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Never Type

Icon LinkNever Type

The Never type ! represents the type of computations which never resolve to any value at all.

Icon LinkAdditional Information

break, continue and return expressions also have type !. For example we are allowed to write:

let x: ! = {
    return 123
};

Although the let is pointless here, it illustrates the meaning of !. Since x is never assigned a value (because return returns from the entire function), x can be given type Never. We could also replace return 123 with a revert() or a never-ending loop and this code would still be valid.

A more realistic usage of Never is in this code:

let num: u32 = match get_a_number() {
    Some(num) => num,
    None => break,
};

Both match arms must produce values of type [u32], but since break never produces a value at all we know it can never produce a value which isn't a [u32]. This illustrates another behaviour of the ! type - expressions with type ! will coerce into any other type.

Note that ! type coerces into any other type, another example of this would be:

let x: u32 = {
    return 123
};

Regardless of the type of x, the return block of type Never will always coerce into x type.

Icon LinkExamples

fn foo() {
    let num: u64 = match Option::None::<u64> {
        Some(num) => num,
        None => return,
    };
}