A type that is not a trait was used in a trait position, such as a bound or impl
.
Erroneous code example:
struct Foo; struct Bar; impl Foo for Bar {} // error: `Foo` is not a trait fn baz<T: Foo>(t: T) {} // error: `Foo` is not a trait
Another erroneous code example:
type Foo = Iterator<Item=String>; fn bar<T: Foo>(t: T) {} // error: `Foo` is a type alias
Please verify that the trait's name was not misspelled or that the right identifier was used. Example:
trait Foo { // some functions } struct Bar; impl Foo for Bar { // ok! // functions implementation } fn baz<T: Foo>(t: T) {} // ok!
Alternatively, you could introduce a new trait with your desired restrictions as a super trait:
# trait Foo {} # struct Bar; # impl Foo for Bar {} trait Qux: Foo {} // Anything that implements Qux also needs to implement Foo fn baz<T: Qux>(t: T) {} // also ok!
Finally, if you are on nightly and want to use a trait alias instead of a type alias, you should use #![feature(trait_alias)]
:
#![feature(trait_alias)] trait Foo = Iterator<Item=String>; fn bar<T: Foo>(t: T) {} // ok!