pub enum AttributeDuplicates {
    DuplicatesOk,
    WarnFollowing,
    WarnFollowingWordOnly,
    ErrorFollowing,
    ErrorPreceding,
    FutureWarnFollowing,
    FutureWarnPreceding,
}
Expand description

How to handle multiple duplicate attributes on the same item.

Variants

DuplicatesOk

Duplicates of this attribute are allowed.

This should only be used with attributes where duplicates have semantic meaning, or some kind of “additive” behavior. For example, #[warn(..)] can be specified multiple times, and it combines all the entries. Or use this if there is validation done elsewhere.

WarnFollowing

Duplicates after the first attribute will be an unused_attribute warning.

This is usually used for “word” attributes, where they are used as a boolean marker, like #[used]. It is not necessarily wrong that there are duplicates, but the others should probably be removed.

WarnFollowingWordOnly

Same as WarnFollowing, but only issues warnings for word-style attributes.

This is only for special cases, for example multiple #[macro_use] can be warned, but multiple #[macro_use(...)] should not because the list form has different meaning from the word form.

ErrorFollowing

Duplicates after the first attribute will be an error.

This should be used where duplicates would be ignored, but carry extra meaning that could cause confusion. For example, #[stable(since="1.0")] #[stable(since="2.0")], which version should be used for stable?

ErrorPreceding

Duplicates preceding the last instance of the attribute will be an error.

This is the same as ErrorFollowing, except the last attribute is the one that is “used”. This is typically used in cases like codegen attributes which usually only honor the last attribute.

FutureWarnFollowing

Duplicates after the first attribute will be an unused_attribute warning with a note that this will be an error in the future.

This should be used for attributes that should be ErrorFollowing, but because older versions of rustc silently accepted (and ignored) the attributes, this is used to transition.

FutureWarnPreceding

Duplicates preceding the last instance of the attribute will be a warning, with a note that this will be an error in the future.

This is the same as FutureWarnFollowing, except the last attribute is the one that is “used”. Ideally these can eventually migrate to ErrorPreceding.

Trait Implementations

Returns a copy of the value. Read more
Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more
Returns the “default value” for a type. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more
Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Returns the argument unchanged.

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more
Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Performs the conversion.
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Performs the conversion.

Layout

Note: Most layout information is completely unstable and may even differ between compilations. The only exception is types with certain repr(...) attributes. Please see the Rust Reference’s “Type Layout” chapter for details on type layout guarantees.

Size: 1 byte

Size for each variant:

  • DuplicatesOk: 0 bytes
  • WarnFollowing: 0 bytes
  • WarnFollowingWordOnly: 0 bytes
  • ErrorFollowing: 0 bytes
  • ErrorPreceding: 0 bytes
  • FutureWarnFollowing: 0 bytes
  • FutureWarnPreceding: 0 bytes