| An unary operator was used on a type which doesn't implement it. |
| |
| Erroneous code example: |
| |
| ```compile_fail,E0600 |
| enum Question { |
| Yes, |
| No, |
| } |
| |
| !Question::Yes; // error: cannot apply unary operator `!` to type `Question` |
| ``` |
| |
| In this case, `Question` would need to implement the `std::ops::Not` trait in |
| order to be able to use `!` on it. Let's implement it: |
| |
| ``` |
| use std::ops::Not; |
| |
| enum Question { |
| Yes, |
| No, |
| } |
| |
| // We implement the `Not` trait on the enum. |
| impl Not for Question { |
| type Output = bool; |
| |
| fn not(self) -> bool { |
| match self { |
| Question::Yes => false, // If the `Answer` is `Yes`, then it |
| // returns false. |
| Question::No => true, // And here we do the opposite. |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| assert_eq!(!Question::Yes, false); |
| assert_eq!(!Question::No, true); |
| ``` |