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@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ says they should still consume a byte of space.
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difference from a struct is that the fields aren’t named.
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* `repr(C)` is equivalent to one of `repr(u*)` (see the next section) for
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fieldless enums. The chosen size is the default enum size for the target platform's C
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fieldless enums. The chosen size and sign is the default enum size and sign for the target platform's C
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application binary interface (ABI). Note that enum representation in C is implementation
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defined, so this is really a "best guess". In particular, this may be incorrect
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when the C code of interest is compiled with certain flags.
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@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ More details are in the [RFC 1758][rfc-transparent] and the [RFC 2645][rfc-trans
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## repr(u*), repr(i*)
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These specify the size to make a fieldless enum. If the discriminant overflows
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These specify the size and sign to make a fieldless enum. If the discriminant overflows
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the integer it has to fit in, it will produce a compile-time error. You can
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manually ask Rust to allow this by setting the overflowing element to explicitly
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be 0. However Rust will not allow you to create an enum where two variants have
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@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ The term "fieldless enum" only means that the enum doesn't have data in any
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of its variants. A fieldless enum without a `repr(u*)` or `repr(C)` is
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still a Rust native type, and does not have a stable ABI representation.
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Adding a `repr` causes it to be treated exactly like the specified
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integer size for ABI purposes.
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integer type for ABI purposes.
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If the enum has fields, the effect is similar to the effect of `repr(C)`
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in that there is a defined layout of the type. This makes it possible to
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