The built-in function traits are generic over a tuple of the function arguments. If one uses angle-bracket notation (Fn<(T,), Output=U>) instead of parentheses (Fn(T) -> U) to denote the function trait, the type parameter should be a tuple. Otherwise function call notation cannot be used and the trait will not be implemented by closures.
The most likely source of this error is using angle-bracket notation without wrapping the function argument type into a tuple, for example:
#![allow(unused)]
#![feature(unboxed_closures)]
fn main() {
fn foo<F: Fn<i32>>(f: F) -> F::Output { f(3) }
} It can be fixed by adjusting the trait bound like this:
#![allow(unused)]
#![feature(unboxed_closures)]
fn main() {
fn foo<F: Fn<(i32,)>>(f: F) -> F::Output { f(3) }
} Note that (T,) always denotes the type of a 1-tuple containing an element of type T. The comma is necessary for syntactic disambiguation.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/error_codes/E0059.html