use rustc::lint::*; use syntax::ast::*; use syntax::codemap::Spanned; use utils::{span_lint_and_sugg, snippet}; /// **What it does:** Checks for /// - () being assigned to a variable /// - () being passed to a function /// /// **Why is this bad?** It is extremely unlikely that a user intended to assign '()' to valiable. Instead, /// Unit is what a block evaluates to when it returns nothing. This is typically caused by a trailing /// unintended semicolon. /// /// **Known problems:** None. /// /// **Example:** /// * `let x = {"foo" ;}` when the user almost certainly intended `let x ={"foo"}` declare_lint! { pub UNIT_EXPR, Warn, "unintended assignment or use of a unit typed value" } #[derive(Copy, Clone)] pub struct UnitExpr; impl LintPass for UnitExpr { fn get_lints(&self) -> LintArray { lint_array!(UNIT_EXPR) } } impl EarlyLintPass for UnitExpr { fn check_expr(&mut self, cx: &EarlyContext, expr: &Expr) { if let ExprKind::Assign(ref left, ref right) = expr.node { unimplemented!(); } if let ExprKind::MethodCall(ref path, ref args) = expr.node { unimplemented!(); } if let ExprKind::Call(ref path, ref args) = expr.node{ unimplemented!(); } } fn check_stmt(&mut self, cx: &EarlyContext, stmt: &Stmt) { if let StmtKind::Local(ref data) = stmt.node{ unimplemented!(); } } }