x: 1.0, y: 2.0, z: 3.0 } * 2.0;
68 }
69